Trump
Updates to the Midterms:
Jessica
Drake, Stormy Daniels’ (Stephanie Clifford’s) friend,
and a fellow porn star, has confirmed that Daniels discussed her
$130,000 settlement with Trump days before the 2016 election, and
Drake also accuses him of inappropriate sexual contact.
In
his continuing efforts to distract from his scandals, Trump has now
offered the possibility of pardoning Jack Johnson, the first African
American heavyweight champion (1908-1915), who was indicted in 1913
and subsequently jailed under the Mann Act which made it illegal to
transport a woman across state lines “for
the purpose of prostitution or debauchery, or for any other immoral
purpose.” But in reality, Johnson was a victim of
anti-miscegenation, racial prejudice because he dared to flaunt his
opulent lifestyle and date white women during a period of
intractable Jim Crow laws. Dr. Harry Edwards, Professor Emeritus of
Sociology at the University of California, Berkeley and a noted
sports scholar, has concluded that it is the U.S. government that
owes Johnson an apology rather than a pardon.
The
nomination of White House physician, Rear Admiral Dr. Ronny Jackson,
Trump’s pick to become Secretary of Veterans Affairs, has been
derailed by revelations of his presiding over a hostile work
environment, being drunk on the job, and overly prescribing
prescription medications as Trump claims to be fighting the opioid
epidemic, another example of his improper vetting of his nominees.
Democrats lost the high
profile Arizona race for the House of Representative in a district
that Trump won by more than 20 points but narrowed the Republican
victory to approximately six points. However, they have made inroads
into the number of seats needed to take over the House in 2018. The
Democrats’ major political challenge is not to be sidetracked
by focusing on the past, current, and future scandals surrounding
Trump and his associates. The print and broadcast media will provide
ample coverage and emphasis on these events. To date, Trump’s
not so secret political strategy has been to lure Democrats into a
modern day “rope a dope” scheme akin to Muhammed Ali’s
approach to fighting heavyweight champion, George Foreman, for the
title in 1974. Ali maneuvered him into expending his energy by
punching himself out, while Ali leaned on the ropes, before he
knocked Foreman out in the eighth round. This tactic worked against
Hillary Clinton in 2016, and Trump could prevail during the midterms
if Democrats persist in pursuing it.
It would be prudent for
Democrats to essentially chill in their continuing criticism of the
President at every turn as a major party emphasis. There are far
more important efforts that they should pursue. First, they need to
support teachers, a critical part of their base, in their protests
and strikes to fully fund public education, raise their wages, ensure
the safety of their students, and defeat the privatization of public
education. To date, Democrats have essentially straddled the fence
in their backing of teachers and public education as they have
provided aid and comfort to those individuals, organization, and
corporations who are daily creating initiatives to privatize
education and other public services for private profit. Teachers
need to demand that Democrats work closely with them to frame an
education agenda that they will promote at the local, state, and
federal levels. They must also be assertive in making certain that
Democrats hold the line against the dismantling of public education
and of their profession.
Second, the Democratic
National Committee (DNC) needs to be more inclusive in communicating
with all its groups— suburban white females, millennials,
people of color, immigrants, the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender,
and queer (LGBTQ) communities to ensure that their primary concerns
are incorporated into the DNC platform. It must refrain from
advancing a national plan that requires its base to follow a
political itinerary that is not always in sync with local and
regional interests. This was evident in the 2017 statewide elections
and legislative races that Democrats won rather handily in most
instances and by large margins in races for Governor, Lt. Governor,
and Attorney General based on their direct attentiveness to their
constituents. There are limited indications that the DNC embraces
this perspective.
Third, and by far the
most important task for the Democratic Party, is to conduct an
electoral autopsy to determine why so many traditional Democratic
voters turned to Trump for political salvation in 2016. It is
foolhardy to write them off as deplorables, racists, homophobes, and
white male--mostly Christian—voters fearful about their place
at the political table as Hillary Clinton did in 2016 and persists in
doing today. Undoubtedly, some of these elements exist among Trump
voters as they do among Democrats. But far more Trump voters were
attracted by his fiscal message, although flawed, which strongly
appealed to their very real social and economic anxieties. A major
reason for their defections was the simple fact that Democrats did
not properly acknowledge these feelings and simply took them for
granted. The Democratic victories in Republican strongholds since
Trump’s election have been largely a result of Trump’s
personal peccadillos, their disappointment in his leadership, and
local and state Democrats targeting local uncertainties. Those
winners have largely achieved their success by addressing local
worries.
Therefore, Democrats
can only return to power if they keep their eyes on the ball and
return to their working-class roots and commitment to equity that has
sustained them since the 1960s. The question is whether they can
stay on task while campaigning to regain the majority.
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