How To Win the Next Election: Ditch the Rich
Are you listening, Jack Conway?
Kevin Drum at Mother Jones:
Even those with high incomes agree that wealthy people benefited the most from government policies and that the poor and middle class got bupkis. Even Republicans largely agree that this has been the case.
This is Stockholm Syndrome writ large. Everyone—rich, poor, Republican, Democrat—agrees that in the wake of the greatest financial disaster since the Great Depression, the government mostly turned its largesse on banks, big corporations and the wealthy. Nonetheless, Republicans—the longtime party of banks, big corporations and the wealthy—have done increasingly well over the past six years. For an explanation, take your pick:
Whatever the reason, only about 20 percent of middle-class voters think government policies benefit the middle class. The first party to figure this out and embrace it wholeheartedly has a huge electoral opportunity ahead of it. But first, they're going to have to ditch the rich. Can either of them ever do that?
- Most voters don't understand Republican economic priorities.
- Most voters don't think Democrats would do any better.
- Most voters think this is just the way the world works and there's no point voting based on economic promises in the first place.
No comments:
Post a Comment