▲ | danans 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
> I don't think Trump is anyone's idea of a textbook conservative, especially not economically I'm just going off what you said above: > The US is a very right wing country. > It's politicians are better able to avoid populist price controls. I don't think he is a traditional conservative either, but rather a right-wing nationalist ethno-socialist. However, the fact is that he has the near unanimous support of most "textbook conservatives", both in Congress and in the broader Republican party, as evidenced by their voting for and supporting a massive debt-exploding budget and their silence in the face of his ethno-nationalist executive actions. If he isn't a textbook conservative, neither are they. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | wredcoll 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I'm just piling on but: > a textbook conservative, especially not economically Wtf is a text book conservative supposed to be, exactly? And have we ever had one? All the republicans in my life have raised the national debt and spent their time passing laws about culture war issues. | |||||||||||||||||
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▲ | qcnguy 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Trump has certainly dragged his party towards the left economically speaking. With lots of squealing and resistance, but they went there in the end because it's popular with voters. They haven't managed to win people over on fiscal conservatism despite trying. But US politics plays out in many ways, including at the local level. For water supply who the POTUS is doesn't matter that much, it's not handled at the federal level. American political outcomes vs the rest of world are the result of long term social trends beyond any one man. | |||||||||||||||||
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