The
GOP, economic populism, and ‘that giant sucking sound’ By Robert Romano
The
National Review’s Quin Hillyer had a very interesting piece on May 11 that points to the Republican voter turnout deficit in 2012
among what Sean Trende at Real Clear Politics described as “largely downscale,
Northern, rural whites. In other words, H. Ross Perot voters.”
Here, Hillyer and
Trende are pointing to the
2.5 million potential Republican voters who stayed home in 2012, probably costing Mitt Romney the presidency.
Hillyer
explains the deficit by pointing to another one: “Romney was crushed, 81–18, on
the question of which candidate ‘cares about people like me.’ Despite first
appearances, this isn’t merely a touchy-feely ‘empathy’ question. It’s at least
as much a question about cultural cues. The key part of the question isn’t
cares, but cares about people like me.”
“The same sort
of voters left cold (or at best lukewarm) by Romney were enthusiastic about the
even wealthier Perot in 1992,” Hillyer added. But why? Was it cultural
differences? Or something else?
Besides the
dramatic growth of the national debt, Ross Perot’s big issue in 1992 was being
against the pending North American Free Trade Agreement. He was an economic
populist.
In the presidential
debate, Perot famously said, “We have got
to stop sending jobs overseas. It’s pretty simple: If you’re paying $12, $13,
$14 an hour for factory workers and you can move your factory South of the
border, pay a dollar an hour for labor… have no health care — that’s the most
expensive single element in making a car — have no environmental controls, no
pollution controls and no retirement, and you don’t care about anything but
making money, there will be a giant sucking sound going south.”
That message
was enough to garner 18.9 percent of the popular vote and bring 19.7 million
people to the polls. Perot’s run almost certainly cost then-President George
H.W. Bush any chance at re-election.
That was also
the year Pat Buchanan ran for president unsuccessfully in the Republican
primary, promising
among other things, to “stop foreign
imports putting guys up here out of jobs.” Although Buchanan did not win a
single primary that year, he did manage to garner 2.9 million votes.
Recall also
that with the economy still reeling from the recession of 1991, and with
unemployment averaging more than 7 percent throughout 1992, jobs were a key
issue in the campaign.
So, perhaps,
trade was an issue that showed to voters that Perot and Buchanan “care about
people like me.” Illegal immigration would be another issue, too, that falls
into this category.
In this
context, we’re talking about a constituency deeply suspicious of unlimited
immigration and trade deals based on past experience, whether it is the drop of
manufacturing employment nationwide or the prior no-borders amnesty policies
that have been implemented by past administrations.
These deals,
then, pose a direct threat to the economic well-being of these voters, and
politicians who present themselves in favor of them risk provoking a sense of
betrayal that their own government is intent on importing in cheap labor and
exporting jobs — to supplant them.
Agree or
disagree with that notion, the vote totals for Perot and Buchanan speak for
themselves. Even
the Wall Street Journal agrees in an editorial that without those voters, the campaigns waged against
illegal immigration and trade agreements “contributed to [the GOP’s]
presidential defeats” in the 1990s.
That is to say,
this constituency forms a vital portion of the Republican base without which
the prospects of national victory are diminished.
Now, rising
Republican opposition to trade promotion authority and Obama’s executive
immigration amnesty, writes the Journal, amounts to “a symptom of a return of
an anti-growth strain within the GOP.”
“This is no way
to rebuild a conservative majority,” the Journal adds.
Yet, polls
suggest Republican voters are both overwhelmingly opposed
to executive amnesty (81 percent) and to granting President Barack Obama
trade promotion authority to negotiate the Trans-Pacific Partnership (87 percent).
Maybe the real
question is whether Republicans will ever again achieve a majority in a
presidential election with a small but powerful business class running the
show, driving an agenda that Americans perceive to be against their economic
interests. When they continue to run candidates who voters don’t believe “care
about people like me.” Perhaps that’s the real giant sucking sound.
Robert Romano
is the senior editor of Americans for Limited Government.
http://netrightdaily.com/2015/05/the-gop-economic-populism-and-that-giant-sucking-sound/
Comments
Comments
I voted for Perot. NAFTA was a bad deal. So
were the other trade deals. TPP is no
different. It’s a really bad deal. I’ve complained about excessive immigration
since 1993. My posts from 2010 were
letters to our Senators and Congressmen complaining about bad trade deals,
unconstitutional excessive federal spending and excessive immigration. I converted these letters into blog posts.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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