Chattanooga Times Free Press

TRUMP’S ALARMING SUCCESS

- Frank Bruni

Just days ago I was in Ohio. I was talking to Republican­s, and this was the refrain I kept hearing: Donald Trump is throwing this election away. He has no real campaign here. No get-outthe-vote operation. No ground game.

Those Republican­s thought that he’d win the state — barely. But they didn’t think that he could snatch victories in some of the other places that he did on Tuesday.

Hillary Clinton had the best experts money could buy, the most sophistica­ted data operation that the smartest wonks could put together and the dutiful troops who went door to door, handing out “Stronger Together” literature and pleading her case. He had his hair and his ego. And yet Donald Trump was just elected the 45th president of the United States. Yes, Donald Trump.

He defied the prediction­s of pundits and pollsters, more than a few of whom foresaw an Electoral College landslide for Clinton. That’s what their numbers told them.

But that’s not what America had to say.

On Election Day, Trump did what he had throughout his surreal campaign: exploded the traditiona­l assumption­s, upended the usual expectatio­ns and forced us to look afresh at the accepted truisms and hoary clichés of our political life. There are important lessons to learn and crucial questions to ask.

Democrats are in the same position Republican­s were when Trump romped to their party’s nomination. They need to look seriously at the way they do business and how they arrived at this surprising, humbling destinatio­n.

Are the unglamorou­s, tedious approaches to rounding up votes as powerful as the booming voice of a celebrity with hours of free television time and millions of rapt Twitter followers? Does the imprimatur of the establishm­ent and a towering stack of endorsemen­ts and a bulging retinue of pop stars and Hollywood actors make any difference when there’s a fury out there that you haven’t fully and earnestly tried to understand? Does accurate polling lag behind the nature of contempora­ry American life?

And is a party being remotely realistic — or entirely reckless — to try to sell a candidate who personifie­s the status quo to an electorate that’s clearly hungry for some kind of shock to the system?

There was an arrogance and foolishnes­s to lining up behind Clinton as soon as so many Democratic leaders did, and to putting all their chips on her.

She fit the circumstan­ces of 2016 awkwardly, in the same way Jeb Bush did.

She was a profoundly flawed candidate unable to make an easy connection with voters. She was forever surrounded by messes: some of her own making, some blown out of proportion by the news media, all of them exhausting to voters who had lived through a quarter-century of political melodrama with her.

She never found a pithy, pointed message.

It’s insane that a pledge to “make America great again” works, because the vow is so starry-eyed and pat. But it’s concise. Digestible. It takes emotion into account. Democrats in general and Clinton in particular aren’t always good at that.

The party had a night so miserable that its leaders cannot chalk it up to the Russians or to James Comey. They had a gorgeous chance to retake their Senate majority, and not only did they fail to do so, but Democratic candidates who were thought to be in tight races lost by significan­t margins.

Clinton struggled more than had been predicted in the so-called Rust Belt — states like Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia — in yet another illustrati­on of how disaffecte­d working-class white men had become and how estranged from a new economy and a new age they felt.

Their anger was the story of the primaries, the fuel not just for Trump’s campaign but for Bernie Sanders’ as well. And it manifested itself in the general election. Both parties are going to have to reckon with it.

And they should. If this were all that Trump had shown us, we’d owe him our thanks.

But there are darker implicatio­ns here, too. After all the lies he told, all the fantasy he indulged in, all the hate he spewed and all the divisions he sharpened, he was rewarded with the highest office in the land. What does that portend for the politics of the next few years, for the kinds of congressio­nal candidates we’ll see in 2018, for the presidenti­al race of 2020?

I can’t bear to think about the conflagrat­ions to come.

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