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MAGA must be reborn Time to shed the crankery and contrarianism

'MAGA 3.0 should build itself not around one politician but around one particular class.' (Photo by Probal Rashid/LightRocket via Getty Images)

'MAGA 3.0 should build itself not around one politician but around one particular class.' (Photo by Probal Rashid/LightRocket via Getty Images)


November 7, 2024   5 mins

“This is a movement like no one’s seen before… the greatest political movement of all time… the most incredible political thing…” Donald Trump didn’t hold back in his victory speech. And though he is known for his rhetorical exaggerations, it will be difficult for anyone to disagree with him this time.

Amid the chorus of victory, however, choices will have to be made about the direction his populist force will take. MAGA has grown tremendously, co-existing uneasily with the party establishment, even as it has started to displace it, and incorporating new constituencies, with divergent interests and ideological orientations. Initially rooted in economic populism, MAGA now is a more unruly cultural movement united by loyalty to its leader. And as it returns to power, it stands at a crossroads.

How can MAGA avoid making the same mistakes of the first administration, while translating the popular energies it has awakened into a viable strategy? To do so, it must redefine itself once again: not just for winning but for wielding power in accordance with its own stated goals of controlling the border and rebuilding the country’s economic strength. Only a third iteration, MAGA 3.0, can fully realise the promise of Trump’s political revolution.

When Donald Trump first descended the escalator nine years ago, he opened his political career with a trail-blazing critique of globalisation with a focus on fixing America’s trade and immigration imbalances: MAGA 1.0. A radical strategy, at times its critiques of bipartisan corporate orthodoxy converged with Bernie Sanders and the populist-Left. The opening days of the first Trump Administration saw out-of-the-box proposals for a tax hike on the rich (put forward by Steve Bannon, of all people) and an expansion of public healthcare options for working-class Americans, as opposed to an Obamacare repeal.

But it was an unstable formulation. And it was soon folded into the same party leadership Trump initially opposed. The president essentially adopted Congressional Republicans’ tax cutting agenda as his own and abdicated any serious effort at comprehensive immigration reform, even coming to oppose Mandatory E-Verify under pressure from business lobbies.

Only with trade under the leadership of Robert Lighthizer did the administration seriously and consistently diverge from GOP strictures. Its final achievement was Operation Warp Speed in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, one of the greatest feats of executive action in modern times, which set the template for the Biden Administration’s industrial policy. But MAGA 1.0 was a largely stillborn revolution that never had much of a chance against a still entrenched old guard.

“MAGA 1.0 was a largely stillborn revolution that never had much of a chance against a still entrenched old guard.”

Enter MAGA 2.0: As Trump left office in 2021, the lingering conflicts between his populist instincts and the establishment’s policy dictates were effectively suppressed. A common front of loyalty to Trump took precedence over any ideological commitments. The party’s emotional centre of gravity remained with the personality rather than with any policy. Much of the Right regrouped around the same small government ethos that had defined conservatism since Reagan. Only tariffs and the defence of entitlements remained from Trump’s original economic heresies.

While out of power, MAGA also expanded not just as a political brand but as a cultural current. It came to include many diffuse elements, including: anti-deep state former Democrats like Robert Kennedy Jr and Tulsi Gabbard; Silicon Valley tech bros such as Elon Musk and Marc Andreesen; and substantive heterodox populist conservatives J.D. Vance and Marco Rubio. It attracted more than a fair few disgruntled cranks but one of these factions, the intellectual wing of the so-called “New Right” has actually come far in developing the anti-globalisation ideas of MAGA 1.0: reining in Wall Street; reforming finance and defending workers and upgrading the defence-industrial base against a resurgent China.

The irony is that MAGA 2.0 had by then lost any genuine interest in governing, instead focusing on indulging the “vibe and tribe” identity affirmation aspects of the movement. But the upshot is that Trump campaign did not have to talk about policy much at all: Americans’ disaffection with continuing economic decline and progressive-led cultural change, particularly among the working-class, non-metropolitan and non-college-educated, was strong enough.

And so, in the immediate post-election environment, Trump partisans must hope that the next MAGA movement will take the best features of MAGA 1.0, while cutting the fat from MAGA 2.0: Vance’s post-globalised vision without the crankery and contrarianism. It must recapture the creative and ambitious policy visions of early-stage Trumpism while developing the discipline and foresight that the first term lacked. It must also complete the break with the GOP’s free-market fundamentalism by adopting a pragmatic approach that can mix strategic deregulation with state-directed guidance of key industrial sectors. But who is going to actually carry it out?

The realisation is clear enough for both Trump himself and his die-hard followers that this is his last rodeo. The torch will eventually be passed on to a worthy successor. The day before the election, Politico interviewed Trump supporters and hinted at the difficulty of finding such a figure: Vance, Tucker Carlson, Kari Lake, Donald Trump Jr, Ron DeSantis, all elicited at best lukewarm reactions from rally-goers, who recognised Trump as a singular (and non-replicable) phenomenon. But the lack of a clear successor may be a good thing. It would allow the movement to move on from personalities and back toward the big-picture promises with which Trump launched the MAGA era.

All great American political movements united broad coalitions under a compelling alternative vision of the country; they succeeded only if they were able to displace the existing elite with a new counter-elite: from the Revolution to the New Deal and beyond, this has been the pattern of US history. MAGA 3.0 should build itself not around one politician but around one particular class. The role should go to an unheralded group at the heart of the MAGA coalition: not quite the working-class, who lack the social, political, institutional and economic capital to fulfil the function of elites, but rather the “American gentry” who fuelled Trump’s rise from the very start: the car dealers, general contractors, agribusiness owners, extractive industry magnates, franchise and factory owners, and assorted small-town millionaires, who often possess great wealth but little cultural prestige or recognition — a classic description for a revolutionary counter-elite.

Rather than a single princely political figure to take the mantle of Trump, it is they — this class of local entrepreneurial leaders — who should be crowned as the collective successors to Trump, for what are they if not a collection of mini-Trumps? The promise at the heart of MAGA, the physical reconstruction of the United States, should be entrusted to them. They could be awarded generous provision of capital in the form of subsidies, loans, and technology transfers to supercharge national productivity. This petty-bourgeois industrial policy would create jobs, helping the working-class along and the nation as a whole. Just as important, by upgrading the technological capabilities of the small-business sector and enlisting its help in stamping out the employment of undocumented workers (in fields like agriculture and construction) through a national Mandatory E-Verify scheme, the demand for illegal immigration could be reduced.

MAGA 3.0 may end up being less entertaining than the early tide of the Trump era, with more conventional politicians, your Vances and Rubios and Hawleys, courting the gentry and the other members of the coalition. But the Trump legacy could be more serious. By bulldozing the old establishment and galvanising a counter-elite, the MAGA job he started might just find success.


Michael Cuenco is a writer on policy and politics. He is Associate Editor at American Affairs.
1TrueCuencoism

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Matt Hindman
Matt Hindman
1 day ago

I think Trump knew what he had to do. The simple fact is he has missed a step and he is getting old. He is nowhere near as bad as Biden but you can see it if you compare him to just a few years ago. What he needs to do is hand off his movement to those with the drive and expertise to carry it on. It is the only way it survives past him. He always had great instincts but he was never in any way a policy guy. Trump’s biggest mistake in his first term was surrounding himself with enemies who had ill intentions towards his movement. His second biggest mistake was listening to them. He even acknowledged this fact when he was interviewed by Rogan. The beautiful irony to me is I don’t think he would have even had close to the people needed for this back in 2020. Not too mention his Bush Republican enemies were surrounding him ready to pounce.
Now look at things. America is much farther along on its realignment track. The Bush era neocons of the Republican Party are a shadow of their former selves. The issues he focused on such as trade, foreign wars, domestic manufacturing, institutional decay, and immigration are at the front and center of American political discussion. Rising populist stars in the GOP like Hawley and Vance have been making waves and just as importantly have proven they can govern effectively. Groups like Oren Cass’s American Compass have sprung up and spent years working out how to implement populist ideas through hard policy. Defections of former Democrats like Tulsi Gabbard and RFK Jr. have broadened his coalition. The GOP establishment ran a slate of candidates against him in the primary who proved they learned nothing in the last eight years. They thought they were running for the 2004 primary and forgot they were running for the 2024. With this victory Trump has proven how little he needs them. His coalition has even expanded to include new demographics who in turn have had their own influence. I think it is safe to say that MAGA is a movement that will well outlast Trump.

Last edited 1 day ago by Matt Hindman
Seb Dakin
Seb Dakin
1 day ago
Reply to  Matt Hindman

Very fine comment, and I’d also add that his first victory was so unexpected by pollsters, and such a shock to the establishment, that all the it-was-the-Russians nonsense that bogged him down was able to get traction.
This time, the victory is so clear and overwhelming, I don’t think the Democrats could pull that again, and attempts to do so would likely backfire.

Last edited 1 day ago by Seb Dakin
ChilblainEdwardOlmos
ChilblainEdwardOlmos
1 day ago
Reply to  Seb Dakin

Apparently David Corn of Mother Jones has already tweeted out the same BS claim blaming Russia. It’s pathetic.

Alex Margolies
Alex Margolies
18 hours ago

It’s interesting because my son came home from from his secondary school in South-East London on Monday talking about rumours going round his school that Harris wouldn’t allow people to be Christians if she was elected, where does that kind of large scale disinformation come from then?!…

mike otter
mike otter
16 hours ago
Reply to  Alex Margolies

Look at her owners’/handlers’ politics – are you sure this is disinformation? The fault with the premise “wouldn’t allow people to be Christian” is belief being non corporeal. Example i could say to obama’s thugs “there is no God but Allah and Muhammad is his prophet” but in my mind i still pray to the Lord, to Jesus and the Holy Spirit. (Plus the saints, virgin Mary etc). So the correct version is: “harris would try and stop people being Christian”; biden/harris had already used state force and coercion to elevate illegal migrants over US citizens, black over white, queer over straight and Moslems over Christians – result- a thumping electoral loss. Its a big burden on Trump to try and re-grow the founding principles of USA but a way bigger job for demrats to destroy Christianity (or any other religion for that matter)

Harrydog
Harrydog
10 hours ago
Reply to  Alex Margolies

Maybe from when she told two Christians who were at her rally that they were in the wrong place and should go to the other party’s rally. If you don’t see the anti-Christian sentiment that is embedded in the progressive left, you are blind. It is right there, somewhat obscured by the blatant antisemitism.

Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
11 hours ago

Yes I saw Russia rubbish too today.

Jerry Carroll
Jerry Carroll
6 hours ago

“David Corn of Mother Jones.” Nothing more needs to be said. 

Martin M
Martin M
22 hours ago
Reply to  Matt Hindman

Trump may be nowhere near as bad as Biden now, but what will he be like in four years’ time? Often old people (and Trump is unarguably an old person) often “fall off a cliff” in stamina and cognitive ability (by which I mean they go from “ok” to “three quarters dead” in a very short time). I’ve see it many times in elderly relatives, none of whom had the to deal with the stress of running a country.

Rob N
Rob N
20 hours ago
Reply to  Martin M

Wouldn’t be surprised if Trump does a year or 2 and then let’s JDV take over to give him time to settle in before the 2028 election.

Carlos Danger
Carlos Danger
13 hours ago
Reply to  Rob N

That certainly is a possibility but I would put it in the very unlikely category. JD Vance is not presidential timber, at least not yet, and Donald Trump didn’t choose him as his successor. He chose him like he chose Mike Pence — to help him get elected. We all saw how that turned out for Mike Pence.
All this talk about JD Vance, Bobby Kennedy, Tulsi Gabbard, Elon Musk, Vivak Ramaswamy, and Tucker Carlson having a big role in Donald Trump’s administration is just loose talk. They won’t. They are all just talkers, not doers. And Donald Trump is a doer, not a talker. Last time around his picks for people to help him get things done was a mixed bag. This time around I think he’ll do better.

Michael Mcelwee
Michael Mcelwee
12 hours ago
Reply to  Carlos Danger

To be a good doer one must also be a good talker.

Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
11 hours ago
Reply to  Carlos Danger

Elon Musk is the doer of doers. What are you sniffing!

Carlos Danger
Carlos Danger
50 minutes ago

I’m talking about doing in the political arena. I agree, in business, Elon Musk is, as you put it so well, the doer of doers.

Harrydog
Harrydog
10 hours ago
Reply to  Carlos Danger

“They are all just talkers, not doers.” Yes, that Elon guy hasn’t really done anything but talk.

Carlos Danger
Carlos Danger
49 minutes ago
Reply to  Harrydog

In politics, that’s right, Elon Musk hasn’t done anything but talk.

Dave Canuck
Dave Canuck
16 hours ago
Reply to  Martin M

Not to worry, he will delegate and spend most of his days on the golf course , show up for photo opps and major announcements and sign offs, the occasional press conference answering questions from only friendly reporters for good measure. He certainly won’t be getting up early to read memos.

Carlos Danger
Carlos Danger
13 hours ago
Reply to  Martin M

Donald Trump certainly has slowed down and he will slow down more. It would be better if he wasn’t as old as he is. But you have to balance weaknesses like age against strengths. On balance, there was no candidate for president this time better than Donald Trump. His first term was a great one, and he learns from his mistakes. His second term is likely to be greater.
There is risk in everything. We worry too much about risks and failure, and avoid trying new things just to be safe. In my research and writing on innovation, I’ve found that safetyism does more harm than good. People shy away from experimenting and don’t make any progress.
So it’s good we took a chance with Donald Trump. If he does fall off a cliff, we’ll get by. We did with Joe Biden. And if he does hang on, we’ll get the benefits of being led by a leader who is not afraid to learn by failing, and who knows how to fail safe — to manage risk so that failure is an option.

AJ Mac
AJ Mac
12 hours ago
Reply to  Carlos Danger

Nevertheless it is much easier to damage or destroy institutions than to rebuild them once battered, let alone to rebuild them better (to paraphrase a wretched slogan the Donkey party used).

Given your topical knowledge and general smarts, I don’t guess you think risk—let alone a raging appetite for sudden change (or nostalgic restoration)—is an intrinsic good.

Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
10 hours ago
Reply to  AJ Mac

I forget the number that Elon mentioned. Something like 450 overlapping institutions strangling efficiency and negatively effecting businesses. Time for some severe pruning.

AJ Mac
AJ Mac
10 hours ago

Elon and Donald are proposing to do the “pruning” with sledgehammers.
And both men are outlying examples of elite power and privilege, one the wealthiest man in the world, the other soon to be the most powerful, again. Be careful what you wish for.

Last edited 10 hours ago by AJ Mac
Jerry Carroll
Jerry Carroll
6 hours ago
Reply to  AJ Mac

A born bureaucrat steps forth from a committee room to urge further study on the question at hand.

AJ Mac
AJ Mac
4 hours ago
Reply to  Jerry Carroll

You love labelling and dismissing people, in my case very inaccurately and unfairly. I’m way too argumentative and out-of-lockstep to be a bureaucrat, politician, or even a store manager. A person like Trump or Bolsanaro derives almost unlimited energy from hating and haters, but even aside from my less amplified charisma and ambition (maybe more than you’d estimate) my feelings get hurt too easily and I tend to feel bad after I go off on people. Not always though.
Then again, stereotypes and reductive epithets always seem a bit more fitting when we use them on our opponents. How would you label yourself if you had the nerve to be as cartoonish and unsparing as you are with others?

Max More
Max More
12 hours ago
Reply to  Carlos Danger

Slowed down? There was no evidence of that on the campaign trail over the last many months.

Warren Trees
Warren Trees
12 hours ago
Reply to  Max More

Agreed. The extraordinary pace at which he works defies his age. And he doesn’t quit after 4:00 PM like the current sock puppet.

Carlos Danger
Carlos Danger
10 hours ago
Reply to  Warren Trees

Oh, come on. On Election Day, Joe Biden lasted until past 4:00 pm. He didn’t clock out until 4:02.

Jerry Carroll
Jerry Carroll
6 hours ago
Reply to  Carlos Danger

Yeah, but he didn’t report for work until 2 p.m. and it took an injection to pull that off.

Carlos Danger
Carlos Danger
45 minutes ago
Reply to  Max More

Go back and look at videos of Donald Trump in 2020 and in 2016 and compare them to his recent videos. He’s aged noticeably, in appearance, in the way he walks and holds himself, and in the way he speaks. He’s not a Joe Biden, but he doesn’t have the energy he had.

Jerry Carroll
Jerry Carroll
6 hours ago
Reply to  Carlos Danger

This is a pretty good argument against the bureaucratic process. Look what Elon’s space company has done in comparison to the slow and stodgy NASA.

Carlos Danger
Carlos Danger
41 minutes ago
Reply to  Jerry Carroll

Good point. I use Elon Musk’s SpaceX example a lot. He does agile development, while NASA uses waterfall development. The difference is remarkable. As Donald Trump said in his victory speech the other night, watching the SpaceX booster come thundering down until it was delicately caught in mid-air by the claws coming out of the launch tower was stunning. What a feat.

Harrydog
Harrydog
10 hours ago
Reply to  Martin M

And there are eighty-year-olds who are hale, hearty, and full of energy.

Jerry Carroll
Jerry Carroll
6 hours ago
Reply to  Harrydog

Henry Kissinger lived to be 102 although it must be admitted he slowed down after passing the century mark.

Jerry Carroll
Jerry Carroll
6 hours ago
Reply to  Martin M

The Founding Fathers of the Republic lived to great age.

Norfolk Sceptic
Norfolk Sceptic
8 hours ago
Reply to  Matt Hindman

Trump list his political navigator, Flynn, very early on, and found the opposition too numerous, and the attacks on him, by the bureaucracy, overwhelming, so he switched to Plan B, which was to start the biggest sting operation ever implemented.

Samuel Ross
Samuel Ross
1 day ago

This is the kind of article that makes an Unherd subscription worthwhile. You know what’s funny? I disagree vehemently with the author’s gentle criticism of DJT, but I enjoyed his humor, his tone, his points of view, his skill with English, his logic, the warmth in his writing.

He’s wrong when he says that there’s a ‘cult of personality’ around DJT; yes, he is loved, but his message is real and solid. However, the author speaks of many ‘mini-Trumps’ to come, and in this he speaks truly. It is for all of us to take up his mantle and carry it forth, for love, courage, and truth.

May our Father in Heaven bless all of His children with every blessing ….

Caradog Wiliams
Caradog Wiliams
22 hours ago
Reply to  Samuel Ross

I have an image of those little Trumps walking around New York. Time to invest in Permatan manufacturers.

Martin M
Martin M
22 hours ago
Reply to  Samuel Ross

There are no mini-Trumps. There’s just Trump, and a bunch of wannabes.

Samuel Ross
Samuel Ross
19 hours ago
Reply to  Martin M

Hmm – if I take up his principles in my life (humor, truth, and courage), does this not make me a ‘mini-Trump’?

J B
J B
23 hours ago

Not much mention of JD Vance…there’s a lad to keep an eye on….

ChilblainEdwardOlmos
ChilblainEdwardOlmos
1 day ago

Dude, Marco Rubio is a NeoCon. There’s seriously NOTHING heterodox about him. Where the hell did you get that impression? An alternate reality apparently.

Warren Trees
Warren Trees
12 hours ago

This writer is known for that. He’s the last person on earth that should be giving DJT any advice.

Jerry Carroll
Jerry Carroll
6 hours ago

Rubio is smart enough to know which way the wind is blowing.

AJ Mac
AJ Mac
4 hours ago
Reply to  Jerry Carroll

Malleable enough, like nearly every actual conservative the Elephants have left.

Terry M
Terry M
17 hours ago

You forgot Vivek. He best exemplifies MAGA and he has the minority credibility that will attract some leftists swimming in identity politics.
Viva Vance/Vivek !!

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
16 hours ago

I’m not sure it’s MAGA that needs a rebirth so much as the GOP establishment in general. Its fecklessness, its steadfast refusal to listen to its constituents, and its go-long/get alone attitude with leftist excess is what made Trump possible in the first place.

Carlos Danger
Carlos Danger
11 hours ago

The political career of Donald Trump has been a marvel to behold. He came out of obscurity (political obscurity, at least) to win the 2016 election despite the fact that the Republican party, his own party, was (at first, at least) against him. Once president, the Democrats fought him at every turn, investigating him for two years and impeaching him twice. But still he accomplished more than any president in recent memory, and perhaps in the country’s history.
Donald Trump lost the 2020 election and was vilified by his own party in the aftermath. Many of his own cabinet, appointees, and staff turned into enemies. He was impeached and nearly convicted, which would have barred him from office. He retreated from Washington and New York to his Mar-a-Lago resort, powerless and with his enemies at his heels.
But Donald Trump didn’t retire, he ran for re-election. When he ran, he wasn’t handed the nomination, he was opposed by a strong slate of candidates from his own party. In a corrupt effort that stank of kangaroo courts and banana republics, his enemies used prosecutors and courts to dog him with frivolous civil and criminal lawsuits. They sapped his time and resources and got ridiculous damages of over half a billion dollars and a conviction on 34 criminal counts. He was shot once, coming within an inch of dying, but got back up with blood dripping from his face to pump his fist in defiance. A few weeks later another shooter was chased off minutes before he took a shot.
And Donald Trump won again! He pulled off something only one other president did, winning a non-consecutive second term. And he did it at the age of 78, an age when many people (like Joe Biden) struggle even with the basic tasks of life. He’s slowed down, but he fights off age like he fights off other problems. He seems ready and eager to get started on tackling the problems a president faces.
I go into this detail not to praise Donald Trump. Like most people, I see a lot of weakness to go along with his strengths. I get tired of his tweets and his rallies, of his boasting and bloviating. I’m turned off by his sophomoric insults, his orange hue, his crazy coiffure, and his fat physique. He doesn’t have the charm even of a Kamala Harris, with her smile, her quick laugh, and her “joy”.
What I want to do is to stress how remarkable Donald Trump’s rise to power has been. America has never seen a president like him before. And it’s not due to policy, to MAGA, to plans or platforms. It’s due to process, to an ability to deal with complexity and risk to get things done. Donald Trump is master of that process–the art of the deal–and that is why he has been able to do what he’s done.
When Donald Trump steps down from the presidency, his rare talent will step down with him, with nothing left behind. No one will pick up his mantle to succeed him. They can’t. They either have that talent on their own or they don’t. And nobody else in his orbit seems to have that kind of talent. Certainly not JD Vance. Not Bobby Kennedy, or Tulsi Gabbard, or Vivak Ramaswamy, or any of their ilk.
Someone will be the next president, of course, whether Republican or Democrat. But they won’t be Donald Trump’s successor in anything but that limited sense. What gave Donald Trump the presidency, and what gave us what will last as his legacy, lives in, and dies with, Donald Trump. It can’t be passed down.

Last edited 11 hours ago by Carlos Danger
AJ Mac
AJ Mac
10 hours ago
Reply to  Carlos Danger

Well said. Charisma can’t be coached, though it can bend in a darker or sunnier direction, as it does with Trump and Obama respectively. In the abstract Kamala may have been charismatic enough to win, barely. Hilary was not, nor Dukakis, Kerry, or Romney.
You have to have a certain star quality or personal warmth/likability to win the job in recent decades. (Someone of subdued or more introverted character could perhaps prove that wrong, but not yet—not since Nixon for an elected president). That’s something the Democrats have tried to ignore more often than the Republicans since 1972.
Would you agree that a high percentage of Trump voters constitute a near cult of personality, with some making him into a de facto savior or conquering hero of mythical size? There was a touch of that with Obama, but on a much smaller scale. Trump could become the closest thing to a monarch or autocrat that the U.S. has ever seen. Some think they want that. We’ll all have to live through it, divided in one another’s midst. But I hope it doesn’t get too violent or destructive on either side, of course. Nor stay as divided among the middle 80% percent of Americans with little or no appetite for extremism of any kind.

Harrydog
Harrydog
10 hours ago
Reply to  Carlos Danger

“have the charm even of a Kamala Harris, with her smile, her quick laugh, and her “joy”.
She is the very definition of inauthentic – adopting fake accents to appeal to different audiences. Trump is 100% authentic, for good and for bad. Can you picture Harris on Rogan? She can’t have a genuine conversation without it being scripted or having a Bluetooth earbud.

Carlos Danger
Carlos Danger
36 minutes ago
Reply to  Harrydog

I disagree. Donald Trump has a shtick he calls “truthful hyperbole” that he hides behind but which is really just lying. Kamala Harris seems more natural to me. She serves up word salads, but that’s who she is. Donald Trump puts on an act. He seems like an angry man, but look at his relationship with his family, and he’s anything but. Three wives that he cheated on, and they all love him, along with his children. His employees love him too.

Max More
Max More
12 hours ago

” It must also complete the break with the GOP’s free-market fundamentalism by adopting a pragmatic approach that can mix strategic deregulation with state-directed guidance of key industrial sectors.” The idea that Republicans these days are free market fundamentalists is ludicrous. That is unfortunate because free markets are what is needed. We do not need more corrupt, coercive, and wasteful “state-directed guidance”, i.e. economic authoritarianism.

Victor James
Victor James
21 hours ago

The successor is Musk.

Terry M
Terry M
17 hours ago
Reply to  Victor James

Musk can be the heart and engine, but he can’t be President, not having been birthed in the USA. Kingmaker, not king.

Carlos Danger
Carlos Danger
13 hours ago
Reply to  Victor James

Elon Musk is a talented person but you wouldn’t want him in government. He would be terrible at it. He can’t give a speech. He doesn’t care what other people think. He doesn’t know how to do deals. He’s not a people person, and that’s what politicians need to be. He’s a Mr. Spock.

Max More
Max More
12 hours ago
Reply to  Carlos Danger

Musk will create vastly more value in private business, such as in accelerating our expansion into space.

Carlos Danger
Carlos Danger
11 hours ago
Reply to  Max More

I agree. Elon Musk is a genius, with a remarkable talent in business. But he’s no politician, let alone a successor to Donald Trump.