The Unwavering Support of Trump’s Base Despite the Harm

Donald Trump continues to enjoy unwavering support from his base, despite the ways he has harmed them. As the Trump administration continues to swing its wrecking ball over the U.S., Trump’s supporters persist in their conviction that he is Making America Great Again. Though some Trump voters are beginning to experience buyer’s remorse, Trump’s base remains unwavering in its support, seemingly oblivious to the harm the Trump administration has done them.

Trump’s tariffs, he claimed, would help bring manufacturing jobs back to the U.S. In reality, the tariffs are raising costs for many manufacturers and sending them out of the U.S. The tariffs on steel, for example, are reported to have increased annual costs for GM up to $1 billion.  General Motors and Ford both announced the closure of several plants in the U.S., as well as layoffs for thousands of employees. Many of those who are losing their jobs fall into Trump’s base, yet not only do they continue their unwavering support, they blame the manufacturers, not Trump.

Farmers, too, many of whom make up Trump’s base, have been hurt by Trump’s tariffs. Yet, as one farmer in Iowa, a Trump supporter, said, “We can overlook some things. We need to see the end result.”

Trump’s attempts to obliterate Obamacare, had they been successful, would have been a direct hit to a large number of Americans who make up Trump’s base – rural voters without college degrees. Though many previously uninsured rural Trump supporters gained health care under Obamacare, they voted for Trump on the faith that he would replace Obamacare with something better. Even as Trump continues to push a plan that would leave almost 18 million Americans without health care, Trump’s base insists that he’s going to change health care for the better.

Trump’s coziness with anti-freedom dictators such as North Korea’s Kim Jong-un, and his questionable relationship with Russia’s Vladimir Putin, both leaders that Trump’s base once hated and distrusted, have rung no alarm bells among the base. Despite Trump’s chumminess with them, and the risk of compromising U.S. security as a result, Trump’s base have unwavering support of their leader, and insist that he knows what he’s doing, and that it’s for the good – not the undoing – of America.

Donald Trump’s Government shutdown, the longest in U.S. history, wrecked the finances of many federal employees, some of whom make up Trump’s base. Though the shutdown did cause Trump to lose some ground with those who voted for him, now that Trump has ended it and re-opened the government, the diehard Trump supporters seem to have returned to the belief that the whole thing will be for the good of America.

According to Newt Gingrich,”The fact is, the president’s base is with the president…If he goes to them and says, ‘I got this done for the wall. I got this done to protect America. I’m doing these good things you believe in,’ the base is going to say, ‘fine.’ ”

“I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody, and I wouldn’t lose any voters, OK? It’s, like, incredible.”

Does the unwavering support of Trump’s base, and their inability to be presented with facts, a result of the Dunning-Kruger effect (in which they are not only misinformed, but unable to recognize that they are misinformed)? Or are they so full of fear of all of the possible threats to their world as a result of Trump’s fear-mongering, that they’re ready to latch on to him as the One who will protect them? Or does Trump’s base offering unwavering support because they see the Trump-induced harm to them as a worthy sacrifice for the ultimate goal of Making America Great Again?

‘Everyone is in shock’: Ohio community reacts to GM plant closure |
Washington Post [2018-11-30]

How Donald Trump’s base is hurting from his trade wars but sticking with their man | The Telegraph [2018-11-04]

Trump Vows to “Protect” His State of National Emergency

Donald Trump has vowed to “protect” his declaration of a national emergency to get funding for his border wall. Congress recently approved an amount that was considerably lower than Trump’s requested $5.7 billion to fund tighter security along the U.S.-Mexico border. Trump, however, is determined to build a physical wall and to secure as much as $8 billion to fund its construction. In order to do so, he has declared a state of national emergency with the goal of securing military funds for his wall.

House Democrats are calling the declaration unlawful. According to White House senior adviser Stephen Miller, however, if Congress passes a resolution of disapproval to overturn Trump’s national emergency declaration, Trump will veto their decision.

“He’s going to protect his national emergency declaration, guaranteed,” said Miller.

During his Rose Garden speech, Trump presented the declaration of a national emergency as a routine action, framing it as nothing out of the ordinary when a president needed to reroute funding for a project.

Though it’s true that other presidents have declared states of national emergency, the ability to do so by the executive branch is to be used carefully, seen as a last resort, and only to be declared in times of true crisis, such as with a terrorist attack or natural disaster. An example would be when the U.S. became vulnerable in 2009 to the fast-moving H1N1 virus and healthcare resources were overwhelmed. Most presidential declarations of a national emergency have been uncontroversial, until now.

“I could do the wall over a longer period of time. I didn’t need to do this,” Trump told reporters gathered in the White House Rose Garden on Friday, shortly before he signed a proclamation declaring the emergency. “But I’d rather do it much faster.”

Trump’s open admission that he “didn’t need to do this” casts legal scrutiny on his declaration, as many are concerned that Trump has overstepped his authority, and will continue to do so by vetoing a resolution of disapproval by Congress.

“This is authority given to the president in law already,” said acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney, in all seriousness. “It’s not as if he just didn’t get what he wanted so he’s waving a magic wand and taking a bunch of money.”

Donald Trump didn’t get what he wanted when Congress voted against his request to fully fund a border wall. Despite Mulvaney’s comments, it seems all too true that Donald Trump does indeed see a declaration of a national emergency as his magic wand that will allow him to “take a bunch of money.”

Trump Goes Off Script While Declaring National Emergency for Border Wall | NowThis News [2019-02-15]

The politics of Trump’s national emergency | Fox News  [2019-02-15]