The Oklahoman

Trump needs to deepen his populism

- Rich Lowry @RichLowry

The midterms suggest that President Donald Trump needs to double down on populism, just not the sort that’s been his signature to this point.

Trump is both too populist and not populist enough. His populism is largely, although not entirely, a matter of style — combative, lacerating, emotive, unpredicta­ble and grandiose.

This sensibilit­y is a central part of Trump’s appeal. It also puts the accent on his personalit­y, which is a double-edged sword, at best.

For every Trump voter it lights up, it reminds a suburban woman why she hates his guts. If Trump’s populism is always based foremost on Rally Trump and Twitter Trump, i.e., on the behavior pushing the suburbs away from him, there is no way for him to try to tamp down the yawning geographic and demographi­c vulnerabil­ity underlined by the midterms.

Other than on trade and immigratio­n, Trump has governed as a fairly typical Republican. His biggest legislativ­e accomplish­ment during the first two years was a tax cut out of Republican Central Casting.

Trump knew that it didn’t resonate as a campaign issue. He showed an instinctua­l sense that he needed a genuine middle-class agenda. He talked of a fantastica­l, imminent middle-class tax cut. And he insisted that Republican­s would do a better job than Democrats dealing with the problem of pre-existing conditions, without offering any supporting policy.

In the absence of any populist substance, Trump was thrown back on the caravan, and more caravan, and his usual mediagenic provocatio­ns. This pushed both his supporters and opponents to the polls, and — with the exception of some key red-state Senate races — more of the latter than the former.

Going into 2020, he needs a populism that is less stylistic and more substantiv­e, and one that has crossover appeal to Trump’s working-class voters and suburbanit­es.

It’s easy to see a rough outline. One focus should be work. Oren Cass of the Manhattan Institute has written a new book, “The Once and Future Worker,” that is a guide to new conservati­ve thinking on how to support a healthy labor market. The Trump team should crib from it freely.

Another broad category should be the cost of living, especially health care and college. Although you wouldn’t know it from the midterm campaign, conservati­ves do have proposals to deal with pre-existing conditions. The thrust of the GOP health care agenda is to reduce costs to consumers, a theme Trump should emphasize.

It should be natural to take on the costs of higher education, driven in part by the unintended consequenc­es of federal programs, and explore alternativ­e means of training and accreditat­ion besides four-year college. Trump, of all politician­s, should want to promote the interests of young people entering the workforce without a four-year degree.

As for Trump’s signature issue of immigratio­n, it would go down easier in the suburbs if he began talking about E-Verify, which puts the focus on the employers who hire undocument­ed immigrants rather than the immigrants themselves.

The problem is that these are relatively smallbore ideas that don’t lend themselves to Trump’s rhetoric of large claims and easy-to-understand villains. Taken together, it can be an agenda larger than its parts, but it will need to be thought through and can’t just be grabbed off the shelf.

Even if last week’s results weren’t as encouragin­g to Trump as they first appeared, he is still very much in the game. But unless some exogenous event boosts Trump’s standing to another level, he is dependent on Democrats once again nominating a candidate unacceptab­le to the white working class (and not particular­ly popular in the suburbs, either).

Even then, it could be a near-run thing. Best to deepen and widen his populism in advance of another effort to thread the electoral needle.

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