Skip to main content

Trump Populism


Trump Populism

 

Donald Trump has created consternation, especially among Republicans, as he veers away from some of the traditional orthodox positions of the Party in favor of populist rhetoric that has won him the nomination. Populism can be understood as a set of beliefs that highlight the neglect of and disregard for the hopes and fears of broad swaths of the population by elites who take care only of their own interests.

Mr. Trump's core constituency seems to be drawn from white males with low achievement in formal education. One study showed that a stunning 80% of these blue collar workers voted for Trump in the primaries. They believe that he listens to their stories and understands their disgust at being left behind, many of them earning less than they did twenty years ago. They resent that the elites of both Parties seem to dismiss their concerns.

Let's look at two of the populist themes that Trump has been dealing with and making vague promises to remedy.

Income inequality has to be number one on the list. Workers see that the improved company profits caused by major increases in production have gone disproportionately to the top echelon of managers and to shareholders. The salaries of most blue collar workers have dropped or at best remained static.

They have good reason to be peeved and frustrated by this unfair situation. By comparison, German workers with similar qualifications have seen their salaries rise by 25% in recent years because in that country the Government mandates that representatives of management and labor must agree on a system of distribution of company profits where the needs of all workers are considered.

Donald Trump has no plan to alleviate the lot of this category of workers. In fact, he says workers' salaries are too high and he is against raising the minimum wage. He subscribes to the Republican economic program of giving more massive tax breaks to the richest people in the country in the hope that somehow that will lead them to loosen their purses. This is the same trickle - down theory that has been shown to widen the income gap and increase the level of inequality even more.

Unfortunately, the trade union movement, which plays a major role in Germany and other European countries, has very little influence in the United States, leaving most blue-collar workers without a voice in company decision-making. These workers need a Mike Quill to fight their case and not a Donald Trump.

The Republican nominee points the finger of blame at immigrants who allegedly are taking the jobs of local workers. His twofold response involves building a wall along the Southern border which, he says, the Mexican Government will have to pay for - an astonishing assertion by a candidate for the highest office in the country. Secondly, he will hire a new militia to round up and deport the eleven or twelve million workers who are here illegally, including the estimated hundred thousand undocumented Irish people.  Do aggrieved blue collar workers really believe that a Trump Administration will implement these populist but unrealistic pie-in-the-sky policies?

Populism, like the Roman god Janus, has two faces. On the one side is the legitimate demand for fair treatment by masses of disgruntled people; the other side is represented by Trump bombast and bluster, blaming immigrants or minorities for complex social and economic problems while offering no coherent solution.

 

Gerry O'Shea     Yonkers    New York

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

  Trip to Honduras        Gerry OShea I recently returned from a four-day visit to San Pedro Sula, the second-largest city in Honduras. I was accompanied by Vincent Collins, his wife Linda, and Patricia Alarcon Cavalie. We were representing the New York-based charity HOPe, which has a project in the region of Choloma on the outskirts of the city. All of us, except Linda, are members of the organization. HOPe was founded in Yonkers by a group of Irish people in 1997, the 150 th anniversary of the worst year of the Irish potato famine. The members of this group, led by Pat Buckley from Killarney, felt that bemoaning the awful laissez-faire policies of the British Government, which caused the Irish disaster, was an inadequate response to the Gorta Mor tragedy.   We looked for other ways of honoring the lives of the million or more Irish people who died from starvation or related diseases in their family huts or on the streets, or in the coffin...

Election Reflections

  Election Reflections       Gerry OShea On a post-election day when I lived in Dublin, I recall meeting a local man who was very involved with one of the political parties in the previous day’s contest. I asked him for his views on the election. I still recall clearly his answer: “The election was fine but the f----ing voters turned on us, despite all we did for them.” This response will resonate with many Democrats as they reflect on the recent presidential election. After all, the health of the American economy is deemed by experts to be so strong that it claimed a cover-page headline in the prestigious Economist magazine, stating in bold letters that the United States economy is the envy of the world. They compared the employment statistics, wage increases, and growth of GDP with those of all the other major countries and found the United States ahead in these measurements. Add the good news of major gains in the stock market, which usually p...

Some Moral Perspectives on American Life

  Moral Perspectives in America      Gerry OShea The clear division between the traditionalists and progressives in the American Catholic Church has become more glaring during the last few decades. A more free-thinking membership has largely supplanted the old-time religion involving weekly attendance at mass and regular confession of sins to a priest. In my Yonkers neighborhood stretching along McLean Avenue from Broadway on the west to Bronx River Rd., which is still populated by large numbers of emigrants from Ireland, three Catholic schools have been closed in the last few years, and the number of people attending weekly mass has dropped dramatically from just a generation ago. A 2022 Pew Research Center survey highlights a major difference between Catholics identifying themselves as supporters of the Republican and Democratic parties. 82% of Catholics who are Democrats feel that global climate change presents a serious moral problem, while among Repub...