Trump’s
victory is not the end of the world
Aaron Glantz
We were
warned that there would be ‘no guardrails’ if Trump won. But that is not true.
We are the guardrails
Wed 6 Nov
2024 10.38 EST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/nov/06/trump-election-win-guardrails
The next
four years will be exhausting. An ageing, angry, erratic president branded a
fascist by decorated generals will relentlessly spew falsehoods and hate,
threaten violence against citizens and mass deportation of immigrants. But amid
this onslaught, one need not feel powerless. Positive change will continue to
be possible.
Donald Trump
is not the only actor in this drama. During his first term, significant social
movements emerged and gained traction. The #MeToo movement, which highlights
sexual harassment and assault, surged, bringing issues of gender inequality and
violence against women to the forefront of national conversation. Similarly,
the Black Lives Matter movement gained unprecedented momentum, particularly
following the murder of George Floyd in 2020. These movements ignited
discussions about systemic racism and police reform, reshaping our political
landscape.
Trump was at
odds with these movements, but they still made progress. Powerful men lost
their jobs; laws and corporate practices changed. Trump was ordered to pay $83m
for sexually assaulting E Jean Carroll, a judgment made possible by a New York
law that extended the statute of limitations for sexual assault that passed
while he was president. It may seem counter-intuitive, but it’s true:
diversity, equity and inclusion programs proliferated under Trump. Then they
retrenched under Joe Biden.
Leaders
grapple with popular will. Backlash comes in reaction to progress. Trump’s
closing argument piled vile attacks on transgender people. He falsely accused
teachers of performing surgeries during the school day and spent millions on TV
ads that argued Kamala Harris’s “agenda is they/them – not you”. These attacks
are hurtful, but they occurred because trans people have never been more
visible. The non-binary pronoun “they”, rarely used before Trump took office,
was named the “word of the year” by Merriam-Webster dictionary in 2019.
Progress
remains possible across a range of issues. Trump famously called the climate
crisis a “hoax”. He has professed a love of coal and rails against windmills,
falsely claiming they cause cancer. Energy department figures show, however,
that coal burning plummeted during Trump’s first term, while domestic wind and
solar generation surged. The number of hybrid, plug-in and fully electric cars
tripled, from just over 500,000 sales in 2017 to nearly 1.5m in 2021.
Trump won
re-election, in part, because large numbers of Black and Latino voters defected
from the Democratic party. Some commentators, including the former president
Barack Obama, blamed sexism. In October, he chided a group of Black men in
Pittsburgh. They just weren’t, “feeling the idea of having a woman as
president”, he said. But while sexism may have played a role, it’s also a fact
that economic conditions for Black and Latino families improved during Trump’s
tenure. The homeownership rate for both groups increased every year of Trump’s
first term – after declining throughout Obama’s presidency. The unemployment
rate for Black and Latino Americans hit historic lows before the Covid pandemic
shut everything down.
No one was
more surprised by these outcomes than me. My book, Homewreckers, argued
America’s first real estate developer president would be a disaster for
homeowners, especially those of color. It documented how Trump stacked his
administration with vulture capitalists, including Wilbur Ross and Steve
Mnuchin, who profited off the 2008 housing bust by foreclosing on thousands of
American families while reaping hefty government subsidies. Amid the wave of
foreclosures, firms run by Trump’s financial backers, including the private
equity titans Stephen Schwarzman and Tom Barrack, gobbled up tens of thousands
of homes that could have otherwise been purchased by families – contributing to
the widest wealth gap between the richest Americans and everyone else since the
Gilded Age.
But
politicians are not immune from public pressure. An honest review of the first
Trump term shows that when Covid hit, leaders from across the political
spectrum revealed they had learned from their mistakes. Trump administration
officials declared foreclosure and eviction moratoria and allowed millions of
newly unemployed Americans to rework their mortgages. The $2.2tn Coronavirus
Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, which passed with broad bipartisan
support, included economic equity provisions drafted by the frequent Trump
antagonist Maxine Waters, a Democrat from Los Angeles, that funneled billions
to struggling homeowners and renters.
None of this
is to sugarcoat the current situation. If you are a woman worried about
reproductive health, an immigrant frightened your family will be rounded up, or
branded an “enemy within”, the stakes are very high. But remember: Trump did
not build that “big, beautiful wall” along the Mexican border. Department of
Homeland Security figures show deportations declined on his watch from their
peak under Obama. Since the Dobbs decision, voters across the US have restored
access to abortion.
In the
closing days of the campaign we were warned that Trump would be surrounded by
sycophants in his second term and that there would be “no guardrails” to
restrain his worst instincts. But that is not true. We are the guardrails.
Aaron
Glantz, a two-time Peabody award winner and Pulitzer Prize finalist, is a
fellow at Stanford University’s Center for the Advanced Study of Behavioral
Sciences
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