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question everything

(49,079 posts)
Sun Dec 1, 2024, 10:08 PM Dec 1

My hometown broke its 100-year Democratic streak. What can that teach us? - WaPo EJ Dionne

Every Thanksgiving, Fall River ranks high on my gratitude list. The venerable mill town in southeastern Massachusetts imparted many of the values I still hold dear. It’s a place where solidarity among family, friends and neighbors matters greatly — and where politics has always been both a great sport and a matter taken very seriously. But this year, I write about my hometown because it made a certain kind of history. The Fall River I remember growing up in — an old-fashioned labor Democratic town, a stronghold of New Dealism where unions once thrived — voted for a Republican president for the first time in 100 years.

(snip)

Paul Coogan, the city’s current mayor, supported Harris but sensed the city was ready to flip. “I was riding around and seeing all these Trump signs, and I said, ‘Wow, this is different!’” Coogan told me. He summarized the emotion behind support for Trump with one word: “Anger.” “There’s such a level of skepticism in Fall River about politicians, including me,” he said. “There’s very little trust.” The anger Coogan sensed has been gestating for a century. Fall River was once a major player in the nation’s economy, and its cotton mills made it an “American Textile Colossus.” But the colossus collapsed in the 1920s as the mills headed to the South. The city’s economy never fully recovered.

(snip)

In the years after the Depression, the city got another go at textiles as shops making shirts, sweaters and dresses moved in, largely from New York. Unions — the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, the International Ladies Garment Workers, the Textile Workers Union — became embedded in the community and its politics. But that industry went offshore and the private-sector unions were left decimated. Lambert sees the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement under President Bill Clinton as the origin of Fall River workers’ sense “that the Democratic Party has abandoned them.” Clinton was very popular in the city at the time, and the late 1990s saw “short-lived success in certain industries,” Lambert said. But as better-paying jobs disappeared, “the anger over that loss of opportunity” grew.

(snip)

There is a terrible irony for Democrats in hemorrhaging working-class votes despite the Biden-Harris administration’s resolute focus on blue-collar concerns. The administration’s big investment programs were aimed at creating jobs in left-out regions, particularly for people without college degrees. Their labor and trade policies were designed to lift up the sorts of people Biden grew up with in Scranton and Delaware — and I grew up with in Fall River. But investments take time to be felt, and Biden’s efforts, Lambert said, were “obscured by grocery prices and the cost of living and rents going up.”

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8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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My hometown broke its 100-year Democratic streak. What can that teach us? - WaPo EJ Dionne (Original Post) question everything Dec 1 OP
Hard to cure racism. nt Buttoneer Dec 1 #1
we've actually had a black president - a MALE one Skittles Dec 1 #2
Agree but I agree racism was also a factor--and I think spooky3 Dec 1 #5
Obama was a once in a lifetime magic black man. Keepthesoulalive Dec 1 #6
"Anger." "There's such a level of skepticism in Fall River about politicians, including me," elleng Dec 1 #3
That there are far more fools in America than we realized. DavidDvorkin Dec 1 #4
There will be many regrets..... Historic NY Dec 1 #7
Look, these people probably had no idea how pro-labor Harris was. lees1975 Dec 2 #8

spooky3

(36,413 posts)
5. Agree but I agree racism was also a factor--and I think
Sun Dec 1, 2024, 10:47 PM
Dec 1

Dionne is right—that ignorant and misled voters didn’t understand that the Dems passed bills that will have long term benefits, and that the President and Congress do not set prices, among other things.

Keepthesoulalive

(808 posts)
6. Obama was a once in a lifetime magic black man.
Sun Dec 1, 2024, 11:12 PM
Dec 1

The backlash was swift Tea party , Obama’s birth certificate, his daughter’s hair wasn’t strait enough. Anything to other him, it also paved the way for trump.
Because you have one black friend you can still be a racist.
Florida, Mississippi, Texas, Louisiana and South Carolina. Don’t say gay , don’t teach black history and a bunch of other dog whistles about race and sexuality .
Misogyny sure but a lot of white folks now feel it’s okay to accost people of different ethnicities.
Trump played up her ethnic background and most white folks weren’t upset. If America was all that she is supposed to be they would have been outraged . Oh well race card played and he won.

elleng

(136,826 posts)
3. "Anger." "There's such a level of skepticism in Fall River about politicians, including me,"
Sun Dec 1, 2024, 10:19 PM
Dec 1

he said. “There’s very little trust.” The anger Coogan sensed has been gestating for a century. Fall River was once a major player in the nation’s economy, and its cotton mills made it an “American Textile Colossus.” But the colossus collapsed in the 1920s as the mills headed to the South. The city’s economy never fully recovered. . .

But investments take time to be felt, and Biden’s efforts, Lambert said, were “obscured by grocery prices and the cost of living and rents going up.”'

lees1975

(6,100 posts)
8. Look, these people probably had no idea how pro-labor Harris was.
Mon Dec 2, 2024, 12:31 AM
Dec 2

They've been watching the same mainstream media circus as the rest of us for four years, 24-7 coverage of Donald Trump to get ratings. It was the media who blinded Americans to the real issues in the campaign, refused to report the truth and created their own reality show, and there are some reporters and journalists, I won't name because it will make people here mad, who have no critical thinking ability and are totally out of it when it comes to what politicial issues are. They are just flattering themselves by thinking they're hot stuff because they're in front of a camera. There was no way to communicate the narrative of the Democratic party candidates, because no one would report on it. It was Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, and everything they said about him was a lie.

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