Tuesday, December 2, 2025

A New Working-Class GOP? If “Working-Class” Means $4.3 Million a Year!

 https://newrepublic.com/article/195867/working-class-gop-trump-plutocrats

The New Republic
 
 

OLD “WHINE”

A New Working-Class GOP? If “Working-Class” Means $4.3 Million a Year!

Last year, Trump won praise for building a new GOP. But the Big, Beautiful Bill utterly shatters the illusion that he is some sort of brilliant policy innovator.

Trump sits, leaning on the arm of an upholstered sofa.
Oleg Nikishin/Getty Images 

So much for a new, “populist” Republican Party. So much for the GOP as a brave band of fiscally prudent, anti-deficit hawks. The “Big, Beautiful Bill” is a declaration of intellectual bankruptcy, policy incoherence, and political vacuousness. That’s its formal name, by the way, and you’ve already admitted a problem when you have to sell something that hard.

It’s no wonder that the only way the BBB passed the House was for one opponent to vote “present” and for two others to miss the vote. One of the absent members fell asleep and missed the vote, an entirely appropriate response to an exercise in philosophical exhaustion. Defending the bill requires twisting facts into the “alternative” variety and turning the plain meaning of words upside down.

For example: The right wingers who demanded more cuts in programs for low-income people are regularly described as “deficit hawks.” But even if they had gotten all the changes they sought, the bill would have massively increased the deficit. And most of them voted for a final product that will add close to $4 trillion to the nation’s indebtedness.

If these guys are hawks, I don’t know what a dove looks like.  

Trump and his backers continue to insist that they are building a new working-class Republican coalition. But the astonishing thing about this bill is not only that it lavishes tax cuts on the very well-off; it also takes money away from Americans earning less than $51,000 a year once its cuts in Medicaid, the Affordable Care Act, SNAP, and student loans are counted for. Republicans who rail against “income redistribution” are doing an awful lot of redistribution themselves—to those who already have lots of money.

The Penn Wharton budget model of the near-final version of the bill found that Americans earning less than $17,000 would lose $1,035 under its terms. Those earning between $17,000 and $50,999 would lose $705. But the small number of our fellow citizens who earn more than $4.3 million a year have a lot to cheer about: They pick up $389,280 annually.

Please explain to me again why this is a “populist” Republican Party.

It’s imperative not to miss what’s obvious about this billthat it ravages lower-income people to benefit the very privilegedand for progressives and Democrats to act on this.

But it’s also essential to notice what doesn’t get enough attention: that so much of the commentary about how Trump has reinvented the GOP with a fresh set of ideas and commitments is poppycock. Trumpism is certainly dangerous and authoritarian in new ways. It is, well, innovative when it comes to a vast and unconstitutional expansion of presidential power.

But it’s also an ideological mess riddled with contradictions. When you look below the hood, it’s primarily about the interests of people who can buy their way into Trump’s golf clubs and private pay-for-play dinnersand, especially, about the enrichment of Trump and his family.

On the phony populism side, Democrats in the House did a generally good job of highlighting the costs of provisions in the bill that hurt so many of Trump’s voters, particularly the cuts in Medicaid and nutrition assistance, or SNAP. Senate Democrats have already ramped up similar efforts as that body’s Republican leaders prepare to grapple with the steaming pile of incongruities the House has sent their way.

You can tell that Republicans know how unpopular the Medicaid cuts in the bill are because they delayed their effectiveness date to minimize their electoral effect, repeatedly denied they are cutting Medicaid—and don’t want to talk at all about how slashing subsidies within the Affordable Care Act would take health coverage away from millions more Americans.

They are hiding the Medicaid cuts behind “work requirements” that are really bureaucratic paperwork requirements that would make it much harder for people with every right to coverage to access it. They would make it more difficult for others to maintain continuous coverage. And if these rules were not about “cutting” Medicaid, the GOP couldn’t claim to be “cutting” roughly $700 billion in Medicaid spending.

But the GOP thinks it has a winner in its work argument. It’s a tired but tested replay of a very old (and, yes, offensive) trope about alleged grifters among supposedly “lazy” poor people. House Speaker Mike Johnson offered a remarkable version of this defense of the “work” provisions: He said they were aimed at “the young men who need to be out working instead of playing video games all day.” If ever there was a quote that should go viral, this is it. Young men, after all, shifted toward the Republicans in 2024. They should know what the party many of them voted for thinks of them.

More important, progressives need to take the work argument on directly, not only by showing that the work provisions aren’t really about work but also by offering amendments replacing the Medicaid cuts with provisions that actually would expand the availability of well-paying opportunities for greater self-sufficiency. Restoring the clean energy tax credits are important not only to battling climate change; they’re also about preserving and creating well-paying jobs. A package of proposals on affordable housing, job training, and access to community colleges, particularly in economically depressed areas, would make a nice contrast to those who deny that government has the capacity to improve lives.

What the Financial Times’ economics columnist Martin Wolf nicely termed “pluto-populism” when the GOP passed the 2017 tax cuts that this bill extends is alive and well. That populist rhetoric is being married to plutocratic policies is still not recognized widely enough. This is certainly a commentary on the rightward tilt of the media system the editor of this magazine has called out. But it also reflects a failure of Democrats to take the argument to the heart of Trump’s base.

It’s political common sense that parties focus most of their energy on swing states and swing districts. Yet there will be no breaking the 50-50 deadlock in our politics without a concerted effort to change the minds of voters who have drifted to Trump out of frustration with their own economic circumstances and the condition of their regions. The fight over Medicaid and SNAP cuts directly implicates these voters and these places.

And these voters pay more attention to these issues than either the Republicans who take them for granted or Democrats who have given up on them believe.

When Andy Beshear won his first race for governor of Kentucky in 2019, he not only mobilized Democrats in urban areas; he also flipped many rural counties and cut the Republicans’ margins in others. Typical was Carter County in eastern Kentucky. The county went for Beshear even though it had backed his GOP opponent and then-incumbent Republican Governor Matt Bevin four years earlier and gave Trump 73.8 percent of its ballots in 2016. Breathitt County in Appalachia also flipped, having gone for Bevin and voted 69.6 percent for Trump.

Fred Cowan, a former Kentucky attorney general and a shrewd student of his state’s politics, told me then that these voters understood where their interests lay. “In a lot of these counties, the school systems or the hospitals—or bothare the biggest employers,” he said “The Medicaid expansion helped a lot of people over there.”

Sure, it’s easier for Democrats like Beshear with strong local profiles to make their case. But the national party needs to learn from these politicians that giving up on whole swaths of voters is both an electoral and moral mistake.

The emptiness of Republican populism speaks to the larger problem of mistaking Trump’s ability to create a somewhat new electoral coalition with intellectual and policy  innovation. Some conservative commentators are honest enough to admit how the BBB demonstrates that the “old Republican Party is still powerful, the old ideas are still dominant,” as Ross Douthat observed in The New York Times.

But even Douthat wants to cast the bill as an exception to a bolder transformation the president has engineered, particularly around immigration and a “Trumpian culture war.” The problem here is that none of this is new, either.

The GOP was moving right on immigration well before Trumpwhen, for example, it killed George W. Bush’s immigration bill in 2007 as right-wing media cheered it on. The culture war and the battle against universities are old hat too. The real innovator here was the late Irving Kristol, whose columns in the 1970s introduced Wall Street Journal readers to the dangers posed to business interests by “the new class” of Hollywood, media, and university types, along with activist lawyers. True, Trump is taking this fight to extreme places Kristol would never have gone. But, again, there’s no new thinking here.

And the attack on trans rights is just the latest front in the LGBTQ+ debates, now that the right has had to abandon its opposition to same-sex marriage because Americans have come to support it overwhelmingly.

Even the contradictions aren’t new. Since the Reagan years, Republicans have always talked about the dangers of deficits when Democrats were in power but cast those worries aside when they had the power to cut taxes. “Reagan proved deficits don’t matter” is the canonical Dick Cheney quote from 2002 when he was pushing for more tax cuts in W.’s administration. The exception proves the rule: George H.W. Bush made a deal with Democrats in 1991 that included tax increases because he really did care about deficits—and conservatives never forgave him for it.

In an odd way, you have to admire Cheney’s candor: At least he admitted what he was doing. The Freedom Caucus members have the gall to yell at the top of their lungs about how they care so very much about the debtand then vote in overwhelming numbers to pile on billions more.

As the debate over the BBB moves to the Senate, the immediate imperative is to expose the damage the bill does to millions of Trump’s voters to benefit his Mar-a-Lago and crypto-wealthy friends. But it’s also an occasion to shatter the illusion that Trump is some sort of brilliant policy innovator. Extremism and authoritarianism are not new ideas, and his legislative program would be familiar to Calvin Coolidge. 

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    Civil Society is Mounting a Resistance to Trump—Business Leaders Must Follow Suit

     https://www.justsecurity.org/113882/civil-society-resistance-trump-business-leaders/

     

    Stock market statistics are displayed as traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) at the opening bell on April 21, 2025, in New York City. Wall Street stocks opened lower amid lingering uncertainty over President Trump's trade policy. (Photo by ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images)

    Civil Society is Mounting a Resistance to Trump—Business Leaders Must Follow Suit

    Since taking office, the Trump administration has launched an aggressive assault on the institutions, norms, and values that sustain American democracy. Attacks on independent media, political retaliation against law firms and charities, demands to control universities, and efforts to punish dissent have become defining features of this moment. Comparisons to the authoritarian drift seen in Hungary, Turkey, and elsewhere are apt; authoritarian leaders often begin by isolating and weakening civil society. But the Trump administration is underestimating the strength of American institutions.

    We are beginning to see early signs of meaningful resistance. Charitable foundations, law firms, and universities — pillars of American society — are beginning to organize, defend themselves, and stand together against these threats.

    Business leaders now face a pivotal choice: Will they join these civil institutions and mount a collective defense against a government that not only threatens market stability, investor confidence, and economic growth but also the fundamental well-being of democracy? Or will they remain passive as the United States retreats from its democratic roots? As they consider stepping up, they should look to civil society for inspiration about how to respond.

    Collective Self-Defense

    Charitable Institutions  

    Evidence of this emerging civil resistance can be found in the philanthropic sector. The United States has by far the largest charitable sector in the world, with 60 percent of global foundation assets held by U.S. organizations, totaling close to $1 trillion. In April, a group of charitable organizations released a joint statement pledging collective action if the government seeks to challenge them or the non-governmental organizations they support. More than 670 organizations have now signed that statement.

    John Palfrey, president of the McArthur Foundation, whose assets totaled $8.7 billion in 2023, has been one of the leaders of this effort, motivated by what he calls “full frontal attacks on the fundamental system of the rule of law in America.” MacArthur has also announced that it will step up its giving in response to the Trump “crisis.”

    The Legal Community

    The legal community is also starting to mobilize. Over 500 law firms recently signed a friend-of-the-court brief opposing government retaliation against Perkins Coie for representing clients unpopular with this administration, including Hillary Clinton. In March, almost 200 law school deans signed a letter condemning efforts to penalize lawyers based on whom they represent. Federal judges – including J Harvie Wilkinson III, a federal judge appointed by President Ronald Reagan – have also spoken out about these attacks on the American legal system.

    Colleges and Universities

    Higher education leaders, too, have made clear that they will not quietly submit to government control. On April 14, Harvard’s President Alan Garber sent just the right message when he rejected the Trump administration’s demands, emphasizing that, “no government – regardless of which party is in power – should dictate what private universities can teach, who they can admit and hire, and which areas of study and inquiry they can pursue.” Harvard continues to challenge the administration’s efforts to interfere with its educational mission, including most recently by filing a lawsuit challenging the administration’s effort to bar foreign students from attending.

    The Big Ten Academic Alliance is pursuing a “mutual defense pact” in which member institutions would provide legal representation, countersuits, strategic communications, amicus briefs, expert testimony, legislative advocacy and research in defense of any school that becomes a target of the administration. Faculty bodies at at least 10 of the 18 Big Ten Schools have endorsed this proposal. Since late April, the leaders of more than 650 colleges and universities signed a statement—issued through the American Association of Colleges and Universities—denouncing the Trump administration for its “unprecedented government overreach and political interference” in higher education.

    These actions from civil society matter not just because they uphold abstract democratic principles, but because they model a practical, urgent strategy in this new environment: collective self-defense.

    When autocratic governments move to consolidate power, they often target institutions one by one, hoping to isolate them and make an example. The only effective response is solidarity — standing together to make retaliation costly and ineffective.

    What Business Leaders Need to Do

    Business leaders now need to step up as well. To date most have stayed silent or in some cases publicly aligned themselves with the administration’s agenda in hopes of winning short-term financial gains, some examples include Energy Transfer and EQT Corporation. Their reticence to stick their heads above the parapet is not surprising. Many lead companies have large federal contracts or with a dependency on favorable treatment from government regulators.

    But their continued silence carries an escalating price. We are already seeing warning signs that the US business environment is growing less stable and less secure. Tariffs and other politically driven market interventions are disrupting supply chains, shrinking margins, and introducing volatility that undermines long-term investment and threatens millions of workers.

    The transactional nature of the administration’s approach and its increasing corruption are eroding consumer confidence, and making the United States a less attractive destination for foreign investors. The hollowing out of government agencies, for example, those charged with ensuring airline safety, regulating food and drugs, and overseeing the integrity of the financial markets are weakening democratic guardrails that have contributed to a stable business environment. As these and other democratic norms erode further, businesses are likely to face growing legal uncertainty, arbitrary enforcement, and heightened political risk.

    Though a few leaders of big U.S. corporations have stepped up, they have done so on issues that directly affect business such as tariffs. A number of business leaders, like JP Morgan’s CEO Jamie Dimon and Walmart’s CEO Douglas McMillon, have challenged the administration’s tariff policies. In May, Warren Buffett, CEO of Berkshire Hathaway went a step further warning more broadly that “trade should not be a weapon.”

    A few large companies have challenged the administration’s hardline attack on diversity and inclusion policies, including Costco, Apple and Starbucks. They have made it clear that pursuit of diversity policies is in their company’s best interests.

    More subtly but also importantly large companies are offering implicit support to law firms that have challenged the admiration demands for fealty by directing business to them. In April, for example, Microsoft transferred a significant portion of its legal business from Simpson Thacher and Bartlett, a firm that yielded to the administration’s demands, to another firm, Jenner and Block, that has successfully challenged the administration’s demands in court.

    Business leaders will find strength in numbers, and in taking collective action especially as they consider voicing concerns about the administration’s broader assault on the rule of law, and democratic norms—issues that affect business but society more broadly.

    These efforts need to transcend our partisan divide, involving business leaders with widely divergent political views. This must not be seen as a partisan issue but instead needs to be framed as an essential effort to safeguard the conditions that have made American markets the strongest and most dynamic in the world: free expression, stable governance, and a predictable rule of law.

    Initially these expressions of concern can be expressed privately, by groups of business leaders within business associations such as the Business Roundtable and the Chamber of Commerce. A next step would be to engage with business leaders now in senior positions in the Trump administration and with Republican leaders in the Congress. These types of private engagements often can be the most effective.

    At some point, and for those ready to engage more publicly, a group of corporate leaders should contemplate making public statements that stress the value businesses place on democratic norms – fidelity to the constitution, separation of powers, press freedom, independence of the judiciary and the rule of law.

    On a parallel track, companies should offer legal, financial, and strategic support to organizations under attack. For example, they can encourage their in-house legal offices to engage in pro bono legal representation of individuals subject to deportation proceedings or non-profit organizations that are under attack. They also can support law firms handling their commercial work to double down in similar pro bono commitments. Companies also can provide financial support to organizations engaged in civic education and efforts to build democratic resilience. In sum, businesses should make concerted efforts to promote policies and organizations that strengthen, rather than weaken, democratic institutions and the rule of law.

    The early signs of collective resistance from the nonprofit sector, legal community, and higher education show that coordinated action can make a difference. Business leaders must now follow that example, not just to protect the economic future of their own enterprises but to help preserve and defend our democracy.

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    GLOBAL WARMING bullshit

     

     recently released study by the scientists at the max ‘walk the’ plank institute reveal — This very expensive GLOBAL WARMING bullshit has got to stop. Our planet is freezing, record low temps,and our GW scientists are stuck in ice — trump tweets

    Newsom taunts Trump after tariffs loss: ‘It’s raining tacos’

     https://www.politico.com/news/2025/05/29/blue-states-cheer-trumps-tariff-setbacks-00375415 

     

    Newsom taunts Trump after tariffs loss: ‘It’s raining tacos’

    Democratic governors are taking a victory lap after a pair of court rulings against the president’s import tariffs.

    Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office.

    SAN FRANCISCO — Of all the blue state legal challenges to President Donald Trump, none have delivered as big a blow as two court rulings striking down his tariffs on imports from dozens of countries.

    Democratic governors and attorneys general seized the pair of rulings on Thursday as an affirmation of their warnings about the economic toll of rising prices on consumer goods and emptying shipping containers at ports along the East and West coasts.

    It was a stinging rebuke of Trump — and a rare victory for Democrats out of power in Washington and increasingly dependent on the courts system and Democratic-controlled state capitals to mount their resistance to the president.

    “It’s raining tacos today,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom said on the MeidasTouch Podcast on Thursday, an apparent reference to the TACO acronym that Wall Street investors have used to refer to whiplash over Trump’s see-sawing import taxes. The president has bristled at the name, which stands for “Trump always chickens out.”

    Newsom, whose state was among more than 14 that sued to challenge the tariffs, added, “It’s not a good day for Donald Trump and his central economic program. We’re very, very pleased at this moment, this brief moment.”

    Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, basking in the victory for blue states, told POLITICO that of all the lawsuits Democrats have filed to challenge Trump’s policies, the tariffs issue is “the most substantial for our economy, for our prosperity.”

    Democrats’ victory lap came after the New York-based U.S. Court of International Trade struck down Trump’s tariffs on Wednesday, concluding his actions were not authorized by the emergency economic powers he cited in signing four executive orders earlier this year — a major blow to his strategy to use tariffs as leverage to strike trade deals around the world. A second federal court issued a similar ruling invalidating Trump’s tariffs on Thursday morning, when a D.C. District Court judge ordered a halt to duties collected from two toy companies that brought the case.

    “It’s interesting watching the president flail around here; he proposes tariffs and then he backs off,” said New York Rep. Joe Morelle, a Democrat from the Rochester area along the Canadian border. “If this is people’s idea of a master negotiator, I don’t know what people think a bad negotiator is.”

    Wednesday’s decision covered a case filed by Oregon and 11 other Democrat-led states, including Colorado, New York, Illinois and Minnesota, challenging the constitutionality of Trump’s actions. California, the first state to sue over Trump’s tariffs, is challenging his actions in a separate but related lawsuit in U.S. District Court in San Francisco.

    The Trump administration immediately appealed the rulings, and a federal appeals court temporarily reinstated his sweeping “reciprocal” tariffs as it considers the administration’s request to leave the tariffs in place while litigation plays out. However, that pause only applies to the ruling from the Court of International Trade.

    The economic effects of the rulings are still far from certain. And even as Democratic politicians rejoiced, a pervasive sense that Trump’s trade war could still go wrong permeated the nation’s largest ports in Los Angeles and Long Beach.

    Port of Los Angeles Executive Director Gene Seroka told KNX Radio that although the court ruling is encouraging, it added to the “whipsaw effect of information” that has left even the most seasoned international trade experts scrambling.

    “It’s not going to open up the gates of American imports just yet,” he said.

    Port of Long Beach CEO Mario Cordero shared those concerns, saying shipping companies have told him they need time to assess the potential impacts of the court ruling before deciding whether to bring in more imports.

    “We expect the canceled sailings at the Port of Long Beach in June to remain canceled until there is additional clarity about collection of tariffs,” Cordero said in a statement.

    Seroka said the port has seen a recent uptick in activity after Trump lowered a 145 percent tariff on Chinese goods to 30 percent, as American importers moved to scoop up products that had already arrived but were sitting on the docks. The initial 145 percent levy resulted in 17 ships canceling bookings and a 30 percent drop in imports over the first two weeks of May.

    But it could still be weeks or months until the ports see imports pick up, Seroka warned, and lagging trade comes at a critical time for American businesses, which typically would already have orders placed for Christmas and year-end holiday shopping season.

    Still, Democratic officials on Capitol Hill and in states across the country relished the chance to check Trump’s executive powers.

    New York Attorney General Letitia James, one of the 12 attorneys general who sued the Trump administration in April, hailed Wednesday’s trade court ruling in a social media post: “The president cannot ignore the Constitution and impose massive tax hikes on the American people.”

    Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer sought to reclaim the label Trump put on his tariffs announcement by posting “Liberation Day.”

    Xavier Becerra, a Democrat who served as both California attorney general and a member of the House Committee on Ways and Means, which deals extensively with tariffs, noted the weight of the trade court’s ruling coming from a three-judge panel.

    “It wasn’t just significant. It was consequential,” Becerra said. “This decision, especially because it was unanimous — and especially because it included two judges appointed by Republicans — I think this crystallized what many of us have said: ‘The president has a lot of authority, but it’s not omnipotent, and he has to respect laws.’”

    Becerra, who is running for California governor in 2026, told POLITICO that the result of the judges’ decision will provide a measure of predictability for industry and businesses.

    “The president has some authority to help implement or execute on the tariffs, but it’s got to be within those margins,” he said. “And they went way beyond the margins.”

    Mike Frerichs, the Democratic Illinois state treasurer, said the rulings could stave off the most severe economic effects of Trump’s tariffs on vulnerable industries, including corn and soybean farmers. Moreover, Frerichs said whiplash with Trump’s trade policies has already undermined his supposed goal to bring manufacturing jobs back to the middle of the country.

    “No company is going to make a long-term commitment when there is no belief that they will stay in place,” Frerichs said. “Wall Street has been talking about TACO this week… So why would you shut down a factory in China and move it to the U.S. if, two weeks from now, the tariffs are going to disappear?”

    Christopher Cadelago, Liz Crampton, Emily Ngo, Nick Reisman and Shia Kapos contributed to this report.

    Delaware court grants win for Twitter in first hearing in Musk trial

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2022/07/19/twitter-elon-musk-trial/

    twitter wins first round