Times-Call (Longmont)

The coming decade of Democratic dominance

- George Will Mcshineton Fost

WASHINGTON — By a circuitous route to a predictabl­e destinatio­n, the 2020 presidenti­al selection process seems almost certain to end Tuesday with a fumigation election. A presidency that began with dark words about “American carnage” probably will receive what it has earned: repudiatio­n.

In “Three Exhausting Weeks,” a short story in Tom Hanks’ collection “Uncommon Type,” a man has a short, stressful relationsh­ip with a hyperactiv­e woman: “Being Anna’s boyfriend was like training to be a Navy SEAL while working full-time in an Amazon fulfillmen­t center in the Oklahoma Panhandle in tornado season.” After the past four years, Americans know the feeling, which is why Donald Trump’s first and final contributi­on to the nation’s civic health will be to have motivated a voter turnout rate not seen for more than a centur y — not since the 73.2% of 1900, when President William Mckinley for a second time defeated the Democratic populist William Jennings Bryan. The poet Vachel Lindsay (1879-1931) had fun making fun of Br yan’s populism: “Nebraska’s cry went eastward against the dour and / old, / The mean and cold . ... / … Smashing Plymouth Rock, with his boulders from the / West.”

Imagine what fun Lindsay could have had with today’s preeminent populist, who has taken more than $70,000 in tax deductions for hair styling. His style has been his substance. His replacemen­t for Obamacare remains as nonexisten­t as his $1 trillion infrastruc­ture program. He resembles the politicall­y excitable woman in Philip Roth’s novel “American Pastoral,” whose “opinions were all stimuli: the goal was excitement.”

In defeat, Trump probably will resemble another figure from American fiction — Ring Lardner’s

“Alibi Ike,” the baseball player whose talent was for making excuses. Trump will probably say that if not for the pandemic, Americans would have voted their pocketbook­s, which would have been bulging because of economic growth, and reelected him. Americans, however, are more complicate­d and civic-minded than one-dimensiona­l economy voters. But about those pocketbook­s:

The 4% growth Trump promised as a candidate and the 3% he promised as president became, pre-pandemic, 2.5% during his first three years, a negligible improvemen­t over the 2.4% of the last three Barack Obama years. This growth was partly fueled by increased deficit spending (from 4.4% of GDP to 6.3%, by the Internatio­nal Monetar y Fund’s calculatio­n).

Bloomberg Businesswe­ek reports, “In the first three and a half years of Trump’s presidency the U.S. Department of Labor approved 1,996 petitions (for Trade Adjustment Assistance) covering 184,888 jobs shifted overseas. During the equivalent period of President Barack Obama’s second term,

1,811 petitions were approved covering 172,336 workers.” And the Economist says:

“Recent research suggests that Mr. Trump’s tariffs destroyed more American manufactur­ing jobs than they created, by making imported parts more expensive and prompting other countries to retaliate by targeting American goods. Manufactur­ing employment barely grew in 2019. At the same time, tariffs are pushing up consumer prices by perhaps 0.5%, enough to reduce average real household income by nearly $1,300.”

Demographi­c arithmetic is also discouragi­ng for Trump. There are more than 5 million fewer members of his core constituen­cy — Whites without college degrees — than there were four years ago.

And there are more than 13 million more minority and college-educated White eligible voters than in 2016.

In Ronald Reagan’s 1984 reelection, voters under 30 were a solidly Republican age cohort; 2020, for the fifth consecutiv­e election, it will be the most Democratic. The Atlantic’s Ronald Brownstein believes that this year’s “generation­al backlash” against Trump presages for Republican­s a dismal decade during which two large and diverse cohorts — millennial­s (born between 1981 and 1996) and Generation Z (born between 1997 and 2012) — become, together, the electorate’s largest bloc in an electorate that, says Brownstein, “is beginning its most profound generation­al transition since the early 1980s,” when baby boomers (born between 1946 and 1964) became the largest bloc. In 2016, Trump won just 36% of adults under 30; Obama averaged 63% in two elections. Furthermor­e, this will be the first presidenti­al election in which the number of millennial and Generation Z eligible voters will outnumber eligible baby boomers. Generation Z is 49% people of color.

Economic and demographi­c statistics are not, however, the only ones pertinent to next Tuesday’s probable outcome. Novelist John Updike supplied another: “A healthy male adult bore consumes each year one and a half times his own weight in other people’s patience.” This nation and its patience are exhausted.

Email: georgewill@washpost.com

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