Chattanooga Times Free Press

MAGA IS ABOUT WHITE GRIEVANCE, NOT ECONOMICS

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Republican­s like to bill themselves as a “working-class” party. But just as their refusal to take seriously the real threat behind the deaths and injuries of law enforcemen­t personnel on Jan. 6 strips them of the pretense of being “pro police” or defenders of “law and order,” so too does their economic agenda dispense with the fiction that they are attuned to the interests of workingand middle-class Americans.

The New York Times gives the GOP too much credit when it declares that “Republican­s have offered very little to advance the economic interests of blue-collar workers.” The phrase “offered very little” suggests they have been trying but just haven’t managed to come up with something. In reality, they have not been trying to enact a populist agenda.

Let’s review: Republican­s backed a tax cut under the last administra­tion that primarily benefited the rich and corporatio­ns; attempted to strip health-care coverage from tens of millions of Americans by repealing the Affordable Care Act; and insisted that front-line workers, the elderly and others prioritize the “economy” (i.e. the stock market) over their own health while downplayin­g the pandemic that has disproport­ionately affected lower-wage workers.

Since President Biden’s inaugurati­on, Republican­s have picked up where they left off. They opposed giving middle- and lower-class workers $1,400 checks, raising the unemployme­nt subsidy (for fear their working-class friends would prefer lying on their couches to getting work), providing millions with food subsidies, and supporting states and localities that employ police, firefighte­rs, teachers and other middle- and working-class employees.

It is not simply that Republican­s have fallen short in advancing middleand working-class interests; they have acted in ways directly contrary to the interests of those they claim to represent.

And let us be clear: The MAGA phenomenon was never about economic dislocatio­n. In 2018, a study from the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences concluded that “White, Christian and male voters … turned to Mr. Trump because they felt their status was at risk.” An Iowa study found, “Economic distress is not a significan­t factor in explaining the shift in Iowa voters from Democrat to Republican between 2008 and 2016. The election outcomes do not signify [a revolt] among working-class voters left behind by globalizat­ion.”

The Post after the 2016 election reported, “Among people who said they voted for Trump in the general election, 35% had household incomes under $50,000 per year… . Trump’s voters weren’t overwhelmi­ngly poor. In the general election, like the primary, about two thirds of Trump supporters came from the better-off half of the economy.” The same was true in 2020. President Joe Biden crushed the incumbent 55 to 44% among voters making less than $50,000 and 57 to 42% among those making between $50,000 and $100,000.

The MAGA Republican Party has never represente­d the interests of working- and middle-class Americans; it and their cult leader have represente­d the “interests” of those motivated by xenophobia, racism and misogyny — whatever their economic status.

What is the GOP’s “agenda” now? Voter suppressio­n to deter minorities from voting, angry memes that tell the base that elites have contempt for them and Jan. 6 denial. None of this has to do with working-class “interests.”

The media should stop acting surprised when the GOP’s populist results are negligible. Republican­s use white grievance to rile their base while pursuing economic interests that benefit the wealthy donor class. It is not an anomaly; it is standard operating procedure for the party of white grievance.

 ??  ?? Jennifer Rubin
Jennifer Rubin

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