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Do Trump voters feel cheated by his policies?

Lets park aside the culture war for one second...

Donald Trump became President on a populist ticket which claimed to represent the interests of the little man against Wall Street. His platform was protectionist against free-trade, interventionist in favour of infrastructure spending, as well as hinting at curbing the power of big business.

Trump has opted out of T-TIP but has done nothing to change NAFTA or apply tariffs. He has cut taxes for big businesses and the rich. He has a cabinet stacked with ex-Wall Street people. In short; his economic program is conventional right-wing Republican. Also; Trump claimed to be anti-war but morphed into a hawk on Syria, Isreal, N Korea and perhaps Iran.

You can make a case for any of these policies (though I would disagree). The fact remains though that the impact of Trump is pretty much exactly the same as George W. Bush would have had if he had come to power in 2017, just taken one step further and with added chaos and controversy. Even the tax cuts have echoes of Bush because, like Dubya's own tax cut, it has greatly increased the deficit at a time of economic growth. I'm sure people remember how that worked out.

Trump was meant to be something new; an 'anti-establishment' candidate who would drain the swamp and change the system. In reality, a vote for Trump is a vote for the same 'globalist' trickle-down economics which has dominated the Anglo-phone world since the 1980s, depressed wages and increased inequality.
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jackjjackson · 61-69, M
The unprecedented increase of the GNP is no accident.
Burnley123 · 41-45, M
@jackjjackson You need a causal link because economic growth is always based on multiple factors and cycles last many years.

The US economy is growing but why? Early on it grew without him having implemented any economic policies. That can't be linked to Trump and can only be put down to either A) Long-term trends B Global trends or C) Obama.

The world economy is on a (fragile) upswing and America is growing faster than most because of the legacy of Obama's fiscal stimulus plan and also yes because of tax cuts.

The tax cuts have accelerated growth but also increased the deficit. The rich will see most of the benefit but when the economy overheats and a crash happens, it will leave everyone more vulnerable.

As I said before, this has echoes of Bush.
whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
@jackjjackson You are right. pumping money into an economy and racking up debt will support consumption and provide employment in the short term.. And Obama started that, but Trump continues.. But, sadly we have a global economy, like it or not and these things will come back to bite. Politics can argue. But economics can only be pushed so far before it bites back