Marjorie Taylor Green is MAGA. Trump is not.
MTG and Zohran Mamdani have something in common. They are economic populists.
They are canaries in the coal mine.
In Russia, Marjorie Taylor Greene would have been thrown out of a window. In the USA, she is merely scorned and threatened. She was a nuisance and a threat. Now she is a message: Don't cross Trump.
She was too MAGA for Trump and the GOP. She was too much like Mamdani.
Donald Trump made the GOP a MAGA party. He taught Republican voters to like what he likes: a tone of resentment, a policy of lawfare retribution against Democratic villains, and a suite of populist policies featuring America First nativism, opposition to "woke" cultural values, and recentering White native born Americans as the default American. To make that work as a majority party Trump needed to add a dimension: anti-elitism. There are two realms for elitism, cultural and economic. The cultural portion was easy and popular with his base: attack universities, criticize the media written by smarty-pants, and turn the Kennedy Center into a showcase for country music. The hard part is the economic elites. At first, Trump sounded like Bernie Sanders, attacking economic elites. He said he didn't need them. He said he understood them well enough to disempower them. He said he would drain the swamp. He talked a good game to get elected in 2016.
He didn't follow through. And in this second term, he abandoned draining the swamp of economic elites. He stopped anti-trust activities. He made the government a shareholder in businesses. He allied with economic elites and then flagrantly sought their tribute. He celebrated their purchase of his meme crypto coin. He sent a powerful signal with tech billionaires on stage at his inauguration. He sent a stronger one in accepting their offers of gold tribute. He looked like a conquering warlord from ancient wars of conquest. His association with big business sends a muddled message to GOP voters. Yes, Trump was a winner. But Trump's triumph is personal to Trump. There isn't clear trickle-down benefit for taxpayers and consumers. Inflation is real. Those billionaires are in it for themselves, and they are throwing their weight around and Trump lets them do it.
Three events converged in time. It helps explain MTG's very public move. One was the shutdown over the issue of affordable health insurance for working families. The second was Trump's effort to protect himself and other wealthy men from whatever is in the Epstein files. The third was the shocking election of Zohran Mamdani despite every effort of the moneyed interests of New York City to stop him. Mamdani showed the power of economic populism, the power that MTG spoke of in the conclusion of her resignation announcement.
. . . the Political Industrial Complex of both parties is ripping this country apart. . . and instead the reality is that they, common Americans, The People, possess the real power over Washington. . . .
That is a message with appeal to both Democratic and Republican voters. It is the MAGA message, but it isn't the Trump message anymore, because Trump chose to ally with the business establishment. Those lobbyists and establishment donors and bankers and tech billionaires support Trump. They also support the federal and state officeholders who have Trump's back. They protect him from impeachment. They praise and defend him, even when he does things that are outrageous, blatantly illegal, or unpopular. Those business elites fund campaigns, either for you or against you. If you cross Trump you cross them.
Trump can keep a populist GOP together, notwithstanding being in the money swamp, by making culture issues the centerpiece of his message. But Mamdani is the canary in the coal mine. MTG noticed it and so did Trump, who hastened to make-nice with Mandami. The public wants more than cultural populism; it wants economic populism.
Democrats backed away from economic populism when it was advanced by Bernie Sanders. His ideas were new and the country wasn't ready. Sanders was a trial balloon. Mamdani is a second trial balloon. His economic populist message was unstoppable this time. But there is room for caution. After all, this was New York City, not New York State or a battleground state like Pennsylvania. But the message is clear: Economic populism has appeal. There may be an opportunity for an economic populist to take over a party and win the White House.
We have history to examine. FDR did not get elected amid happy days and prosperity. That is the condition for caution and stability. FDR was elected amid a devastating financial crisis. Business interests lost credibility. They needed rescue. Rescue came at a cost for them. The public made new rules to shape the economy and the distribution of national income.
Both Democrats and Republicans have laid the groundwork for a populist reset of the American economy. It will take a crisis to light the fuse. America has them from time to time. Something triggers it, and there are ample triggers.
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