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Trump’s strategy is already backfiring in America’s backyard

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  bob-nelson  •  6 days ago  •  18 comments

By:   David Wallace-Wells

Trump’s strategy is already backfiring in America’s backyard



Trump is buoying liberals in Canada and Mexico


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Stupidity is not always a defect. President Trusk is living proof. Twice!

But... the penalty for stupid action often falls on an innocent idiot doofus. MAGA!!!

There are links in the seed.



S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


original The most remarkably popular major political figure in the world right now is Mexico’s Claudia Sheinbaum, who swept into the presidency in a landslide victory last summer — and who has, in defiance of the laws of contemporary political gravity, been building on her popularity ever since. Her approval rating just hit an astounding 85 percent, according to one poll , a significant jump from an already high level, and one that has come since she started publicly sparring with President Trump.

I’m not surprised: Often when Trump picks fights abroad he seems to give a significant political boost to his antagonists.

We’re living through a global wave of anti-incumbency, as you might have heard. But it isn’t always easy to perceive the ideological signal through the white noise of frustration.

The face of Europe’s new right, Italy’s Giorgia Meloni, has only a 42 percent approval rating; Argentina’s anarcho-capitalist Javier Milei’s approval rating has been stuck below 50 percent . In Britain, Labour secured a historic victory last summer, but by the fall Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s net approval had fallen to negative-38, a decline of nearly 50 points since election day. . And while despondent liberals looking for success stories sometimes point to the center-left coalition in Denmark, support there for the party of Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen slumped as low as 18 percent in November.

Sheinbaum’s approval is more than four times as high. For every Mexican who opposes her, there are now more than five who support her. And she is the face of an incumbent party, too.

There are many possible lessons here for the global left, though Sheinbaum’s success is also idiosyncratic. She’s a climate scientist who embraces fossil fuels and a social democrat who uses the left-populist rhetoric of her predecessor. Obviously, Mexico and the United States have different needs and political climates, but in her five months as president, Sheinbaum has pursued priorities that look pretty familiar to those on the American left: an expansion of social-welfare spending, particularly on health care; rhetorical and policy emphasis on equality; investment in public infrastructure, especially transportation; and a more data-driven approach to crime and the drug trade.

But one additional explanation for Sheinbaum’s post-election surge is Trump, who has a now unmistakable effect on the domestic politics of those countries he makes a sport of antagonizing. Since his election, Sheinbaum has routinely shadowboxed with Trump, participating in his for-show negotiations while just as happily rolling her eyes and trolling him — making fun of Trump for demanding things Mexico has already delivered, for instance, or proposing, after Trump unilaterally declared the Gulf of Mexico be known as the Gulf of America, that the United States be renamed Mexican America.

She has also taken a more serious tone, emphasizing the violence the United States exports to Mexico in the form of guns. Sheinbaum’s approval rating is now 25 percentage points higher than her share in the June elections, and 15 points higher than on America’s Election Day .

A similar dynamic is playing out on the other side of the U.S. border, though the personalities are — in honor of national stereotypes — quite different. In January, as Trump prepared to take office, Canada seemed destined for a right-populist future, too, with Justin Trudeau stepping aside amid abysmal ratings and the conservative heir apparent, Pierre Poilievre, leading the rudderless liberals in polls by more than two to one.

Then, two things happened. The wonkish central banker Mark Carney announced his candidacy for leadership of the liberals, to succeed Trudeau. And Trump started talking so incessantly about taking over Canada as a 51st state that his minions like Kristi Noem have used trips to the Canadian border to mock-insult our gentle neighbors to the north.

Failing a war of conquest, it was clear, there would be a protracted trade war, absurdly premised on the number of drug overdose deaths in the United States, which has been falling for a year; Peter Navarro, a Trump adviser on trade, recently argued that Canada had been “taken over” by Mexican cartels, though in total just 43 pounds of fentanyl was seized last year at the Canadian border, compared with 21,000 pounds at the Mexican border. Today, not two months later, Carney’s liberals are now neck-and-neck with Poilievre and the conservatives. Carney, who will be the next prime minister, is expected to confidently call a new election soon.

As recently as two months ago, Poilievre was talked about as a Canadian counterpart to Trump, or at least as close as genteel Canada could really get to MAGA-like anti-elitism. (He’d risen to international notoriety thanks to an interview in which he argued with a journalist who’d described him as a “populist,” combatively counterpunching while loudly eating a crunchy apple, like a suaver Ben Shapiro.) Now, he’s desperately attacking the American president, hoping to convince voters that he is actually the potential leader who would fight Trump the hardest. “My message to the president is this: Knock it off,” he declared Friday in a carefully staged news conference, two days before Carney won the vote to lead the liberal party. “Stop the chaos. You are hurting your workers, your consumers and most immediately destroying trillions of dollars of wealth on your own stock market.”

He has a point. In the first Trump term, it seemed like the president would drop almost any policy commitment at the first sign of stock market frustration. This time, he looks much less interested in being an S&P hood ornament than in testing just how far his supporters will follow him, away from the advice of almost everyone on Wall Street, down the path of a throwback William McKinleyism. Will they cheer higher prices, produced by tariffs? A huge spike in business uncertainty, depressing investment and hiring? A genuine recession, should one come? A redefinition of G.D.P., in the face of such a downturn, to preserve the illusion of economic growth?

We are just halfway through the first 100 days of Trump’s second term, and some cracks in his swaggering coalition are already beginning to show. But you can see the tremors pretty clearly abroad, too. In Denmark, Frederiksen might be getting a boost from the fight over Greenland, and in Britain, even the bedraggled Starmer appears to be getting a Trump bump , too.


Red Box Rules

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Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
1  seeder  Bob Nelson    6 days ago

Doug Ford is a Trump-wannabe who had no choice, really, but to go up against his model. The Canadian electorate, not being as blind as the American, would have crucified him if he had done otherwise.

But the Liberals may take the next election, anyway. I guess I should feel sorry for Ford, but... ... it' pretty much impossible to feel any sort of empathy for such a ...

 
 
 
TᵢG
Professor Principal
2  TᵢG    6 days ago

Of course it is backfiring.   Trump's tariff ideas are obviously brain-dead stupid.

The question is, as noted in the seed, when will Trump supporters start waking up to the carnage gratuitously imposed by the buffoon they elected?:

This time, he looks much less interested in being an S&P hood ornament than in testing just how far his supporters will follow him, away from the advice of almost everyone on Wall Street, down the path of a throwback William McKinleyism.  Will they cheer higher prices, produced by tariffs?
 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
2.1  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  TᵢG @2    6 days ago

Have you noticed that many NT MAGAs have abandoned ship?

Neither have I.

Up is down... no problem!

 
 
 
Dismayed Patriot
Professor Quiet
2.1.1  Dismayed Patriot  replied to  Bob Nelson @2.1    6 days ago
Have you noticed that many NT MAGAs have abandoned ship?

images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSpqOvPMTeQO03yud13HvJu-50VR_0I0aH5uQ&s

mpQuaQZ5CUyDsadF5ZNHaZ-1200-80.jpg

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2.1.2  JohnRussell  replied to  Bob Nelson @2.1    6 days ago

Jonestown didnt abandon Jones. 

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
2.1.3  Greg Jones  replied to  Bob Nelson @2.1    6 days ago

Oh, we're still here, silently observing the silliness of progressivism

“Here’s Your Sign!” Democrats Fasc”ish” Foolishness On Display | 710 KNUS - Denver, CO

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
2.1.4  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  Greg Jones @2.1.3    6 days ago
Oh, we're still here,

That's what I said.    jrSmiley_80_smiley_image.gif

 
 
 
Krishna
Professor Expert
2.1.5  Krishna  replied to  Bob Nelson @2.1    6 days ago
Up is down... no problem!

And this:

War is peace
Love is hate
Slavery is freedom

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
2.1.6  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  Krishna @2.1.5    6 days ago

... and Big Brother is undoubtedly watching...

 
 
 
Hal A. Lujah
Professor Guide
2.2  Hal A. Lujah  replied to  TᵢG @2    6 days ago

The question is, as noted in the seed, when will Trump supporters start waking up to the carnage gratuitously imposed by the buffoon they elected?

When they have exhausted every sycophantic excuse and the sherrif’s deputy has placed all their stuff out by the curb.  Plenty of time.

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
2.2.1  Trout Giggles  replied to  Hal A. Lujah @2.2    6 days ago

Even then they won't wake up. To do that would be to admit they made a huge mistake and they can't admit mistakes

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
2.2.2  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  Trout Giggles @2.2.1    6 days ago
To do that would be to admit they made a huge mistake and they can't admit mistakes

Exactly.

We see this phenomenon right here on NT, when members are confronted with incontrovertible proof that they don't like, they simple refuse it. The don't argue with it because they cannot; they just deny or ignore it.

 
 
 
bugsy
Professor Participates
2.2.3  bugsy  replied to  Bob Nelson @2.2.2    6 days ago
We see this phenomenon right here on NT, when members are confronted with incontrovertible proof that they don't like, they simple refuse it. The don't argue with it because they cannot; they just deny or ignore i

Seems more like a left wing phenomenon.

 
 
 
Krishna
Professor Expert
2.2.4  Krishna  replied to  bugsy @2.2.3    6 days ago
Seems more like a left wing phenomenon.

Trump is not a Leftist.

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
2.2.5  Buzz of the Orient  replied to  Bob Nelson @2.2.2    6 days ago
"...when members are confronted with incontrovertible proof that they don't like, they simple refuse it."

Or deflect to something off topic, which is what happened when I posted an absolute indication of Trump's misleading false rehetoric on another article here. 

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
2.2.6  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  Buzz of the Orient @2.2.5    6 days ago

They're adept. They often Comment just a little off-topic, in order to get an answer that of course is also off-topic. And bit by bit, they derail completely. Then too... some of our dear members are simply incapable of aligning two consecutive linked ideas.

 
 
 
Dismayed Patriot
Professor Quiet
2.2.7  Dismayed Patriot  replied to  bugsy @2.2.3    6 days ago
Seems more like a left wing phenomenon.

beam-deflection-diagram.png

I believe your deflection has overloaded; deflection gap detected...

 
 
 
bugsy
Professor Participates
2.2.8  bugsy  replied to  Krishna @2.2.4    6 days ago
Trump is not a Leftist.

Never said he was....

 
 

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