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These have been the best few weeks of Trump’s presidency


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2019 Dec 21, 9:25pm   2,589 views  46 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (58)   💰tip   ignore  

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2019/12/17/why-these-past-few-weeks-have-been-best-trumps-presidency/

The House of Representatives will soon impeach President Trump. Yet these past few weeks have arguably been the best of Trump’s presidency — not despite impeachment, but in no small part because of it.

Consider the string of successes Trump has racked up in recent days. First came news that the U.S. economy added 266,000 jobs in November, far exceeding economic forecasts. Not only that, but the Bureau of Labor Statistics also revised the September and October jobs reports upward, adding 41,000 more jobs to the Trump economic record. And a new Quinnipiac poll found that 57 percent of Americans said they are better off financially since Trump took office.

In a move that will further bolster the economy, Trump reached agreement with House Democrats to move forward on the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), giving the president a major win. Within days, Trump also reached a “Phase 1” trade deal with China, postponing new tariffs on Chinese goods that were set to kick in and cutting tariffs on some Chinese products he had previously imposed in half. The administration expects a $200 billion boost in exports over two years from the deal. Both deals will certainly bolster the president’s standing with the rural and working-class voters who defected to Trump from the Democrats in 2016. ...

Trump also got good news from across the pond, when Boris Johnson’s Conservatives trounced the Labour Party by effectively following Trump’s 2016 campaign script — appealing to working-class voters with an anti-globalist message, promises to protect entitlements and make “colossal” investments in infrastructure. The Tory victory showed that Trump’s brand of conservative populism is still potent.

To top it all off, Trump learned that the Justice Department inspector general found that the FBI had falsified evidence in its applications to the FISA court to conduct surveillance on former campaign adviser Carter Page, as part of its counterintelligence investigation into his presidential campaign, and that — contrary to former FBI director James B. Comey’s claims — the Democratic National Committee-funded Steele dossier played a “central and essential role” in authorizing that surveillance.

Ah, say the critics, but this good news was bookended by the dark cloud of impeachment, which dimmed the luster of Trump’s successes. The opposite is true. Many of these successes happened precisely because of impeachment. Until now, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) had been dragging her feet on the USMCA and other Trump priorities. So why did the legislative logjam break precisely the same week that Democrats introduced their articles of impeachment?

Because Democrats know that voters see them focusing on impeachment at the expense of getting things done. Moderate Democrats running in Trump districts have seen the polling showing that two-thirds of swing-state voters who cast their ballots for Trump in 2016, but then voted for Democrats in 2018, plan to back Trump again in 2020. One of them, Rep. Jeff Van Drew (D-N.J.), was so alarmed he is switching to the Republican Party. As the rest of the Democrats are forced to walk the plank on impeachment, they are desperate to show that they are also working with Trump on the kitchen-table issues they campaigned on. Trump didn’t get all this done despite impeachment; impeachment is the reason Democrats allowed gridlock to finally give way.

Impeachment is both a legislative and political plus for Trump. After weeks of hearings, most polls show that support for impeachment and removal has gone down — especially in swing states. Before the impeachment hearings began, a GOP poll by Firehouse Strategies showed Trump trailing his Democratic challengers; now, in the wake of the impeachment hearings, Trump is leading them all. The politics will only get worse for Democrats going forward. As soon as the House votes, impeachment moves to the Republican-controlled Senate. When the Senate acquits Trump, as it inevitably will, the spirits of the “Resistance” will be dampened — while Trump supporters will be energized by his victory and claimed vindication.

Bottom line: The economy is humming, Trump’s accomplishments are accumulating and impeachment is backfiring — and that makes these the best weeks of Trump’s presidency so far.

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41   marcus   2019 Dec 23, 11:45am  

:
Sounds like Pelosi's son must be a republican.
42   clambo   2019 Dec 23, 11:47am  

Yeah, things are still going Trump's way.

People have more spending cash; they will buy more shit for Christmas; Apple and others will report higher profits; stocks will rise even MORE in January.
It's beginning to surprise me even; I never saw my net worth rise so fast as it has lately.

The impeachment is already an embarrassing failure for Pelosi and her loser ilk; she has guaranteed almost that Trump wins in Nov. 2020.

Pelosi, Biden, Clinton and the rest should have remembered their own shit must be perfectly clean to survive the inevitable scrutiny; the anti-wealth, socialist, class warfare mongering people in their own party will be yelling about their corruption soon enough. The rats in the cage will attack each other in due time.
43   marcus   2019 Dec 23, 11:49am  

:
You're going to get reality based people saying:

WookieMan says
the raising of minimum wage in many states is the cause of the graph


Excellent point.
45   CBOEtrader   2019 Dec 23, 8:38pm  

personal
46   WookieMan   2019 Dec 24, 7:38am  

marcus says
:
You're going to get reality based people saying:

WookieMan says
the raising of minimum wage in many states is the cause of the graph


Excellent point.

I don't know in all honesty. There's too much that goes into the economy and I get frustrated with anyone saying it's even X, Y and Z together. Who knows how many inputs there are in our economy. Minimum wage is one of those inputs. That's not the cause of the graph. It's a combination of a shitload of things.

Low unemployment will obviously raise wages and the lower wages are the most palatable to raise during good times versus paying the 6 figure guy/gal 5% more. You're talking $500/yr versus $5k a year from the low employee to the top employee. This is just one piece of the puzzle. Minimum wage raises ultimately inflate the cost of living as people have more money. So there's likely no economical net gain from it. And it does indeed create higher unemployment locally that won't show up nationally all that well when McDonalds has 40 employees and cuts to 38 to make it up. And we all get shittier service by all this as well.

I agree with you Marcus on some things and one of those are the deficits. I have a few problems with Trump, but this is definitely one of them. When we start getting revenue numbers after tax filing season (2020) that aren't cutting away at the deficit, I'm not going to be thrilled, nor should anyone. The debt is never getting paid anyway, but the longer we can string this out is better for my kids. I want to see progress in this realm.

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