this post was submitted on 10 Nov 2024
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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.

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[–] jj4211 4 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

That summary was a bit misleading compared to the linked summary.

"What Americans really want, sir, is fewer protections on the job and a weaker safety net,"

The conservative economist is not saying that he shouldn't have tax cuts and maybe some deregulation, is that he shouldn't screw the pooch for swing voters in the process.

As he looks toward his new term, Mr. Trump could claim a mandate to lead however he wishes,

As an example, I heard a MAGA politician on the radio the other day. Admittedly it didn't sound like anyone "hooked in" to Trump's circle, but I suspect his rhetoric was consistent. The interviewer put to him a question like "given how divisive things are, what do you hope Trump will do to be a good leader for all the nation, including those that didn't vote for him?". The response was that Trump won, therefore, there's no mandate to do anything for the losing voters, and the mandate was simple to do whatever Trump wants to do.

Further, Don Jr. said a key facet for anyone in Trump's administration is that there must be no one who would dare think themselves smarter than the president. Only yes men allowed.

Ultimately, people need to feel like they have viable livelihoods with a return to relatively affordable goods, and they need to see that within 2 years or else the house and senate will be hard blue come 2027. Of course, there's always the potential for dismantling the democracy, but the economist would probably think that would be disastrous for stability, and a grave threat to everything including economic concerns. So best outcome for him, as a conservative economist, is somehow making the electorate willingly want to keep the republicans, and he knows that Trump listening only to himself and hard core sycophants is not a recipe to make the electorate happy.