The Return of Trumpism: Lessons from the 2024 Election

It happened.

Donald Trump defeated Kamala Harris. A twice-impeached convicted felon who has promised to act as a dictator will return to the White House in 2025.

There’s no way to sugarcoat this nightmare scenario. The consequences of this election will unfold for decades to come. They will likely prove destructive to the very fabric of American democracy – and to the survival of life on Earth itself.

Trump is the greatest threat we have ever faced. Yet he will return to power by a vote of the people. Whatever the fate of our nation is, it involves getting through this. We must be up to the task.

Understandably, there’s plenty of blame and finger-pointing to go around. The Harris campaign painted a rosy picture to the very end. Many trusted pollsters and pundits predicted a Democratic victory. They said the fundamentals were favorable to Harris. They said turnout would work in her favor. They said anti-Trump Republicans and women would make all the difference.

They turned out to be very wrong.

Republicans scored a shocking win. The “Blue Wall” crumbled as Trump won battleground states. Republicans took the Senate and the House. Many pollsters and pundits who expressed exceeding confidence about Harris’s chances are now in panic mode. And the Democratic Party is gravely damaged as the nation heads into an uncertain future.

At FrameLab, we didn’t make predictions. We tried to be optimistic but acknowledged the grim possibility of a Trump victory. The fact that he remained strong in the polls was a warning sign. Trumpism has grown stronger, not weaker. Defeating this new iteration of Trump – overtly fascist – will be the moral and political challenge of our times.

Read the full post at the FrameLab newsletter (and please subscribe for free!):

Some Lessons of the 2024 Election

‘Moderate’: a weasel word masking extreme politics

From George Lakoff and Gil Duran at the FrameLab Newsletter:

Moderate and centrist are political weasel words. Their definitions vary widely because there is no such thing as a moderate or centrist ideology. There is no united “middle” or “center” in politics, no single set of ideas on which all moderates or centrists agree. Some support abortion rights, but others oppose them. Some support marriage equality, but others don’t.

For example, Nikki Haley was often described as moderate. Yet the Republican former presidential candidate wouldn’t get many votes in San Francisco. Neither would Elon Musk, who has called himself both a “centrist” and a “moderate” while simultaneously acting a superspreader of right-wing ideas and conspiracy theories.

More to the point: Both Haley and Musk are now backing Donald Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign. Clearly, they have simply been trying to mask their extreme authoritarian politics as “moderate.”

Click here to read the full post: ‘Moderate’: The weasel word masking extreme politics by George Lakoff and Gil Duran at FrameLab.

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