Did racism and sexism elect Trump?

Posted on November 19, 2016 in Equality Debates

TheGlobeandMail.com – Opinion
Nov. 19, 2016.   MARGARET WENTE

In the aftermath of the biggest upset in U.S political history, people are groping to find the reasons why. One popular explanation is that racism and misogyny elected Donald Trump. As Jenée Desmond-Harris wrote in Vox, “Never underestimate the power of racism and bigotry.” He brought out the worst instincts of America and rode the hatred all the way to the White House.

The exit polls tell a different story. People desperately wanted change – and they would even vote for Mr. Trump to get it.

According to the exit polls, fewer than 40 per cent of voters think Donald Trump is honest and trustworthy. Only a third said he has the temperament to serve effectively as president. Many of those who voted for him expressed deep reservations. Mr. Trump scored well on only one character trait: “can bring needed change.” And to voters, that was the trait that mattered most.

“They hated the status quo,” The Washington Post’s Chris Cillizza wrote. “They wanted something else. Trump was the something else.”

Why did almost the entire media miss the Trump trend? They missed it because they were in denial. They knew, statistically, that Mr. Trump could win. Nate Silver’s final forecast at fivethirtyeight.com put the odds of a Trump victory at 29 per cent. But the thought was too terrible to contemplate. So they (me included) didn’t.

The New York Times was among the worst offenders. It portrayed most Trump supporters as if they’d crawled out of the basket of deplorables. It missed the fact that most of them are solidly middle class. Many of them once voted for Barack Obama. After the election, Dean Baquet, The Times’s executive editor, admitted, “If I have a mea culpa for journalists and journalism, it’s that we’ve got to do a much better job of being on the road, out in the country, talking to different kinds of people than the people we talk to – especially if you happen to be a New York-based news organization – and remind ourselves that New York is not the real world,” he told the paper’s media columnist.

As Bernie Sanders tweeted the other day, “I come from the white working class, and I am deeply humiliated that the Democratic Party cannot talk to the people where I came from.”

That will be a gigantic challenge. The cultural chasm between Middle America and the Democrats/New York Times is vast. Cultural cluelessness is their biggest blind spot. As liberal progressives became obsessed with transgender bathrooms, middle Americans wondered if their incomes were ever going to go up. They are not especially preoccupied with climate change. They admire the cops, and do not think of themselves as racists. When Hillary Clinton declared in the first debate that “implicit [racial] bias is a problem for everyone,” millions of people silently answered back, “No, it’s not.” Meanwhile, Mr. Obama reassured them that the economy is doing just fine (even if not for them).

Bill Clinton was the last Democratic president who knew how to talk to the working class. Then he joined the Davos crowd and started travelling the world in private jets. Hillary’s campaign wanted her to get out more among the masses. But the masses weren’t her thing. Receptions on Park Avenue and $250,000 speeches to Goldman Sachs were her thing, and the masses knew it.

Progressives are also rending their garments because Mr. Trump’s victory was a decisive loss for feminism. How could so many women, especially college-educated ones, have voted for a groping misogynist like Mr. Trump? Or, as a Guardian writer put it, “How do I tell my daughter that America elected a racist, sexist bully?”

Maybe she should tell her daughter that Ms. Clinton was the second most unpopular presidential nominee in history. Or maybe she should acknowledge that most women reject the narrow, intolerant identity politics of today’s feminism. The big thing the Democrats and the media don’t get is that class trumps gender. Most women are not preoccupied with the glass ceiling, or what percentage of vastly overpaid CEOs and elite board members happen to be women. What they want are decent part-time jobs so that they can afford to stay home with the kids.

Donald Trump’s election is Brexit, cubed. And the dismay of the elites is much the same. How could the masses be so shortsighted/ignorant/disastrously wrong? The answer must be that they are even more xenophobic/racist/susceptible to demagogues than we thought.

Such explanations are quite popular in Canada, where looking down our noses at those awful Americans has always been a national sport. But the same nation that elected Mr. Obama elected Mr. Trump. It’s crucially important to understand why.

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2 Responses to “Did racism and sexism elect Trump?”

  1. Kristen C. says:

    Dear editor,
    You are right in suggesting that the middle class is concerned about their wages and job security. They too, have become casualties of an ever-expanding global economy. I’m just not sure how a CEO of a corporation that pays low wages, does not offer health insurance to part time employees, and does not consistently pay employees, plans to do that.

    But to simply dismiss gender and race from the equation and to suggest that white, middle class Americans only voted for ‘change’ in terms of economic stability is highly dismissive. His anti-immigrant, anti-trade, misogynistic and discriminatory presidential platform was riddled with racist ideologies, and creates a very obvious ‘us versus them’ dichotomy. It sounds like ‘make America great again’ really means, ‘lets make America white again’…

    Kristen C.

  2. This article gives an eye opening perspective to the truth behind the US presidential election which took place in November. Throughout the election process many people speculated that Ms. Clinton was going to win, dramatically, over Mr. Trump. As many were taken aback when Mr. Trump was elected, this author explains why we should not have been.

    From the citizens that I have spoke with and viewed on the television, the USA was looking for change after 8 years of a Democratic president. As Canadians we cannot fathom the fact that Pres. Trump won. By analyzing the fact that Mr. Trump was honest and willing to explain what his intentions were, was a vote on his behalf. Clinton held her campaign vastly on the fact that she is a woman. Many of the individuals who voted in this election were of the higher-class. They would rather hold their status than vote for a woman who would demean their financial background.

    After viewing the article, Wente opens up the political eye to view how Trump was voted into office. Citizens of the USA are no longer afraid of the lies and corruption that may have come with a Democratic vote. Although Trump may not be an ideal president, we see that Class triumphs over a progressive gender based society.

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