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Renaissance Man

(669 posts)
Fri Jul 22, 2016, 12:08 PM Jul 2016

Trump's Speech Targeted a Certain Demographic on the Electoral College Map

I reviewed some of the key points of Donald Trump's speech, and there are certain themes that were embedded in that speech that were repeated throughout, including immigration (which was mentioned eight times), violence (mentioned 11 times), trade (mentioned 7 times), terrorism (mentioned five times), law and order (mentioned four times), safety (mentioned four times), trade deals (mentioned four times), and rigged (mentioned four times).

The certain demographic of voters that Trump is targeting are poorly educated, authoritarian, rustbelt and Midwestern voters that have lost what were formerly decent-wage, middle class jobs, due to outsourcing or offshoring that are looking for a scapegoat. They might not necessarily display overt bigotry or even agree 100% with Trump's message, but they understand that their nice union job at the auto plant, the auto supplier, the steel mill, etc., no longer exists, and they're looking for someone to save them from that.

They understand that the factory that they were formerly employed at is shut down. They understand that their dreams of being able to afford a home to raise their family may be in the balance because they're trying to survive on a service job where they make half of what they used to make. They drive to what used to be downtown in their small city or town and they see it boarded up, and they become hopeless. They see the ever-increasing cost of college tuition, and they feel as if their children are going to be shut out, completely. They remember when they felt they had a chance at the American dream, and now, it seems even harder and harder to attain.

They hear the word "trade deal" and they think about having to train other people for their job that is going to be shipped to China or India. They hear the word "HB Visa" and they think about the IT job that they lost because the company they worked for and the politicians that receive their campaign contributions passed laws making it easier for them to get similar labor at a cheaper cost by increasing the number of HB visas available. They call a customer service center and speak to someone that, in some cases, is not an American to resolve an issue of service, or an order they placed, or a question that they have for their very American household.

These are all simple concepts. These are the realities they have been forced to live. This is their experience with America over the last 30-40 years, and they're looking for someone to articulate those fears and offer cut and dry solutions. They're not interested in hearing about identity politics or how America will be great if it elects its first female president.

To be fair, these are the same people that don't have time to look at all of the union-busting legislation Republicans have passed year after year. They don't have the time to think about the tax cuts that have been passed that are virtually making them pay more of a percentage of their salary to the federal government than the CEO. They don't have the time to look at the records of votes in the House and Senate and what politicians voted on these issues.

These are the voters who are looking for answers. They link NAFTA with "my job was shipped overseas," and they see another trade deal coming down the pike (TPP) that may be just as disastrous. They don't have time to discuss the nuance of this legislation.

They understand that they see the American dream slipping from them more and more every day, and they want someone to blame and someone who hears them. To boot, they're seeing political unrest about police overreach and terrorist attacks (hence the phrases "law and order" and "immigration&quot , they may plug into Fox News every now and then, and they're being fed the narrative that a big reason for their losing is the hand of some "other," and they know that "politics as usual" will not cut it. They hear that there are more than 10 million people living in America illegally (without paying attention to how much in taxes these "illegal" immigrants are paying), and they compare it to their job loss, and they need someone to blame.

This is how xenophobia and scapegoating works. It doesn't need facts and statistics to support their biases. It doesn't need reasoned and nuanced discussion on whether a trade deal will be beneficial to them or their family. They don't want an honest discussion about police overreach and brutality.

When it comes down to it, they'll be listening for who agrees with the trade deals and who opposes them. Who gives them confirmation bias on what has to be done about those "others" to bring them back the job they lost (even though it will never come back due to globalization). Who stokes their fears and promises to "Make America Great Again."

... and they'll be viewing this within the context of what Washington, D.C. has done (its Senators and Congressmen) to alleviate these fears.

Do you know where these voters are located?

Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Iowa, and Wisconsin

With the exception of Ohio and Iowa, Trump won all of these states in the Republican primary. Hillary lost Michigan and Wisconsin. With roughly 10% - 15% of the electorate still "undecided," don't ever think that appeals to bias, fear, xenophobia, and "law and order" rhetoric aren't effective tools. Just like there's economic populism that appeals to our better angels, there's also fascist populism which appeals to the worst in our electorate.

These were all tools that were employed in that speech and will be employed in this general election. Trump may be the biggest bigot on the planet, but he is a business man and he understands numbers. It's imperative that we do so, as well, and that we get out the vote and defeat him.

http://www.latimes.com/nation/politics/trailguide/la-na-republican-convention-2016-trump-trump-s-favorite-words-from-violence-1469154163-htmlstory.html

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ymetca

(1,182 posts)
2. Meanwhile
Fri Jul 22, 2016, 12:53 PM
Jul 2016

... the millionaire talking heads on TV keep saying that Americans "feel" like they are being sold down the river when we actually ARE being sold down the river. The privileged classes always sell the zero sum game when the "unwashed masses" start to agitate too much. Anyone who challenges their unearned status is either dismissed as a fool, a la Bernie Sanders, or if they really become a threat, are taken out a la MLK and RFK.

Demagogues like Trump are always given airtime when unrest arises in the streets to the level where it can no longer be ignored.

Same shit, different decade.

Remember, he started his campaign by declaring "America sucks". Then he waves the flag and exclaims how he'll fix it by removing all the "undesirables".

Unfortunately for him America never has been anything close to unified. We're the Great Satan. We're the Whore of Babylon. We are legion...

We're the most "exceptionally" simultaneously murderous and charitable people the world has ever known. We're the planet's spore patch just prior to post terrestrial migration.

Woah! I probably should put that weed down now...

 

Ghost Dog

(16,881 posts)
5. The spore patch, intellectually, technically,
Fri Jul 22, 2016, 01:09 PM
Jul 2016

& financially, more and more, is international, wouldn't you agree? And likely to be increasingly domiciled in China.

ymetca

(1,182 posts)
9. Yes
Fri Jul 22, 2016, 01:50 PM
Jul 2016

... the "festering muck" of humanity has finally achieved "global circumambulation". The "Seven Ages of Humanity" have been completed (I.e. "divide and conquer&quot . Now global civilization must reconstitute itself on a "higher arc", as it were. The "octave" or eight circuit model of planetary evolution.

The "theory", if you can call it that, is that this phase is evidenced by rapid changes in communication technologies and dramatic social upheaval. The last ditch efforts of our hindbrains to keep us all "grounded" instead of embracing our "cosmic" (extraterrestrial) future. The final fear-gasm before the collective leap.

JCMach1

(27,591 posts)
3. Only needle he can thread to even possibly win...
Fri Jul 22, 2016, 12:57 PM
Jul 2016

he would need to take Red states +Ohio, or Pennsylvania + 1 other toss-up state.

apnu

(8,760 posts)
4. Of the states you mentioned, only Ohio is in question based off the targeted demo in the speech.
Fri Jul 22, 2016, 01:01 PM
Jul 2016

I doubt MI will go for trump, his open racism won't carry the urban areas and Michigan just doesn't have it out in the burbs and rural areas to carry the state. Same for IL and PA. WI tires of conservative assholery, and Iowa is probably a GOP state to begin with.

That leaves OH as a possible pick up for Trump. But given state polling today, after email scandals and the RNC hate fest, Hillary has a lock on a ton of electoral votes with out doing a single thing. The only path to victory for Trump, today, includes Ohio AND Penn. AND Florida. He won't carry all three in November.

emulatorloo

(44,274 posts)
6. Iowa's definitely a purple state. In general they vote for Dem presidential candidates
Fri Jul 22, 2016, 01:32 PM
Jul 2016

Exception was 2004. Yes there are GOP crazies there. However doubt the majority will buy what Trump is selling.

kimbutgar

(21,285 posts)
10. I can see someone on the left running the video of cheeeto saying Iowa voters are losers in a loop
Fri Jul 22, 2016, 02:24 PM
Jul 2016

When he lost that state he attacked it. A great commercial in the making. I just saw on the pod people video someone posted here.

yellowcanine

(35,705 posts)
7. I think Kasich is making sure Trump doesn't win Ohio.
Fri Jul 22, 2016, 01:38 PM
Jul 2016

And by doing that he increases his chances of capturing the 2020 nomination if Trump goes down in flames.

brentspeak

(18,290 posts)
8. You're under the illusion that it's only rust-belt Americans who were crippled by "trade"
Fri Jul 22, 2016, 01:43 PM
Jul 2016

All Americans from all age groups, except for those in the upper 30% income brackets, have had their livelihoods, wages, and prospects permanently trounced by NAFTA and the granting of MFN status to China. This is regardless if they were directly employed as a factory worker or not, blue collar or not. It's not just the blue collar class that has been dismantled by the trade deals, its also been the middle class.

What "nuance" concerning NAFTA and offshoring to E. Asia are Americans supposed to care about?

The topic of economic devastation caused by "trade" is something that could get Trump elected. Hillary is a fool if she ignores this issue or takes the Chamber of Commerce's side.

emulatorloo

(44,274 posts)
11. Trump makes his suits and ties in China. As usual you use half-truths to attack Dems
Fri Jul 22, 2016, 02:30 PM
Jul 2016

while protecting Republicans.

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