Leiter's post-mortem is worth reading, as is the analysis he links to by Ian Kerr.  If Trump does what he ran on (and what in his speech last night he said he wants to do: build infrastructure.  And really, he's right that our infrastructure is a national embarrassment), it's going to be very interesting to see how he intersects with the Republican party in Congress, since they don't want to spend money on things like that, or any of the other populist parts of the Trump agenda.  And his supporters are going to be very disappointed that he can't constitutionally do a lot of what he promised.

Here are two things that I haven't heard mentioned that need to be talked about.

  1. Libertarians.  Gary Johnson got more votes than Trump's margin of victory in a lot of places, if my memory of late last night serves me well.  What percentage of those votes came from Clinton versus from Trump?  We'll never know, but in a very concrete way, libertarians own the Trump presidency.  When Nader was informed that his candidacy cost Gore in 2000, the response was a smug "well, Gore should have been a better candidate."  No doubt he (and Clinton) could have been better (I'm going to say something about that in point #2).  But that argument fundamentally misunderstands what it means to live in a majoritarian system.  In a parliamentary system, vote for the 5% candidate!  You'll get a seat in parliament, and maybe even a part of a ruling coalition.  But in a majoritarian system, if you vote for a candidate who can't win, you are indicating your acceptance of whoever does win.  You don't care, you can't tell a difference, whatever.  Because you take away a vote from the candidate you regard as less evil.  This isn't strategic voting or anything like that.  This is a structural feature of the system.  Don't blame the parties.  Blame the Constitution.  Anybody who voted for Johnson in a state more of a battleground than California or Texas needs to know that they played a non-trivial part in the Trump victory.  And Trump has indicated hostility to rights: during the campaign, he showed complete contempt for the 1st, 4th (and probably 5th), and 14th Amendments.  And women's rights are next, given that he's going to get Court appointments.  The Contrast with Clinton was very stark.  A Johnson vote in a battleground state was at the level of "what's Aleppo?"
  2. The Auto Bailout.  I had to go out and get milk this morning, and had a moan with the cashier at the grocery store.  She said that she couldn't believe he won Michigan, given the auto bailout.  And then it struck me.  Obama made a very high-risk, unpopular decision to bail out the auto industry – and in the process saved thousands and thousands of largely-white, working class jobs in places like Michigan and Ohio.  In other words, he took a huge risk to help the sort of people who voted for Trump.  Did he help them all?  Of course not.  Did other things he do hurt them?  Probably.  But the rust belt would have been in much, much worse shape without the bailout.  And I didn't hear Hillary mention the auto bailout even once during the campaign.  When you're looking for something to say in Ohio and Michigan about how democratic party elites stand up for working people without college degrees, you should probably start there.  It's an actual achievement, and it took some courage to get it done.

 

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2 responses to “Two Quick Thoughts on the Election”

  1. AJ Kreider Avatar
    AJ Kreider

    It doesn’t appear to be fully consistent to admit, on the one hand, that we will never know what percentage of Johnson voters broke for Trump or Clinton, and to say on the other that the libertarian voters played a non-trivial role and somehow own the Trump presidency. If we don’t know (or have good reason to believe) then it may well have been trivial.
    Here’s another possible culprit. When the exit polls asked if the next president should continue Obama’s policies, support more liberal policies, or more conservative policies – 17% said more liberal. And of that 17%, 22% voted for Trump. This seems like the Bernie folks switching to Trump. So, maybe we should blame them.
    Full disclosure, I’m a libertarian-minded registered republican who voted for Hilary (mostly for the reasons you highlight).

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  2. Gordon Hull Avatar

    Thanks for the comment – and I wasn’t as clear as I needed to be in the OP (I blame lack of sleep. When it’s 1:45 in the morning and you’re looking at county maps in Arizona to see if there’s enough votes in Pima County to overcome the deficit in Maricopa County, it’s a long night). My sense, at least from 2000, is that most of the libertarian vote came from people who decided that they didn’t want either major party candidate, and refused to contemplate which would be the lesser evil, because they took them to be functionally equivalent. So at that point, assuming they know the libertarian won’t actually win, they are signalling their acceptance of whoever does win. So my usage of “own” was probably misleading – I meant that on some moral level, they voted to accept a Trump presidency, even though they knew, or should have known, that Trump seems extremely hostile to individual rights. Had Hillary won, they would have voted to accept her, too, but her record on rights is better. In other words, it wasn’t an empirical claim. There may be the data out there to make the empirical claim, but I’m happy to wait for someone else to dig it up…
    Bernie folks switching to Trump – I don’t know where to begin. If they couldn’t tell the difference between Clinton and Trump in advancing Bernie’s platform, well, yeesh.

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