Trump’s negotiating style

On Friday, Trump’s high tariffs on Canada and Mexico were in effect. On Monday they were gone.

On Tuesday Trump said the Palestinians must leave Gaza, the most extreme demand of Netanyahu’s ultra nationalist coalition. The United States should take over Gaza, he added. Within hours, European and Arab States including Saudi Arabia and Egypt said no way.

Trump had to have been pleased. The most extreme Israeli proposal had been trounced and died without Trump leaving any fingerprints. Indeed, he roped in the most extreme supporters of Israel. The ones most likely to contribute to the Republican Party and most willing to call Democratic doves antisemites were happy. They were convinced that their President Donald Trump was a true friend of Israel, uncontaminated by wishy washy moderates.

The Arab’s rejection presumably was music to Trump’s ear: no American troops would go to West Asia. But Trump was the crazy man who wanted to use American power in Palestine. Democrats’ reaction is still taking shape. They and their friendly media accused Trump of being a mad man, exactly the image he wanted to project.

The other step Trump took offered Iran unspecified goodies if Tehran gave up atomic weapons. A proposal that presumably sits well with the Saudi Arabians. Trump reached this step without looking like a moderate. Netanyahu was neutralized. He was a major endorser of Trump and has damaged, if not destroyed, his relationship with Democrats. Trump’s headline grabbing proposal to turn Gaza into the “Riviera of the Middle East” is actually the opening gambit for the intricate negotiations that could lead to stability.

Bloomberg reported, “US President Donald Trump said Wednesday he’s willing to immediately start working on a new nuclear deal with Iran that allows the country to ‘peacefully grow and prosper,’ seemingly softening his stance on the Islamic Republic.”

In a matter of hours, Netanyahu’s visit had generated a proposal to reduce tension with Iran. An outcome from the first face-to-face meeting between the President and the Israeli leader that nobody predicted. Trump had gotten the better of Netanyahu. Democrats were left sputtering. They don’t support the removal of the Palestinians and consider Trump’s Riviera proposal outlandish. Accusations that usually have the effect of increasing Republican confidence in Trump and making it unlikely in the near future that Democrats will play a constructive role.

There is no mystery to Trump’s method: open with an idea that will be rejected and then move on. Putting Israel in a box might create a stunning success—a cease fire that lasts.

The Democrats project competence as opposed to Trump’s chaos, but they lack Trump’s showmanship. The voters are evenly divided but Democrats should not be fooled with the comforting belief that Trump is crazy and incompetent. It’s safe to say that eventually Democrats will make more specific, even damning, criticisms of Trump’s Middle East policies.  

It Wasn’t The Left, It Was The Party

It may be normal politics to blame the left for failures committed by all the Democrats. But the D’s should spread their net much wider. It was not just the left that made the party appear hapless in 2024.

My roommate, a poet, recently returned from a variety show at a Brooklyn home. A friendly gathering where photographers displayed their work, poets shared their creations, singers jammed, and everyone left with a warm glow—transgendered, gay, lesbian, or whatever choice the guests preferred. Who wouldn’t say “they” if that was the preference of a guest at this gathering. The left will only make modest changes. They are not a majority of the Democratic party, but it would be nearly impossible for this party to become a majority without their support.

In his book “Where have all the Democrats gone” Ruy Teixeira stresses the importance of social gatherings to cement political loyalty. Labor unions offered events and gathering places for years. Union members and their families and friends assumed we are all Democrats. That social cohesion is gone, replaced by the NRA and its social events. The assumption among this working-class group is we are all Republicans.

This is one meaning of the thought that the Democrats have lost the working class. Adding to this gap is the change in union membership. Industrial workers form one group among union membership. Other strong unions represent schoolteachers, government employees, and healthcare workers. Groups who identify as middle-class.

The industrial workers understand that their employers, be they General Motors or U.S. Steel, face stiff competition from foreign companies. They have softened their adversarial posture, recognizing that protecting their industry from overseas competitors requires a different approach. Needless to add, they are thrilled that Donald Trump will erect tariffs to protect their jobs and keep their employers competitive.

Teixeira seeks a revival of Democratic social solidarity with the working class, and he places great faith in a rejuvenated labor movement. His efforts should be encouraged, but he certainly is off base if he relies on blaming the left for causing the D’s problems. The left is here and enjoying its variety shows. It thinks Trump is a buffoon or even dangerous.

My roommate looks stunning in the dresses he frequently wears. His friends and I lavish him with compliments. He will continue to display his creativity. It is improbable that Teixeira’s reproach will have an effect on their lives and preferences.

And it will certainly be true that Kamala Harris would enjoy herself at one of these variety show. The Republicans scored a direct hit with the tag line “Kamala is for ‘they/them.’ President Trump is for you.”

Teixeira worries that the Democratic National Committee will favor the Kamala Harrises, and the NRA will retain its hold on working class. He is absolutely correct that this is a critical question; the tactic he favors, blaming the left for the D’s decline, misses the mark.

It might be the right tactic but it is the wrong analysis.

Roosevelt’s party defeated itself.

From the moment D’s decided to impeach Trump in his first term, they became enamored with anti-Trump hostility. It backfired. Democratic hostility proved to many Americans that Trump will make a difference. According to the Dems, Trump would destroy democracy and the rule of law. In other words, the Dems hostility convinced many that Trump is a genuine change agent. So great was mainstream party leaders’ faith in the electoral appeal of civic virtue that they spent years on venomous attacks.

Attacks that amounted to endorsements for the millions who thought the nation was on the wrong track. Undoubtedly the Dems kept the party united, but they ignored the crucial question: what will the party do to make America better. Trump had an answer. The Dems proudly touted their programs that helped the poor while allowing the nation to be flooded with low-wage workers. Obviously, it did not address the question. As of now, the Democrats still have not projected a program that will generate wage inflation. While Trump devotes most of his time to this popular task.

It was the Dems’ failure to have a popular and unifying program that allowed the trans issue to become a hot-button election issue. Had the Dems something to offer in the way of policy the trans issue would have stayed in the background. The left did not push the issue to the forefront. It was the Republicans. They got away with it because the Dems offered no alternative that engaged the voter.

The Dems are still at Trump’s mercy. They must wait to see if high tariffs raise Americans’ standard of living. Shifting the blame to the left avoids criticizing other wings of the Democratic Party, but it could stifle policies that truly compete with Trump’s.

Will Trump Create a Permanent Republican Majority?

More voters have no college degrees than do.

To belabor the obvious, a winning political coalition must win the loyalty of most voters, regardless of education level. President Franklin Roosevelt did this.

To those of us who want to stop endless wars, spend money domestically so the U.S. provides the same social benefits as European social democracies offer and regulate business to protect consumers and prevent runaway rents, enlisting all voters into a dominant coalition is a progressive necessity.

It is not enough to win landslide elections. Obama did that, Reagan did that, even Jimmy Carter did that. “To achieve … enduring realignment, a party’s approach to policy has to mesh with its approach to politics. …[The policies must] actually benefit the constituencies … .” Put simply, you can fool the people some of the time, but if the administration takes care of the prosperous and ignores the rest of us, the voters will look for new leadership. This is the conclusion of two political scientists focused on the obstacles to a progressive coalition. Ruy Teixeira and John B. Judis’s aptly titled book Where Have All the Democrats Gone? draws its lessons from recent political history.

In 1971, for the first time in the 20th century, the United States started importing more than it exported, running a negative trade balance. The new left, invigorated by its agitation over the Vietnam War and Jim Crow was joining forces with the labor movement. This coalition, which now included black voters, might dominate the Democratic Party and control its agenda.

Business took notice and organized. They hired lobbyist and ramped up campaign contributions. With these moves, the business community and its wealthy allies were no longer vulnerable and became dominant.

During the ‘70s, the U.S. economy spurred by Vietnam War expenditures, operated at full tilt, unemployment was low, and wages were rising even in the non-union South. Companies began to flee the United States to set up subsidiaries in low-wage nations. Even with the expense of transportation, the imported goods offered bigger profits than the goods made in the U.S. Globalization was starting and it would have a disastrous effect. A factory leaving New York City was a hiccup compared to a plant closing in Akron, Ohio or heavy industry leaving big cities like Pittsburgh. “By 1974, the largest American companies, including Ford, Kodak, and Procter & Gamble, employed more than a third of their workforce overseas.”

Industries moving overseas was a body blow to communities all over the United States. Unlike New York City, when smaller communities lost their biggest employer, their civic life suffered. Too often the young despaired, turning to drugs and even suicide. The future looked bleak and states like Iowa, Democratic since FDR, gradually welcomed the Republican Party.

Republicans were no more willing than the Democrats to pursue policies that helped workers. The book offers a clear definition of the working class: working for wages not an annual salary, having no college education, and no real authority over the products they make.

Unlike Senator Bernie Sanders, who includes schoolteachers in the working class, the authors’ definition describes a group whose potent asset is their numbers. United they can make their political party a winner. Judis/Teixeira believe in this possibility, but the political party must win these voters’ loyalty just as FDR did in 1933.

It was Trump’s innovation that put this group’s problems on the political frontburner. He didn’t blame the employers; he blamed China and tax laws for taking jobs overseas. Categories popular among workers became recognized by political elites. There are the “nationalists” and the “globalizers.” Workers fighting for jobs in the U.S. were nationalists, all too often the globalizers were college graduates. Far more numerous than they had been in the 1960’s they formed a voting bloc. They were comfortable with cultural changes, from feminism to opposing racism and choices about sexuality. These differences are fault lines that should be bridged, but so far the Democratic Party fails to unite the diversity in its ranks.

Teixeira and Judis reject the notion that racism has driven whites into Republican arms. These political scientists argue that when George Wallace stopped running for President after 1972, the nation and the white working class learned to live with Civil Rights. That year George McGovern got clobbered by Richard Nixon in one of the most lopsided Presidential votes in U.S. history. The Democrat won only Massachusetts and Washington D.C.

But the book’s most important lesson is that landslide elections are only half the battle; the party’s policies must satisfy the voter.

While racism exists, it doesn’t make a Democratic victory impossible, as demonstrated by Obama’s victories in 2008 and 2012. If Nixon clobbered the Democrats in 1972, Obama trounced the Republicans in 2008. Neither victory brought a new political coalition that dominated the nation the way FDR’s New Deal made the United States Democratic.

Recent history shows voters shifting from one party to the next. A victory for Obama in 2008 was followed by a Republican landslide in the 2010 off-year election. Teixeira and Judis suggest neither party is establishing policies that offer real relief to a public hungry for economic growth and good paying jobs. As a result, first one party dominates, then another. In this theory, the decline in Democratic votes that marked Vice-President Harris’s defeat is temporary, unless Trump’s administration really brings peace and prosperity to the U.S. If his policies bring real change, then the ’24 election might signal a realignment placing the Republicans into a quasi-permanent majority, but don’t bet on it.

Obama offered a similar opportunity for the Democrats, but rather than staying populist and enlisting the public to join political disputes on issues that separated the working class from the rich, he sought compromises and followed the advice of budget hawks and the rich. He had the rhetorical skills and intelligence to win political quarrels, yet time and again he avoided public disputes by seeking policies acceptable to Democrats and Republicans. When he left, Clinton lost, and Trump won.

It was a missed opportunity. Like FDR, Obama took office during an economic crisis. He won the election by presenting a plan for economic recovery that made his Republican opponent look like an amateur. The economists in Obama’s administration “calculated that it would take a $1.8 trillion stimulus” to turn the economy around. After meeting with business interests and conservative appointees, the final plan allocated “between $600 billion and $800 billion.”

Obama kept the budget deficit down, but he also let down the voters. The 2010 Republican triumph illustrated the seesaw pattern.

Businesses going overseas created a great divide in the U.S. Communities dependent on technology and finance prospered. Their educated middle-class prospered. Goods manufactured overseas meant globalists could buy their goods cheaply. Immigrants working cheaply meant low food prices. Nothing illustrated the “globalist” blind spot than the preference for foreign cars.

Immigrant rights became an albatross, undermining a Democratic majority. Working class voters understood that these new arrivals work for less money and drove wages down. If Democrats understood this they certainly did so quietly. They didn’t want to offend left voters who wanted an open-door policy. Nobody publicized the extent that immigrant rights were backed by corporate America. Making the left a partner of the corporate elites.

Democrats may benefit from Trump’s failures, but a true victory requires that Democrats make government responsive to the people, even if it makes budget deficits go up.

Democrats Must Fight Back Now

Don’t look back. Look ahead. Get ready for 2026. We can learn from the past if we are guided with a purpose: doing better next time.

Don’t spend time blaming the Vice-President’s campaign.

Donald Trump pounded the message: “Kamala is for ‘they/them.’ President Trump is for you.” It’s a brilliant tag line and a direct hit on Kamala Harris as being for those people who sign their messages They/them.

What can be done?

Senator Bernie Sanders insists voters are angry, but that anger is not Democratic or Republican. They know the economy is rigged; the rich get more while the rest of us just get by. They/them isn’t the problem. Democrats, he believes, must tap into this anger to prove they are for people who live paycheck to paycheck. Don’t let Republicans define the message. They/them isn’t the problem; high rents, evictions, and food costs are.

Why should food companies raise prices when their profits are soaring is a Bernie Sanders focus. Democrats should choose sides and make it clear that the food companies are a problem.

The Vermont socialist has an answer to Republican charges of elitism: “the Democrats lost this election because they ignored the justified anger of working class America.” In this election, the Party “became the defenders of a rigged economic and political system.”

Trump controlled the debate. He was able to convert the anxiety/hostility towards trans persons and immigrants into a general attack on Democrats. “Trump’s ‘genius’,” Sanders wrote “is his ability to divide the working class so that tens of millions of Americans will reject solidarity with their fellow workers and pave the way for huge tax breaks for the very rich and large corporations.”

Don’t let the Republicans define the issues. Focus on making the economy work for everyone.

Trump’s campaign got away with nonsense. He rebelled against the woke culture. “They/them” isn’t a serious problem. Healthcare that doesn’t “cover home health care, dental, hearing, and vision” is a national failure. Democrats should urge the public focus on these issues.

Sanders presses the Democrats to change the conversation. Why should the Citizens United decision allow billionaires to buy elections? He offers fourteen proposals that work, but only if the Party feeds voter anger.

He would campaign to raise the minimum wage and pass the Protecting the Right to Organize Act to make it easier for workers to unionize. These ideas don’t raise taxes or government spending. Other ideas, like expanding Medicaid and Medicare coverage, have big costs. But he argues they are so popular that the costs, offset by smaller payments to the pharmaceutical industry, would be acceptable to a majority.

His fourteen proposals are tactically sound. Some would provoke Republican tax arguments; others would make the economy fairer, that is where the Democrats will gai strength.

And he wants Democrats to start now. They should offer the public a choice between Democrat and Republican plans. The Democrats should offer a real choice that exposes the Republican’s vacuous ideas. For example, support making all public colleges tuition free. In this way, Democrats can build solidarity in many groups simultaneously. The focus becomes the idea and “they/them” stops being a roadblock and becomes a bump in the road.

In this election, the Republicans increased their vote. Trump received 75.6 million, [as of November 15 76.4] compared to 74.2 million in 2020. The Republican gains were moderate while Democratic losses were a landslide. Harris received 71.8 million, [as of Nov 15 73.7] compared to Biden’s 81.3 million votes in 2020. 9.5 million [7.6M as of Nov 15] fewer votes ought to spur the Democrats into publicizing an American future drastically different from Trump’s MAGA vision. Democrats shouldn’t wait even though they are in the minority; they should start offering a real choice.

Clearly, the Democratic left and center must cooperate in developing these new rationales. This is a task for the whole party. Centrist Democrats have to stop blaming the left for their problems. Why not use the left for inspiration?

Trump Shows Signs of Running a Professional Campaign, Making Democrats Worry

Clearly Trump will be harder to beat this year than he was in 2020. The election was held in the middle of the Covid epidemic, and glaring errors hurt Trump’s chances for reelection.

When Trump, at a news conference with public health officials, started thinking out loud, he suggested “it would be interesting to check” whether bleach could kill the virus and restore health. This mistake added to confusing messages he had been sending about the virus and wearing face masks.

This mistake was good news for Joseph Biden, who was trying to oust Trump from the White House. Biden’s aides quickly realized that Trump had hurt his chances of being reelected: “this was stratospherically insane and dangerous.” In 2024, the evidence is growing that the Trump campaign is avoiding errors that work to Biden’s advantage.

The Republican campaign is showing signs of professionalism that have to make Biden’s team nervous. The thorny question of who will be Trump’s running mate was presented for public comment when Donald Trump invited Doug Burgum to ride on his campaign airplane. It wasn’t an announcement, but it clearly signaled that anyone objecting had better make their case now, before the announcement. This is standard operating procedure, and it is a sign that this year Trump will be avoiding the mistakes that helped Joe Biden’s campaign win in 2020.

Doug Burgum is a native son of North Dakota who has amassed a considerable fortune and is in his second term as governor. He is the epitome of the self-made man and has a career that probably appeals to Trump. While still in college, he became a chimney sweep, a lowly beginning that is played up in his biographies. He started a software company that did business in Midwest states like North Dakota. It was a success, and Microsoft purchased the company. Governor Burgum has a knack for impressing people. Microsoft placed him in charge of Microsoft Business Solutions, selling Microsoft products to other businesses.

After leaving the software giant, Burgum went off on his own and started a technology venture capital company and a real-estate development firm. The Republican establishment backed the State Attorney General in North Dakota for Governor, but Burgum had the money and the personality to easily win the Republican primary.

In other words, Burgum has a career that may appeal to Donald Trump. In another sign that Trump is running a professional campaign this year, Burgum addressed a massive Trump rally on the Jersey Shore. 100,000 people showed up at the Wildwood rally. Beyond this show of enthusiasm, the rally took place in the Philadelphia media market. Trump found a way to mobilize his supporters and make a big impression in Pennsylvania, one of the battleground states for this year’s election.

This adds up to a campaign triumph, and it makes Biden’s job more difficult. Four years ago, Trump’s mistakes helped Biden win the election. That seems less likely this year.

Trump DEFIES THE CONSTITUTION BY SAYING THE ELECTION WAS STOLEN.

I have previously taken the Republicans to task for their constant opposition to taxes. A government with funds is clearly stronger than a poor government. There is a second serious problem with Republicans. The Republicans are not listening.

Every ten years, as required by the Constitution, a census is taken that determines how many members of Congress each state has. In January 2010, as the new census was started, the Supreme Court issued a decision called Citizens United, which permitted unlimited secret donations by corporations and wealthy individuals. The census determines how many members of the House of Representatives each state should have and how many Electoral College votes each state will have to elect the President of the United States. The total number of Electoral votes for a state is the two Senators plus the number of members of the House of Representatives, so if a state has 10 members [n the House of Representatives then it has 12 electoral votes. The census has always been a big deal in determining the relative strength of the political parties and who has the advantage when running for President. The process is considered fair because the census counts the number of individuals in the United States.

So when the conservative judges on the Supreme Court handed down the Citizens United decision in 2010, they knew full well that the money they were permitting would go to help conservatives get positive results from the census from 2010.

Boston College professor Heather Cox Richardson, in a crisp book for the interested reader states that by 2012 there were over 300 million dollars in dark money political donations. The 2012 election was a presidential election for Barack Obama’s second term and the election of a new Congress. Democrats received 1.4 million more votes for members of the House of Representatives, but the Republicans won a 33-seat majority. The Republican’s big victory enabled them to “hamstring” Obama’s agenda in his second term. This is political hardball and offends millions of fair-minded Americans, but it is far-removed from the sins committed by Donald Trump.

Professor Richardson’s “Democracy Awakening” is one of the books that damns Republicans and is written by a historian with Democratic leanings. It is thoughtful and persuasive. But a second book is written by a member of Republican royalty, whose family have been leaders in the Republican party since the Civil War.

Liz Cheney, whose father was vice-president to George W. Bush, is one in a long line of Republicans. She lives in Wyoming. While Professor Richardson takes the historian’s long view, Liz Cheney’s book puts the microscope on President Trump and his activities after the November 3, 2020 election. In “Oath and Honor,” she relies heavily on fellow Republicans to prove that Donald Trump was told by members of his campaign staff and presidential advisors that Joe Biden had won. This deep dive into Republican leadership gives her bestselling book an intimate view of efforts by Republicans who wanted the truth of Biden’s victory to guide decisions but were stymied by President Trump’s reliance on the big lie that his election was stolen.

Cheney, the third-ranking member of the House Republican leadership, presents a devastating portrait of Kevin McCarthy begging for Trump’s approval when his funding prowess dissipated and his willingness to say one thing one week and the exact opposite the next week. McCarthy resigned from the Congress in December 2023.

Cheney is not settling scores. She describes incidents, many of which were seen by the viewers of Fox television or the readers of the daily press. The power of her book comes from its reliance on Republican sources.

When it became clear that McCarthy and Cheney had irreconcilable differences, Cheney left her position in Republican leadership and became a member of the House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack.

At times her book reads like an adventure story, when members of Congress hunker down in a House Committee room while the mob tries to break down doors. At other times, she sounds like a super capable lawyer explaining the evidence collected by the Select Committee on the January 6 Attack—facts pile on facts, almost always from Republicans or members of the Trump administration, demonstrating that a bullheaded President refused to listen to the legal opinions stating that the election results were conclusive.

The dry language in the opening paragraphs of the U.S. Constitution turn into clear directive that the President is elected by the count of the members of the Electoral College, who are selected in the Presidential election. What seems obscure, to this reader, in the Constitution gains clarity as the lawyers explained the process to the President. An argument that gains heft as we learn that this is the way it has always been done since Washington was elected President.

Liz Cheney describes the steady accretion of evidence unearthed by the Select Committee. A desperate Trump of course insisted that the State legislatures could ignore the Electoral College, or he even told elected officials “to find” the votes he needed to win. Trump’s absurdity and corruption of legal procedures comes into full view. It’s a scary portrait she draws of an egotistical man who will listen to nobody but those who will support his wish for a victory despite the evidence of defeat. The conclusion isn’t novel, but the clarity of the evidence and the reasons why Trump is wrong make this a powerful book. Both Professor Richardson and Liz Cheney describe a dangerous situation where Trump would like to be President and rule the USA without opposition.

Liz Cheney argues that despite the knowledge by Republicans that this is dangerous and illegal they are unable to stop Trump. Thus, this year’s election has one party, the Democrats, supporting free elections, and the other major party bowing to Trump and asserting that his election was stolen. Democracy in the United States faces the greatest danger since the Civil War.