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With Zero Evidence, NPR Suggests Trump May 'Work for the Working Class' in Second Term Jim Naureckas ([link removed])
NPR: Can Trump's 2nd act work for the working class while giving back to his super donors?
NPR (2/1/25 ([link removed]) ) investigates how a politician who surrounds himself with fellow billionaires can "work for the working class." NPR's suggestion: tax cuts for the very wealthy.
"Can Trump's Second Act Work for the Working Class While Giving Back to His Super Donors?" asks NPR.com (2/1/25 ([link removed]) ). The answer, from NPR ([link removed]) senior editor and correspondent Ron Elving ([link removed]) , is a resounding—maybe!
Elving presents the politics of the second Trump administration as a perplexing paradox:
Today we are confronted with an alliance between those whom political scientists might call plutocrats and those who are increasingly labeled populists. The contrast is stark, but the symbiosis is unmistakable. And we all await the outcome as the populist in Trump tries to co-exist with his newfound ally Musk, the world's richest man with abundant clout in the new administration.
After a meandering tour of US history from Andrew Jackson ([link removed]) to William Jenning Bryan ([link removed]) to Ross Perot ([link removed]) , Elving concludes: "We may only be at the beginning of an era in which certain political figures can serve what are plausibly called populist causes by calling on the resources of the ultra-rich." Huge, if true!
Elving's evidence that Trump is a "populist" ([link removed]) —or at least has a populist lurking inside him—is remarkably thin, however:
Trump has shown a certain affinity with, and owes a clear debt to, many of the little guys—what he called in 2017 "the forgotten men and women."... With his small town, egalitarian rallies and appeals to "the forgotten man and woman," he has revived the term populism in the political lexicon and gone further with it than anyone since Bryan's heyday.
Trump "made a show of working a shift at a McDonald's last fall," Elving notes. And he "used his fame and Twitter account to popularize a fringe theory about then-President Obama being foreign born and thus ineligible to be president," which "connected him to a hardcore of voters such as those who told pollsters they believed Obama was a Muslim." Elving suggests that this is the sort of thing populists do.
But when it comes to offering examples of actual populist policies from the first Trump administration, Elving admits that there aren't many to speak of:
If Trump's rapid rise as a Washington outsider recalled those of 19th century populists, Trump's actual performance as president was quite different. In fact it had more in common with the record of President William McKinley, the Ohio Republican who defeated Bryan in 1896 and again in 1900 while defending the gold standard and representing the interests of business and industry.
In fact, says Elving, "Trump in his first term pursued a relatively familiar list of Republican priorities," with "his main legislative achievement" being "the passage of an enormous tax cut...that greatly benefited high-income earners and holders of wealth." For genuine journalists, for whom politicians' actions are more significant than their words, that would be the most meaningful predictor of what Trump is likely to do going forward.
But Trump's second term, Elving suggests on the basis of nothing, could be quite different: "As Trump's second term unfolds, the issues most likely to be vigorously pursued may be those where the interests of his populist base can be braided with those who sat in billionaire's row on Inauguration Day." Such as? "The renewal of the 2017 tax cuts is an area of commonality, as is the promise to shrink government."
So—a restoration of the same tax cuts that "greatly benefited high-income earners and holders of wealth"? That how NPR thinks Trump in his second term "can serve what are plausibly called populist causes"?
All hail the unmistakable symbiosis!
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ACTION ALERT: You can send a message to NPR public editor Kelly McBride here ([link removed]) . or via Bluesky: @kellymcb.bsky.social ([link removed]) . Please remember that respectful communication is the most effective. Feel free to leave a copy of your message in the comments thread of this post.
FEATURED IMAGE: NPR depiction of candidate Donald Trump as a tribune of the working class.
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