What’s So New About the ‘New Right’?
JD Vance and his allies represent a mind-set that dates back to the McCarthy era and the dawn of the Cold War.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/10/magazine/jd-vance-new-right-republicans.html?smid=em-share
We all mostly communicate with people and organizations that share our views
What’s So New About the ‘New Right’?
JD Vance and his allies represent a mind-set that dates back to the McCarthy era and the dawn of the Cold War.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/10/magazine/jd-vance-new-right-republicans.html?smid=em-share
The Real Reason Trump and Vance Hate Being Called ‘Weird’
It reminds voters how far out of the mainstream Republicans have gotten.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/09/opinion/trump-vance-harris-walz-weird.html?smid=em-share
J. D. Vance is just the man that the Catholic right has been waiting for, @DamonLinker writes:
Democrats Have Needed Someone Like Tim Walz for Decades
The Minnesota governor fills a decades-long geographic messaging gap for Democrats.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/07/opinion/tim-walz-prairie-populist.html?smid=em-share
Sarah Smarsh is a journalist and the author of the forthcoming book “Bone of the Bone: Essays on America by a Daughter of the Working Class” and “Heartland: A Memoir of Working Hard and Being Broke in the Richest Country on Earth.”
Keir Starmer’s party beat the far right and far left by addressing real voters’ problems.
Our democratic habits have been killed off by an internet kleptocracy that profits from disinformation, polarization, and rage. Here’s how to fix that.
What Democrats Need to Do Now David Brooks
If Democrats hope to win, they have to take the MAGA worldview seriously and respectfully make the case, especially to working-class voters, for something better.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/18/opinion/maga-trump-vance-democrats.html?smid=em-share
I cannot think of a sillier, more playground, more foolish and more counterproductive political taunt for Democrats to seize on than calling Trump and his supporters “weird.”
But weird seems to be the word of the week. As this newspaper reported, in a potential audition to be Harris’s running mate, Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota said over the weekend of Trump and his vice-presidential pick, Senator JD Vance of Ohio: “The fascists depend on us going back, but we’re not afraid of weird people. We’re a little bit creeped out, but we’re not afraid.” Just to make sure he got the point across, Walz added: “The nation found out what we’ve all known in Minnesota: These guys are just weird.”
As The Times reported, Harris, speaking at a weekend campaign event at a theater in the Berkshires “leaned into a new Democratic attack on the former president and his running mate, Senator JD Vance of Ohio, saying that some of the swipes the men had taken against her were ‘just plain weird.’” The Times added: “Pete Buttigieg, the secretary of transportation, said Mr. Trump was getting ‘older and stranger’ while Senator Chuck Schumer, the majority leader, called Mr. Vance ‘weird’ and ‘erratic.’”
It is now a truism that if Democrats have any hope of carrying key swing states and overcoming Trump’s advantages in the Electoral College, they have to break through to white, working-class, non-college-educated men and women, who, if they have one thing in common, feel denigrated and humiliated by Democratic, liberal, college-educated elites. They hate the people who hate Trump more than they care about any Trump policies. Therefore, the dumbest message Democrats could seize on right now is to further humiliate them as “weird.”
“It is not only a flight from substance,” noted Prof. Michael J. Sandel of Harvard, author of “The Tyranny of Merit: Can We Find the Common Good?” “It allows Trump to tell his supporters that establishment elites look down on them, marginalize them and view them as ‘outsiders’ — people who are ‘weird.’ It plays right into Trump’s appeal to his followers that he is taking the slings and arrows of elites for them. It is a distraction from the big argument that Democrats should be running on: How we can renew the dignity of work and the dignity of working men and women.”
I don’t know what is sufficient for Harris to win, but I sure know what is necessary: a message that is dignity-affirming for working-class Americans, not dignity-destroying. If this campaign is descending into name-calling, no one beats Trump in that arena.
What Has Happened to My Party Haunts Me
Republicans once proudly proclaimed their reverence for the Constitution; in Milwaukee, they crowned as their leader a man who attempted to subvert it.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/29/opinion/trump-vance-republican-party.html?smid=em-share
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/07/23/american-democracy-reform-cenrist-solutions/
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