
Whether or not they vote to shut down the government today, Democrats have proven one thing: They are really bad at messaging.
Laying out their politicalĀ narrative on funding the government should have begun on Jan. 3, when this session of Congress began. Instead, as of lunch time on Wednesday, the party was still trying to puzzle out what itās going to say.
That’s just not the way to do it.Ā Democrats need to have a consistent, effective message that everyone can understand. This shouldnāt be that hard. In the Trump administration, theyāve been given the fattest, juiciest target in American political history.
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As a general rule, Iām not a big fan of populism. But it is certainly one way to build a message, and it seems to be the way Democrats will be heading. Populism, however, has to be popular. Old-school leftist populism tends not to be, especially if the idea is to peel away President Trump’s voters.
So letās try something different: centrist populism. Ā
The message shouldĀ start withĀ the fact that Trump is taking us for a ride. He ran on a promise to make prices go down quickly. He ran on a promise to stand up for regular people. Heās not doing any of that.Ā
Trump talks a lot about tariffs and slashing government. But the only thing he has to say about rising prices is that theyāre going to go up because of tariffs ā and heās āOK with that.āĀ
Trump claims heās going to make America richer, but heās not talking about our America. Heās talking about his America ā the America of billionaires and the 0.1 percent.Ā
Unfortunately, Trump is now all about billionaires. Heās even willing to let Russian oligarchs, some of the most corrupt people on earth, into ourĀ country while he throws out hard-working Ukrainians who came to America because Vladimir Putin bombed their homes. He has appointed 13 genuine billionaires to the government so far, plusĀ who knows how many people who are worth āonlyā a few hundred million.
Thatās not a government for the little guy.Ā
We need to make sure the citizenry knows the people Trump has appointed arenāt interested in our problems. These are people who own private islands. They arenāt worried about the price of eggs. Just Trumpās Cabinet is worth $11 billion āĀ and that obviously doesnāt include mega-billionaire and Trump sidekick Elon Musk.
Itās easy to tell people that the American dream isnāt about ācheap goods,ā as Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said last week, when youāre worth $500 million and donāt have to care about the price of groceries.
Trump and his Cabinet want to turn the clock back to the 1890s āĀ the Gilded Age āĀ when America was rich and had high tariffs. But donāt forget, America also had child labor, a 60-hour work week, robber barons and monopolies.Ā
Tariffs donāt help ordinary people. They help people who are already rich. How does a 25 percent tariff on aluminum help the Average Joe?Ā Is heĀ going to be building an aluminum smelter?Ā Probably not. But those tariffs on aluminum cans are making beer more expensive and putting local craft brewers out of business.Ā
Trump is not being straight with us when he claims heās firing federal workers to cut the deficit. If Trump fired every single federal employee āĀ every air-traffic controller, every park ranger, every FBI agent āĀ he would save about $110 billion a year. That would cut the annual federal budget deficit by just 6 percent.Ā
So firing government employees isnāt really about saving money. Thereās another reason: Itās because the American government looks out for people like us, not for billionaires. People who work at federal agencies like the EPA and OSHA make sure the presidentās billionaire backers play by the rules. And they hate that.
Clean air isnāt communism. Workplace safety isnāt āwoke.āĀ
The presidentās billionaires want to be the new robber barons who have the power to run the country. They want an America where Elon Musk will decide what you can say, Mark Zuckerberg will decide what you can read, and Jeff Bezos will decide what you can buy. Ā
Thatās not what any of us voted for. Ā
It’s important that this message does not point the finger at Trump voters, nagging about why they were wrong. Itās about alerting them to TrumpāsĀ bait-and-switch. Even the most ardent MAGA voter isnāt in favor of having billionaires run everything. They thought thatās what they were voting against.Ā
Everything in this message is as mainstream American as āMr. Smith Goes to Washington.ā Thereās no mention of culture war issues or raising taxes. Itās about pocketbook issues that affect every voter. Moreover, itās a message that canāt be spun. If inflation is rising, not even FOX can convince people that prices are going down instead of up.Ā
Finally, in order to make this work, every Democrat needs to repeat this message, over and over and over again. The power of repetition is real. Trump himself is a master at it. Heās able to convince even his enemies of things that arenāt true. Everybody in the country knows about Hunter Bidenās laptop. Everybody in the country should know that Trump lets Musk ignore conflict of interest rules.Ā
Assuming the laws of economics have not been repealed, the wheels are going to come off Trumpās economy sooner rather than later. Assuming the laws of politics have not been repealed, Trump will try to find a way to blame Democrats when they do.
And if Democrats donāt have better messaging than they do today, heāll probably succeed.Ā
Chris Truax is an appellate attorney who served as Southern California chair for John McCainās primary campaign in 2008.Ā
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