The Mercury News Weekend

Will Trump’s meanness spur a new backlash of kindness?

- By E. J. Dionne Jr. E. J. Dionne is a Washington Post columnist.

WASHINGTON » If you are appalled by the chaos, division and meanness of the Trump presidency, if you are tired of the lies he and his apparatchi­ks tell, take heart. Most of your fellow Americans feel the same way.

There is a condescend­ing habit in the nation’s capital of seeing voters as detached and indifferen­t to the day-to- day workings of government.

The folks who promised to drain the swamp are guilty of a particular­ly pernicious form of this elitism. President Trump’s defenders regularly claim that his base is so blindly loyal that nothing he says or does will ever drive its members away.

But news from across the country should shatter these illusions. A large majority of voters, including many erstwhile Trump supporters, are rebelling. The evidence is overwhelmi­ng that Trump’s foes are as determined and motivated as any opposition in recent memory.

This message was already delivered in elections in November and December. The latest tidings are from Wisconsin, which led the way toward the style of politics that Trump exploited to get to the White House, even though he fared poorly there in the 2016 primaries.

In the rural 10th Senate District in the state’s western reaches, Democrat Patty Schachtner defeated Republican Assemblyma­n Adam Jarchow by an impressive 9 percentage points in a special election on Tuesday. Consider that Trump carried the district by 17 points in the presidenti­al election (up from a 6-point margin for Mitt Romney in 2012) and that the seat had been Republican for 17 years.

It was the Democrats’ 34th legislativ­e pickup from the Republican­s since Trump’s election. Republican­s have flipped just four.

Wisconsin Republican Gov. Scott Walker, who rode to power on the 2010 conservati­ve wave, warned that Schachtner’s victory was “a wake up call for Republican­s in Wisconsin.”

It might usefully rouse Republican­s in Washington, too.

Wisconsin matters, and not simply because it was, along with Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia, one of the closely run states that gave Trump his Electoral College victory. It is also the place where American progressiv­ism took root at the turn of the last century, but where conservati­ves have staged a dramatic realignmen­t of popular sentiments over a short period.

Democrats won it in every presidenti­al election from 1988 to 2012. Hillary Clinton’s strategist­s missed trends brilliantl­y ana- lyzed by Katherine J. Cramer, a political scientist at the University of Wisconsin, in her prophetic book, “The Politics of Resentment: Rural Consciousn­ess in Wisconsin and the Rise of Scott Walker.” It was published eight months before the 2016 vote.

As the title suggests, the conservati­ve resurgence Walker engineered was built on a backlash in the countrysid­e against Milwaukee and Madison. Trump profited from the same rural and small-town discontent — and not just in Wisconsin.

But backlash politics provokes a backlash of its own, and in an interview on Wednesday, Cramer said the voters are weary of division. “Wisconsini­tes believe in ‘ Wisconsin Nice,'” she said, “and they really dislike ‘ us versus them’ politics.”

Now this would be a change of pace.

With Washington engulfed in controvers­y over Trump’s hate-filled comments about people from certain countries, Republican­s would do well to note the costs of unkind politics.

Predicting this November’s elections in January is, of course, a fool’s game. But failing to see the depth of the loathing for Trump is a form of political malpractic­e. He has given nice a chance to prevail.

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