By Matthew Continetti
Saturday, May 5, 2018
Ever since April 30, when the New York Times published a list of topics that special counsel
Robert Mueller would like to ask President Trump about, cable news and the
political press have focused exclusively on the two major legal matters in
which the president is entangled.
First, of course, is Mueller’s open-ended probe into
Russian interference in the 2016 election. Second is the Southern District of
New York’s investigation into Trump attorney Michael Cohen’s business dealings,
including with Stephanie Clifford, aka Stormy Daniels. The coverage has been
typically sensationalist and hyperbolic. Each new revelation, personnel change,
tweet, and television interview is greeted as a prelude to Trump’s
defenestration and exile. Putin, Mueller, Comey, Stormy, Rudy, and the two
Michaels, Cohen and Avenatti—these are the only names that seem to matter in
American political discourse.
What the Democratic Party has not recognized is that
Trump’s legal dramas, though good for ratings, have done little to benefit the
political opposition. On the contrary: President Trump’s approval rating has
been on the upswing. He stands at 44 percent approval in the Real Clear Politics average, his highest
rating in a year. That number might well be slightly higher, given the
existence of “Shy Trump Voters” who are afraid of the stigma attached to
approving of the president.
Meanwhile, since December, the Democratic advantage on
the congressional generic ballot has been cut in half, from plus 13 points to
plus 6.5 points. In a new survey, pollsters for Democracy Corps and Women’s
Voices Women’s Vote Action Fund, while optimistic about Democratic chances in
the fall, nonetheless concede that the party’s “momentum has stalled in the
last few months.”
Why? Well, the most obvious answer is the economy, with
its strong job market and positive wage growth. One could also say that voters
like peacemakers, and so have embraced President Trump’s desire to meet with
Kim Jong-un of North Korea. Both explanations sound reasonable to me.
But I would also suggest another one: The American
electorate has not changed fundamentally in the decades since the Clinton
presidency, when in the words of the late Jeffrey Bell it held a “bifurcated
view” that separated the man from his policies. And as long as the policies
seemed to be working, the man’s opponents found themselves wrapped around the
axle of personal disgust, waiting in frustration for voters to recognize and
repudiate defects of character that were all too plain to see.
Trump became president despite majority personal
disapproval. His victory depended on a coalition between his devoted fans and
more traditional Republican voters who, despite misgivings, supported him
because they concluded that the alternative was worse personally and
politically. Evaluations of his character are now “priced in” to the electoral
market. That is why NBC News/Survey Monkey found this week that Republicans who
say Trump is dishonest support him anyway. And it is why Trump’s overall
approval in this poll is 45 percent, “tied with the highest rate of approval
recorded by the NBC News/ Survey Monkey poll since he began his presidency.”
The incessant spotlight on the lawyers, on their clients
and subjects and targets, not only occupies the attention of Democrats and the
anti-Trump Resistance to the exclusion of other topics. It also relieves them
of any responsibility to come up with a substantive message. The voters, by
contrast, read the headlines with a cursory or prurient interest as they go
about their lives in the real world of work, family, community, and faith. One
voter told me the other day that legal terminology makes her eyes glaze over;
she’d much rather browse Instagram. But such terminology is all anyone speaks
in Washington nowadays—even if most pundits are not lawyers, probably couldn’t
get into law school, and make up for their lack of expertise and inside
knowledge with hyperbole and speculation.
“In the past few months,” write the authors of the
Democracy Corps poll, “Democrats have appeared less focused on the economic and
health-care battles that most engage anti-Trump voters; at the same time,
Republican base voters, especially white working-class men, could finally point
to a signature conservative policy achievement in the new tax cut law, where
before they were grasping for news to justify their vote.”
Is it any wonder that Democrats appear less focused on
the issues that engage voters, when the most prominent spokesmen for the party
are Adam Schiff and his mannequins on the House Intelligence Committee, and
Richard Blumenthal and Ron Wyden on the Senate side? When Michael Avenatti is
on television to such an extent that by the end of this process he won’t just
have his own show, but probably his own network?
I take exception with Democracy Corps’ analysis on one
point. The tax bill passed in December, yet Trump’s approval began its most
recent rise in March. That is exactly when he announced, against the wishes of
his some of his own advisers and the Republican Congress, his first round of
steel and aluminum tariffs. It is Trump’s desire to combat offshoring and
deindustrialization, more than the tax bill, which is galvanizing his base and
strengthening his economic message. More even than immigration, trade and
manufacturing were the issues that distinguished Trump from elites in both
parties and won him a mass majority of white voters without college degrees.
College-educated voters and suburban women disgusted with
Trump may be enough to win the Democrats a slim House majority. But Democrats
won’t find themselves in a truly commanding position until they make inroads
among the Rust Belt voters who abandoned Hillary Clinton for the president. The
more the party focuses on Robert Mueller and Stormy Daniels, the less likely it
is to recognize the appeal of Trump’s economic message and to adjust
accordingly. The more the party falls for the self-flattery, empty rhetoric,
question begging, and maze-like complexity of media narratives—not to mention
the more it succumbs to the fever-dream of impeachment—the less likely it is to
recoup the power it once enjoyed.
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