By Ben Shapiro
Tuesday, June 05, 2018
In 2016, congressional Democrats were given a gift: the
election of Donald Trump. Trump’s approval ratings had never crossed 51
percent; they’d consistently hovered in the low 40s. His personal popularity
had always been low, and he had an obvious penchant for jumping on political
land mines with both feet. All Democrats had to do was sound reasonable, and
they’d probably take back the House of Representatives in sweeping fashion.
Oh well.
The latest polls show that the generic ballot lead for
Democrats has dropped from a nearly insurmountable 13 points in December to
about three points today. According to a new CBS News/YouGov tracking poll, the
odds on a Democratic House takeover are now about 50/50. On average since 1865,
the party in power has lost 32 House seats and two Senate seats in midterm
elections; Democrats need just 24 seats to flip the House this year. Yet
they’re still falling short.
Why?
Because Democrats can’t hem themselves in on two topics:
Trump and policy.
Democrats had a massive opportunity when Trump was
elected. As an ideological nonconformist and a reactionary personality, Trump
seems particularly susceptible to praise and flattery. Imagine if Senate
Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi
(D., Calif.) had strolled into the Oval Office during the first week of Trump’s
presidency, sidled up to Trump, and told him that they’d love to impose
indelible change on America by granting everyone comprehensive health care. There’s
a decent shot that with the help of then–White House chief strategist Steve
Bannon, Trump would have gone full Bernie Sanders. That isn’t complete
speculation — in September 2017, Trump went over the heads of congressional
Republicans in favor of working with Schumer and Pelosi to avoid a government
shutdown.
But instead of playing nice with Trump, while stoking the
flames of anti-Trump ire with their base, Democrats promised a deus ex machina: Trump would flame out,
retire, be impeached, be prosecuted by Robert Mueller for Russian collusion,
and all the rest. Trump wasn’t merely a bad guy — he was the worst guy; a buffoonish Hitler clad in
the armor of cruel conservatism.
But there’s a problem: Trump hasn’t flamed out. Mueller
so far hasn’t come up with credible evidence of Russian collusion, and even the
high hopes surrounding porn star Stormy Daniels have gone flaccid. Trump
himself seems alternatively irked by his office and trollishly empowered by it,
but never willing to walk away. That’s dispiriting to the Democratic base,
which spends each morning fuming over the latest Trumpian twitterstorm,
thrilling to the extremist musings of kooks such as Maxine Waters (D., Calif.).
All of which means that Democrats have been forced to
turn to the second prong of their 2018 attack: policy.
But on policy, the Democratic record looks even worse.
Trump’s rhetoric continues to fuel feelings of unmoored chaos, but the markets
continue to soar, the job market grows, and we’re not in the middle of any
serious foreign-policy crisis. In 2016, CNN
Money warned, “A Trump win would sink stocks.” Nope. Pelosi warned that
Trump’s tax cuts were mere “crumbs” that would amount to nothing. Nope.
Hollywood celebrities warned about the significant possibility of global
thermonuclear war. Nope. Democrats promised a dystopian hellscape. Instead,
they got an economy so good that the New
York Times ran a piece headlined “We Ran Out of Words to Describe How Good
the Jobs Numbers Are.”
Democrats have therefore had to fall back on their font
of ideas: a 76-year-old socialist loonbag from Vermont, the ideological leader
of their party. Bernie Sanders has spent the last few months gallivanting
around stirring up the populist revolution for $15 minimum wage. His most
recent target: Disney, a corporation that leans to the left and employs some
200,000 Americans. Sanders’s preferred policy prescriptions have already been
embraced by Seattle, which is busily alienating its major businesses ranging
from Amazon to Microsoft, and California, which continues to look more like Mad Max than Vermont.
So perhaps policy isn’t the big winner Democrats are
looking for, either.
Which means that Democrats have only two strategies left:
wait for Trump to implode or wait for his policies to implode. Both are
possible — Trump is the most volatile president in modern American history, and
economic downturns are rarely foreseeable. But for the moment, Democrats are in
real trouble.
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