In God We Trust - Established 2008
(606) 638-0123606-624-9019 markgrayson@me.com
In God We Trust - Established 2008
  • News
    • Regional News
    • Announcements
    • Recollections
  • Sports News
    • Big Sandy Sportsman
  • Lifestyles
  • Courthouse
  • Obituaries
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Regional News
    • Announcements
    • Recollections
  • Sports News
    • Big Sandy Sportsman
  • Lifestyles
  • Courthouse
  • Obituaries
No Result
View All Result
TheLevisaLazer.com
No Result
View All Result
Advertisement
LADY BULLDOGS LOOK TO PICK UP THE PACE THIS SEASON; OPENER NEXT TUESDAY POPULAR 19 YEAR-OLD WOMAN FROM KERMIT AREA DIES IN CRASH WITH COAL TRUCK Lawrence Co. Cheer headed to Disney in February; 15th Region Runner-Up PAIR OF LCHS STUDENTS CHOSEN FOR ALL-STATE CHOIR Lawrence Co. local government offices will be **closed** on Thursday and Friday
Three Rivers HH digital ad-AAd-bannerfuneral1leader1joe_young_banneer
Levisa-Lazer-Banner-Ad-copyFoothills-Bundle
Home Content Editorials/Letters

How did Trump win nomination?

Admin by Admin
July 19, 2016
in Editorials/Letters
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Desperation in Appalachia and rest of rural U.S. fueled Trump’s rise to Republican nomination

Donald Trump’s rise from businessman and reality television star to Republican nominee for president has been fueled by desperation in some parts of rural America, Claire Galofaro reports for The Associated Press. Lost jobs, high rates of poverty and drug abuse, and limited education in some areas led to anxiety and despair. “And desperate people, throughout history, have turned to tough-talking populists. And that is how, in one of America’s forgotten corners, the road was perfectly paved for the ascent of Trump.” (AP photo by Steve Helber)

Trump has been huge in Central Appalachia, winning “by spectacular margins all across the coalfields,” Galofaro writes. “From Appalachia to the Rust Belt to the hollowing manufacturing towns in the Midwest, Trump collected his most ardent supporters.” Trump, won big in areas like Logan County, West Virginia, where the unemployment rate is 11 percent—compared to 5 percent nationwide—and West Virginia is the nation’s only state “where less than half of working-aged people work.” Logan County resident Mike Kirk, who lost his home and his $28 per hour mining job, and now makes $11 in a pawn shop, told Galofaro, “He offers us hope and hope’s the one thing we have left.”

Peter Atwater, a consultant who studies the tides of consumer confidence, said “the average Republican is as pessimistic about the economy today as the day Lehman Brothers collapsed eight years ago,” Galofaro writes. “That perception of decline—that the country is careening in the wrong direction—can be as politically potent as watching your hometown wither, he said.” Some call those people “nostalgia voters.”

Daniel Cox, research director for the non-profit Public Religion Research Institute, “said an uneven recovery from the recession lined up with societal shifts—the election of the first non-white president, a rising minority population, the decreasing influence of Christian values,” Galofaro writes. “It left many in struggling, blue-collar communities across the country feeling deserted for the sake of progress someplace else.” He told Galofaro, “Today, we’re not interested in the plan, we’re interested in the slogan. When confidence falls, it’s all too complicated to understand an elaborate plan or an articulated policy. We don’t want to wait for the details; we don’t want to read the footnotes. Just give me a powerful headline.”

That’s something Trump excels at, Galofaro writes: “Trump promised to build the wall. Create jobs. Destroy ISIS. He blamed immigrants and China and Muslims for America’s woes. He stood on a stage in West Virginia, put on a hard hat and pantomimed shoveling coal. He promised to make them win again. His critics warn that his red-blooded, racially tinged rants threaten to unravel the very fabric of the nation. Here, the same words translate as truth-telling. His call caught fire so fervently that some are staking their families’ futures on whether he wins in November.” (Read more)

Written by Tim Mandell Posted at 7/19/2016 11:44:00 AM

 

 

ShareTweetPinShareScanSend
Next Post
Tina Jackson, a disability rights advocate from Louisa, has been inducted into the Self-Advocate Leadership Circle of the National Association of Councils on Developmental Disabilities

Popular Lawrence Countian appointed to national council

   TheLevisaLazer.Com   
TheLevisaLazer.com

In God We Trust - Established 2008

Follow Us

Quick Links

  • News
  • Lifestyles
  • Stay Ahead with Lazer Sports News
  • Education
  • Obituaries
  • About Us
  • Business & Politics News
  • Addiction & Recovery

Quick Links

  • Courthouse
  • Top Recollections News – The Levisa Lazer
  • Big Sandy Sportsman
  • Lazer ad prices and sizes
  • Editorials
  • Lazer announcments, bids and notices
  • Health News

Recent News

LADY BULLDOGS LOOK TO PICK UP THE PACE THIS SEASON; OPENER NEXT TUESDAY

LADY BULLDOGS LOOK TO PICK UP THE PACE THIS SEASON; OPENER NEXT TUESDAY

November 29, 2024

© 2024 thelevisalazer.com, All Rights Reserved. Designed and Managing by BizNex Web.

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Stay Ahead with Lazer Sports News
  • Lifestyles
  • Courthouse
  • Top Recollections News – The Levisa Lazer
  • Obituaries
  • Regional News
  • Announcements

© 2024 thelevisalazer.com, All Rights Reserved. Designed and Managing by BizNex Web.