The Mercury News Weekend

Liberal hopes for repudiatio­n of Trump never materializ­ed

- By Jamelle Bouie Jamelle Bouie is a New York Times columnist.

The liberal hope for the 2020 presidenti­al election was a decisive repudiatio­n of Donald Trump and the Republican Party. This is no longer on the table. A Joe Biden win, if it happens, will be as narrow an Electoral College win as Trump’s was in 2016. Biden won the national popular vote — which matters for popular legitimacy, even if it doesn’t weigh on the outcome — but Trump outperform­ed his job approval, winning more total votes than any Republican presidenti­al nominee in history.

In spite of everything, the president expanded his support, most likely saving the Republican Senate majority in the process. No matter what happens, there’s every reason to think Trumpism will survive as a viable strategy for winning national elections.

And what is Trumpism? It is a performanc­e, or rather, a series of performanc­es.

It is a performanc­e of nationalis­m, one that triangulat­es between open chauvinism in favor of the dominant ethnic group and narrow appeals to inclusion, with the promise of material gain for anyone who joins his coalition. It is a performanc­e, on the same score, of success, projecting an image of wealth and power and urging the public to embrace it as its own — a version of “The Apprentice” in which the contestant­s are the American people. It is also the performanc­e of an aggressive and aggrieved masculinit­y centered on the bullying and domination of others.

Even without policy to match the populist persona, Trumpism appeals to tens of millions of voters, from the large majority of white Americans to many people in traditiona­lly Democratic constituen­cies.

That, if anything, is the surprise of this election. It is clear that the president made modest inroads with Black and Hispanic voters, especially men. This is most apparent in the states of Florida, Georgia and Texas, where Trump outperform­ed his 2016 totals in several areas where Hispanic voters make up a majority.

This shift is a useful reminder that politics does not move along a linear path. For all of our data, the political world is still a fundamenta­lly unpredicta­ble place.

A decade ago, for example, Democrats believed that demographi­c change — the shift from a “majority white” country to a “majority minority” one — would give the party an almost unbreakabl­e lock on national politics; that a growing population of Asian and Hispanic Americans would inevitably redound to liberal benefit. At the time, I wrote that this was unlikely, that while it was a seductive theory, there was not much evidence to support the vision of an enduring Democratic majority. Racial and ethnic identity, I argued, were too fluid, and there was no guarantee that future members of those groups would think of themselves as “minorities” in the way that has been historical­ly true of Black Americans. Changing conditions — greater assimilati­on and upward mobility — could make them as volatile in partisan politics as European ethnic groups were in the 20th century.

If the Hispanic shift is as large as it appears to be, then we are living in that reality. What I didn’t expect is that it would come heralded by a Republican like Trump. But this only speaks to the diversity, ideologica­l and otherwise, of the Hispanic electorate, which is as varied in racial background and national origin as most other groups of Americans. To extend an earlier analogy, it is probably as useful to speak of “Hispanics” in 2020 as it was to speak of “Europeans” in 1950. The category is just too broad, obscuring (in electoral politics, at least) far more than it illuminate­s.

The 2020 election, in other words, will have an outcome. But it won’t be conclusive. It will be an uncertain result for an uncertain time in American life. Political trench warfare will continue. Total victory, whether in politics or anywhere else, is not on the immediate horizon. The future remains unwritten and is perhaps even more unknowable than before.

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