Buckle up, friends. It’s going to be a hairy ride.
Start
with Day One for President Trump (gotta get used to saying that). He
will need to be up-and-at-’em no later than 12:01 a.m., for during his
campaign he promised to get oodles of big stuff done on his very first
day in office, such as repeal Obamacare; begin working on an
impenetrable, physical, tall, powerful, beautiful southern border wall;
meet with Homeland Security officials and generals to begin securing the
southern border; fix the Department of Veterans Affairs; repeal every
single Obama executive order; suspend Syrian refugee resettlement; get
rid of gun-free zones in schools; end the war on coal; defend the
unborn; start taking care of our military; and convene top generals and
inform them they have 30 days to come up with a plan to stop ISIS.
Good
grief. Americans have actually put a
xenophobic-misogynous-racist-nativistnarcissistic blowhard in the Oval
Office. Has our country gone right wing? Or completely nuts?
No.
Trump was not elected on issues, but on anger – a deep seething fury
that the economic and political elites themselves have created by
knocking down the working-class majority, then callously stepping over
them as if they didn’t exist. Exit polls revealed that most Trump voters
don’t think he’s any more honest than Hillary Clinton
(only 38 percent of all voters had a favorable opinion of him, with
only a third saying he was qualified to be president). Also, his own
voters disagree with much of his agenda (especially his grandiose wall
across the Mexican border).
But
his core message – “The system is rigged” by and for the elites – came
through loud and clear to them, so they grabbed him like a big
bois-d’arc stick to whap the whole establishment upside its collective
head.
The major
message from voters was “We want change.” The Donald was the one most
likely to shake things up (or blow things up), while Clinton clearly was
the candidate of the status quo. As a West Texas farmer told me several
years ago, “status quo” is Latin for “The mess we’re in,” so change
voters, including those who would normally side with Democrats, cast
their ballot for the Republican.
Indeed,
on specific issues, voters around the country supported very
progressive changes offered to them in a variety of ballot initiatives:
–
All four states that had minimum wage increases on the ballot passed
them – Arizona (59 percent for it), Colorado (55 percent), Maine (55
percent) and Washington (60 percent). Plus, a South Dakota proposal to
lower its minimum wage was rejected by 71 percent of voters.
– Two states had initiatives calling for a constitutional amendment
to repeal the Supreme Court’s Citizen United decision that has allowed
unlimited corporate cash to flood into our elections – California (53
percent for it) and Washington (64 percent “yes”). Also, 52 percent
voted for campaign finance reform that will provide public funding of
elections there.
– A
Minnesota initiative to take away the power of state lawmakers to set
their own salaries, instead creating a bipartisan citizens council to
consider any increases, won a whopping 77 percent approval.
In
addition, many solidly-progressive “firsts” were elected on Tuesday,
such as the first Indian-American woman in Congress (Pramila Jayapal of
Washington), the first Latina U.S. senator (Catherine Cortez Masto of
Nevada), first Indian-Black woman elected to U.S. Senate (Kamala Harris
of California), and first openly-LGBT governor (Kate Brown of Oregon),
Stephanie Murphy (of Florida) is the first Vietnamese-American woman
elected to Congress, Ilhlan Omar (of Minnesota) is the first
Somali-American Muslim woman elected to state legislature, and Sam Park
(of Georgia) became the first openly gay state legislator there.
Trump
is in the White House, but the takeaway from voters in this election is
a mandate for progressive economic populism and more diversity among
public officials.