Imperial Valley Press

What Democrats fear most in 2020: A bullish Trump economy

- DICK POLMAN Dick Polman is the national political columnist at WHYY in Philadelph­ia and a “Writer in Residence” at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. Email him at dickpolman­7@gmail.com

It shouldn’t shock anyone if Donald Trump wins a second term in 2020. “Now Hiring” signs in local shop windows are potentiall­y more persuasive than abstract phrases like “Constituti­onal Crisis.”

Jobs and wages affect everyone everywhere, and Washington court battles and executive-congressio­nal clashes can be easily dismissed as distant thunder.

I’m not endorsing that scenario. Far from it. But in the wake of the newest Labor Department stats — a 3.6 percent jobless rate (the lowest in nearly 50 years) and a 3.2 percent boost in the GDP during the first quarter of 2019 — we need to acknowledg­e the reality that presidents typically get rehired when voters believe the economy is on the upswing.

Granted, this particular president — and I use that honorific advisedly — is a serial liar whose Russian-style authoritar­ian instincts are damaging our democratic institutio­ns in all the ways that many of us foresaw in 2016. But his defenders may be right when they insist that a strong economy will ultimately trump everything else. Mick Mulvaney, the acting chief of staff, says: “People will vote for somebody they don’t like if they think it is good for them.”

Former GOP Congressma­n and Trump fan Jason Chaffetz tells Fox News that, “When people feel good at home, they’re going to stick with the person who has the White House.”

Maybe that’s just wishful thinking on their part, considerin­g that despite the bullish economy, Trump is saddled with a 42 percent approval rating. But prominent Democrats are neverthele­ss worried that their party doesn’t have

an overarchin­g economic message. They know how important that is. Their mantra in 1992, the last time they defeated a Republican presidenti­al incumbent, was “It’s the Economy, Stupid.”

Bill Clinton toppled George H.W. Bush in part because, midway through the election season, the jobless rate spiked to 7.8 percent.

At least Democrats aren’t claiming that the jobless stats are fake, something candidate Trump routinely used to do. Whenever President Obama’s Labor Department reported job gains for the economy that was slowly recovering from the Great Recession, Trump would lie that the government had “cooked the books” (October 2015), or released “phony jobs numbers” (January 2016), or perpetrate­d “one of the biggest hoaxes in modern politics” (August 2016). But now that he’s the guy in the White House, he suddenly believes that the bullish numbers are accurate.

What Democrats are trying to do is talk around the stats.

The basic Democratic argument — from Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar, Elizabeth Warren, and others — is that, yes, the top-line economic stats look good, but that most Americans still feel pinched in their everyday lives.

Klobuchar tells ABC News: “A lot of people aren’t sharing this prosperity, because of the costs — the cost of college, the costs of health care, the fact that the president had promised to bring down the prices of their prescripti­on drugs.”

All those things are true; for instance, the number of Americans without health coverage has increased by 7 million since Trump took office. The problem is that the Democrats are stuck with a “Yes, but” argument, and that’s not ideal.

A new Washington Post-ABC poll asked: “Does Trump’s handling of the economy make you more likely or less likely to support him in 2020?” Forty-two percent said “more likely.” Only 32 percent said less. (Could some of Trump’s voters dump him if they fear that his tariff war with China will undercut the economy by hiking consumer prices? Don’t bet on it. If Trump personally tiki-torched their houses, they’d praise the smell of smoke.)

For Democrats, the most optimistic scenario is that the “Yes, but” argument will suffice, that a good economy will not save a lawless president saddled with unpreceden­ted baggage. In the words of Democratic commentato­r and ex-policy strategist Ed Kilgore, “Trump’s going to have to campaign on his full record, his full agenda, and the full set of impression­s he has made during his first term. … And even if things look good [economical­ly], the future will look dim to those who fear what Trump will do in a second term.”

I’ll put it this way: Are bullish jobless stats more important than the relentless assault on America’s soul?

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States