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Experts in Germany and the U.S. look at support for right wing parties and fringe movements in 2015 for areas adversely affected by cheap imports.
Grouped Articles
Washington Post 12/25/2015
Washington Post 12/27/2015
Trump Laid Out His Playbook 30 Years Ago
Wall Street Journal 01/25/2016
What’s Our Duty to the People Globalization Leaves Behind?
New York Times 01/26/2016
Here’s what a conservative policy agenda should look like in the Trump era - The Washington Post
Washington Post 01/27/2016
Anxiety Fuels Donald Trump’s Supporters
Wall Street Journal 01/27/2016
Grouped Articles
Wall Street Journal 01/27/2016
Donald Trump’s surprisingly un-Trump Iowa concession speech - The Washington Post
Washington Post 02/02/2016
How Both Parties Lost the White Middle Class
New York Times 02/01/2016
Donald Trump’s Campaign Blueprint: His Own Book
Wall Street Journal 03/03/2016
Democratic Fictions About the GOP and Trump
Wall Street Journal 03/08/2016
Wall Street Journal 03/08/2016
A resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute says the Republican Party and conservatism have missed the problems facing the working class, leading to the popularity of Trump. He sees dangers in the deportation of 11 million Hispanic Americans that Trump has called for, and says conservatism and Republican ought to mean many positive things to working Americans that have missed out on opportunities in the last decade- that it will take many years and more than one election cycle to change this. In fact Speaker Ryan called for a forum on poverty and inequality for working class people, only after Trump increased his popularity by appealing to older white Americans left out by changes in the economy in the last decade.
Grouped Articles
Here’s what a conservative policy agenda should look like in the Trump era - The Washington Post
Washington Post 01/27/2016
Wall Street Journal 01/27/2016
New York Times 01/29/2016
How Both Parties Lost the White Middle Class
New York Times 02/01/2016
GOP leaders, you must do everything in your power to stop Trump - The Washington Post
Washington Post 02/25/2016
As Donald Trump Rolls Up Victories, the G.O.P. Split Widens to a Chasm
New York Times 03/01/2016
By damaging the international trading system including with allies such a Canada, Britain, France and Germany, the result of a downward spiral through higher tariffs in other countries, could end up costing the U.S. 1 million jobs. Under such a system the U.S. would lose many of the advantages of its booming tech sector, its tech driven global advantages in many industries, without signifcant gains in low cost imports such as clothing which would simply migrate to other countries such as India. The problem of worker wage stagnation in the U.S., and loss of jobs in certain sectors, is very real, but this is the wrong way to tackle the problem. China is already moving towards a consumer driven economy. Economists show that trade with Mexico would be seriously hurt both ways, creating more pressure of migrants at the border under such proposals as a 45% tariff and its indirect effect on Mexico, when the actual fact is that net migration from Mexico is the lowest it has ben in decades. Politics can do strange things as when two senators Smoot and Hawley from agricultural states Utah and Oregon, at the head of important committees in the U.S. Congress pushed and passed legislation for a 60% tariff in 1930 for the industrial sector they had no idea about. When Smoot and Hawley lost reelection in 1932 they left behind a lot of damage, especially for the farmers and workers they thought they were fighting for.
Linked Articles
How Trump’s Hard Line on Trade Could Backfire
Wall Street Journal 03/25/2016
Wall Street Journal 03/08/2016
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