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May 3, 2017

Democrats, Now the Party of No, Stonewall Trump at Their Peril

Liz Peek Articles DEMOCRATS, TRUMP

Why won’t the White House publish its visitor logs? Because any Democrat or business executive who meets with President Trump will be attacked on social media for “collaborating” with the enemy. (Disney CEO Bob Iger, who was blasted for participating in a Trump advisory council, is a great example.) As a result, Team Trump has chosen to grant some guests privacy.

Meanwhile, by insisting on this extreme hostility and resistance, the Left has foregone an enormous opportunity to influence policy under this president even though Donald Trump is open to suggestion.

As Democrats have comfortably settled into their new role as the Party of No, some say the formerly obstructionist Republicans are getting their just desserts. But there is one stark difference between President Obama and President Trump, which suggests the Democratic strategy is self-defeating. It is this: Trump wants input, and Obama did not.

At the business-focused Milken Global Conference taking place this week in Los Angeles, speaker after speaker commented on the many confabs that President Trump has held with leaders of all sorts of industries, as well as with top labor officials and political chiefs.

Andrew Liveris, Chairman and CEO of Dow Chemical, said he was “stunned” at the first meeting that he and a dozen other executives had with the president. “We weren’t used to the president sitting through the whole session,” he recounted. “President Trump had to excuse himself to take a phone call, but then came back and proceeded to ask each individual about his company, his particular problems.”

Trump made it clear, Liveris said, that “everything was on the table” in his bid to boost the economy and create jobs.

That includes job training, for instance, and also lightening the regulatory burden, which Liveris said for manufacturers had soared from $9,500 per employee in 2008 to $19,900 today.

Chris Liddell, head of the president’s Office of American Innovation, said the president had met with over 200 business and thought leaders, many of whom “had not been in the White House for a long time and had been paid at best lip service by the prior administration.” He said that Trump wanted Americans to know that “You have a voice in the White House and we’re open to your ideas.” Asked whether anything specific had come out of such gatherings, Liddell noted that the administration had undertaken a review of Obama’s last-minute changes in CAFÉ standards after meeting with auto executives.

Trump is a political neophyte and has shown flexibility on numerous issues. Having never before run for office, he has few fixed notions on a wide range of policy matters, which is why we have seen him change his mind on taking the daily intel briefings or how to treat young Dreamers, for example. Much to the frustration to some on the right, he is not an ideologue; instead, he’s a deal maker.

Obama was the opposite. In his book The Long Game, Mitch McConnell describes Obama this way: “He’s like the kid in your class who exerts a hell of a lot of effort making sure everyone thinks he’s the smartest one in the room. He talks down to people, whether in a meeting among colleagues in the White House or addressing the nation. Almost without exception, President Obama begins serious policy discussions by explaining why everyone else is wrong. After he assigns straw men to your views, he enthusiastically attempts to knock them down with a theatrically earnest re-litigation of what you’ve missed about his brilliance.”

McConnell was not alone in that assessment. Some of the few business leaders invited to meet with President Obama during his White House years report that he barely paid attention to the conversation, and never followed up with questions, much less policy. His views were unshakeable.

President Trump has made a point of meeting not only with representatives of the business community but also with labor leaders, the liberal media, and even the not-so-loyal opposition. He even has a sit-down with Al Gore for heaven’s sake.  We have seen him respond to those conversations by changing his approach to NAFTA and to the future of the Ex-Im Bank, for instance.

Trump also invited the Congressional leadership – Democrat and Republican – early on to the White House. He met with the leaders of the Congressional Black Caucus in March. That group’s chairman Cedric Richmond said afterward, “He listened, and we talked, and we proposed a lot of solutions, many of which I think he had not heard before, and we’re going to keep advocating.”

That’s a lesson for other Democrats, one they have not absorbed. Instead, they continue to stonewall the Trump White House, hurting the country, and their own party’s prospects. According to a Rasmussen poll conducted in late February, “Most voters in nearly every demographic category think it’s bad for the country and bad for Democrats if they totally oppose Trump and his agenda.”

Even President Obama warned against a rigid policy of non-cooperation after the election. Nonetheless, Democrats are intransigent, worried that groups like We Will Replace You will challenge incumbents caught working with Trump who are up for reelection in 2018. The liberal wing of the party is ascendant, trying to convert the excitement of anti-Trump rallies and demonstrations into wins on election day. For that to happen, Democrats must come up with policies and a platform that the country can rally behind.

Currently, Rasmussen reports that 42 percent of likely voters think the country is headed in the right direction. Last year under Obama, that figure was 26 percent.  President Trump may not have high approval ratings, but if people think his efforts to lighten the tax and regulatory burden on employers will boost the economy and job creation, they will stick with him. And they most assuredly will punish those who stand in his way.

 

Published on TheFiscalTimes.com.

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Liz Peek

2 days ago

Liz Peek

My Morning Rant:
I am alternately peeved and sympathetic with Chip Roy, Ralph Norman and the others who torpedoed Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill. But after reading the fine print this morning and realizing that reforms to Medicaid don’t kick in until 2029 !!!! I am disgusted. I get that states need some time to adjust to a change in rules regarding Medicaid eligibility – maybe a year or 18 months — but do they really need four years? No, they do not. The extended timeframe is an obvious play to put political repercussions off until after the midterms. Legislators from swing districts fear losing their seats because able-bodied adults lose their free ride. They want to put off any change as long as possible.
On the other hand, those vulnerable legislators will almost certainly get canned if the 2017 tax cuts don’t get extended and Trump’s agenda crashes. We need both to get the bill passed, and to make it tougher.
The conservatives calling for bigger spending cuts are completely correct. Just ask Moody’s, which in recent days downgraded U.S. debt. Imagine, the United States of America has lost its triple-A status. (The other two major ratings agencies had already made this downgrade.) This would be a wake-up call except that most of our country is asleep, lulled into a false sense of complacency by hours spent on Tik-Tok or watching the NFL. We all need downtime, for sure, but we also need to pay attention to what’s happening with our country’s fiscal outlook. It isn’t good. Even the Fed, no friend to the Trump administration or to fiscal austerity, has announced it will cut staff and overhead. Of course, why the Fed has a headcount of 24,000 is a mystery. How can they employ so many people and still get it wrong most of the time? This is the group that never spoke out against Biden’s reckless spending; it’s quite the switch.
Simply put, the country endorsed a huge surge in government spending to compensate for the wrong-headed directives during Covid that shut down schools, businesses and churches. The government under Trump wanted to keep Americans employed and the economy ready to rebound, which it did. Biden kept the spending at max level, refusing to let a crisis go to waste. Democrats in Congress and the Fed went along, spurring the highest inflation in decades.
Now we have to go back to the trend-line pre-Covid spending; the bill on the table doesn’t do that. Republicans must do better if they want to keep the majority.
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Right on, as usual! Thanks for all your clear-headed messages.

Excellent analysis! Couldn’t agree more.

Just sick of BOTH parties. Neither are there for the Working Americans. BOTH parties responsible for the theft going on. Repubs should have read the bills that gave away money..

Nailed it

We need a balanced budget amendment! Deficit spending needs to end!

Liz Peek Well written, my friend!

Convention of States is looking better everyday.

Honestly you should be somewhere in Trumps administration Liz.. Just sayin

As much as I want a win on the BBB, I’m torn. I find it very difficult to believe that they can’t find more to cut spending

Is TERM LIMITS in this big beautiful bill? Everything else is.
If not, why not?
Past time to cut the deadwood and get “servants” of We the People seated who will do the job more responsibly..

Following.

CUT MORE SPENDING!!!

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Liz Peek

3 days ago

Liz Peek

What happened to DOGE???
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DOGE isn’t meeting its goals — you can thank the political establishment

DOGE chief has been thwarted at every turn — by judges, Democrats and their media allies, even Republicans.

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The only "plan" for this entire crooked System is to keep running deficits and keep printing those fiat currencies. The D Brand of crooks can win primaries just by using a few dumb generic words like " affordability" or "fairness" no matter how your real wages and purchasing power spiral downwards.

The Uniparty doesn't want their gravy train turned over.

Democrats are Americas virus.

Liz Peek

5 days ago

Liz Peek

My Morning Rant:
John Hawley, Senator from Missouri, is out with a blistering attack on Republicans in Congress who want to “cut” Medicaid spending. He declares those in favor of Medicaid reforms contained in the House bill “a noisy contingent of corporatist Republicans — call it the party’s Wall Street wing” who are not on board with working-class Americans and who want to “build our big, beautiful bill around slashing health insurance for the working poor”. www.nytimes.com/2025/05/12/opinion/josh-hawley-dont-cut-medicaid.html
What rot. Working Americans of all classes are sick and tired of an ever-growing amount of their hard-earned taxes going to fund those who are not working. This is not a Wall Street issue- it’s a fairness issue. Though some groups say most Medicaid recipients are working, that is not true. A study by AEI showed that “In December 2022, 44 percent of non-disabled working age Medicaid recipients without children worked at least 80 hours” per month, compared to 72% not receiving Medicaid. Focusing on “prime working ages of 25 to 54, the share working at least 80 hours was 51 percent among Medicaid recipients and 84 percent among non-Medicaid recipients.” So why would 49% not be working?
Here’s the problem: the Medicaid changes that GOP legislators want to make don’t target “the working poor”, they target able-bodied men and women who are not working, and who historically would not have qualified for Medicaid benefits. Only when Obama rescinded the work requirements for Medicaid did the program blow up entirely and become the drain on the fiscal purse that we see today. As he states in his op-ed, Hawley’s problem is this: “Today [Medicaid] serves over 70 million Americans, including well over one million residents of Missouri, the state I represent.” Hawley, who was elected last fall by a 14-point margin, fears he’ll lose ground with those million recipients if he embraces fiscal common sense. Or maybe he fears losing the support of healthcare professionals, who donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to his campaign. www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/josh-hawley/summary?cid=N00041620
Our country has seen a long-term decline in able-bodied men working. The labor participation rate for that group is 89.1% which sounds high until you realize that it was 97.1% in 1960. That’s a huge slide, with troubling implications for U.S. productivity. If you believe, as I do, that work is healthy, it is also bad news for the individuals who are, at least in some cases, gaming the system.
Instead of railing about sincere efforts to reform an out-of-control entitlement, why doesn’t Hawley turn his attentions to improving job opportunities and training in his state? Or attracting more employers? And, where are his ideas for cutting federal spending, which is too high and which is hurting our nation? Some $50 billion in Medicaid outlays funds fraud or constitutes “improper payments.” What is Hawley doing to confront that?
Maybe I would be more impressed with his arguments but for his having published his screed in the New York Times- is that the most efficient way to speak to working-class Americans? Bernie Sanders probably thinks so, and so does Josh Hawley.
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Sen. Josh Hawley – Campaign Finance Summary

Fundraising profile for Sen. Josh Hawley – Missouri

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We have to end the idea that working for McDonalds at the counter is the end game career wise. It’s what you do in high school and college to pay your bills. If you want to be in that industry, you need to think manager then owner as that is the career.

Uniparty in action. They are there to Take money, not help The People.

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