Summary

Conservative economist Oren Cass warns that Donald Trump could jeopardize his presidency by focusing on donor and activist agendas rather than the priorities of swing voters who secured his victory.

Writing in The New York Times, Cass argues that new presidents often mistake donor interests, such as tax cuts and deregulation, for the will of the electorate, leading to ineffective governance and loss of public trust.

Cass urges Trump to prioritize issues that resonate with the broader American public to avoid a fate that has derailed past presidencies.

  • Aielman15@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    If the last few years have taught me anything, it’s that what you do is not important as much as the narrative that you are able to spin.

    As long as TV news networks, podcasters, news outlets, and Musk’s Twitter exist, people who are too ignorant to understand they are being lied to, or too lazy to parse credible information, will stay in the dark and vote red in the next election as well.
    Democracy doesn’t work when the electorate is too illiterate to cast their vote justly. They’ll just vote for the next clown who promises them the moon.

    I don’t have a solution.

    • hemmes@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Exactly.

      I’ve had Republican friends send me articles, I read them, start the debate, only to realize they literally only read the headline.

      I’ve found myself reading terribly written articles just so that I’m sure I don’t misunderstand anything being portrayed in the article. Sometimes spending an extra 20-30 additional minutes for fact checking.

      Trying to have a subsequent conversation with them is like pissing in the wind.

      • flicker@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I really enjoyed explaining to a friend that the headline about outlawing child genital mutilation was referring to circumcision.

        …that was sarcasm.

    • jj4211@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Well, if goods become even more expensive, and wages fail to improve or get worse, then people tend to notice that more than the spin.

      Sure you have very loud passionate politically active people who are game for “their team” to win no matter what and will listen to anything to rationalize their position and reject anything that disagrees, but a lot of folks are just looking at their personal circumstance and deciding if they think it’s bad or not and voting either to continue or change, without a whole lot of consideration of what either side says will work or why things are the way they are, they just know “keep it going” or “change it out”.

    • GraniteM@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      We need never be afraid of the vote of informed Americans. It is only the ignorant voter we have to fear, ignorant politically, no matter how fine his house or how expensive his schooling. Such people have never experienced democracy; they have merely enjoyed its benefits. It is hard to explain what democracy is; it is necessary to participate in it to understand it.

      —Robert A. Heinlein, Take Back Your Government

      Unfortunately, there seems to be an awful lot of ignorance out there today.