Trump 2.0 is going to be the same but worse, like a strong cheese voted out of the refrigerator only to grow ever more pungent as it moldered in a dark corner of Florida. The latest version of Trump has promised more violence and destruction the second time around, from mass deportations to mass tariffs. And he's planning to avoid appointing anyone to his administration who might have a contrary thought, a backbone to resist him, or the least qualification to enact sensible policy.
In the face of such a vengeful and truculent force returning to the White House, surely, you might think, it will be impossible to find any liberals embracing such anarchy the second time around.
Think again. This is how American politics works, if only for liberals. The modern Republican Party routinely boycotts Democratic administrations: blocking Merrick Garland's Supreme Court nomination, working overtime to shut down the federal government, voting en masse against legislation it would have supported if introduced by a Republican administration. The MAGA crowd has, in fact, turned noncooperation into something of an art form.
Liberals, on the other hand, pride themselves on bipartisanship, on getting things done no matter who's in power. So, inevitably, there will be cooperation with the Trump team as it sets about the "deconstruction of the administrative state" (as Trump cheerleader Steve Bannon once put it). Worse, there will even be some silver-lining liberals (and a few leftists) who pull up a seat to applaud the wrecking ball -- not perhaps for its wholesale destruction of neighborhoods but at least for its demolition of a select number of buildings that they deem irreparable.
Each time such destruction takes place, the self-exculpatory comment from such silver-liners will be: "Well, somebody had to come along and do something!" If Trump is the only tool in the governing toolbox, some liberals will indeed try to use him to pound in a few nails they think need hammering.
Burning Bridges with China
In his 2024 State of the Union address, Joe Biden argued that he did a better job than Donald Trump of standing up to China. He certainly devoted more Pentagon dollars to containing China. And not only did he not roll back Trump's tariffs on Chinese products, but he added some of his own, including a 100% tax on Chinese electric vehicles. Biden also made concrete moves to decouple the U.S. economy from China's, especially when it came to the supply chains for critical raw materials that Beijing has sought to control. "I've made sure that the most advanced American technologies can't be used in China," he insisted, adding, "Frankly for all his tough talk on China, it never occurred to my predecessor to do any of that."
Biden's moves on China, from export controls and subsidies for chip manufacturers to closer military relationships with Pacific partners like Australia and India, received the enthusiastic support of his party. No surprise there: It's hard to find anyone in Washington these days who has a good word to say about engaging more with China.
So, when Trump takes office in January, he won't actually be reversing course. He'll simply be taking the baton-like stick from Biden while leaving all the carrots in the ground.
That said, Trump's proposed further spike in tariffs against China (and Canada and Mexico and potentially the rest of the world) does give many liberals pause, since it threatens to unleash an economically devastating global trade war while boosting prices radically at home. But trade unions backed by such liberals support such measures as a way to protect jobs, while the European Union only recently imposed stiff tariffs of their own on Chinese electrical vehicles.
So, yes, neoliberals who embrace free trade are going to push back against Trump's economic policies, but more traditional liberals who backed protectionist measures in the past will secretly (or not so secretly) applaud Trump's moves.
Back to the Wall
On taking office, Joe Biden rolled back his predecessor's harsh immigration policies. The rate of border-crossings then spiked for a variety of reasons (not just the repeal of those Trump-era laws) from an average of half a million to about two million annually. However, in 2024, those numbers plummeted, despite Trump's campaign claims -- but no matter. By then, many Democrats had already been reborn as border hawks.
That new, tougher attitude was on display in executive actions President Biden took in 2024 as well as the border security bill that Democrats tried to push through Congress earlier this year. Forget about finding a path to citizenship for the millions of undocumented immigrants who keep the American economy humming, Biden's immigration policy focused on limiting asylum petitions, increasing detention facilities, and even allocating more money to build Trump's infamous wall.
As Elora Mukherjee, director of the Immigrants' Rights Clinic at Columbia Law School, pointed out on the eve of the November election, "What we are seeing is that the center of the Democratic Party is now adopting the same policies, the same postures, that MAGA Republicans were fighting for about six years ago."
And yet such punitive policies still weren't harsh enough for MAGA Republicans and their America First followers. The bottom line was that immigration-averse voters didn't want to support Democrats pretending to be MAGA Republicans. When it came to the White House, they wanted the real thing.
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