Short, Brutish and Cruel: Five Takeaways from Tuesday’s Historic Election (Last Time We’ll Get to Vote for President?)

Grieving over the grim result of Tuesday’s presidential election, Newsmakers harks back to an astute adage about living through hard times, famously uttered by the late John McCain.

“It’s always darkest,” the Arizona Senator liked to say, “before it turns pitch black.”

The tongue-in-cheek proverb by Senator McCain, a fierce non-fan of Donald Trump, seems an apt formulation for contemplation of the imminent White House return of the 78-year old convicted felon,

Endlessly aggrieved, increasingly unhinged and reliably surrounded by sycophantic flunkies, the would-be autocrat soon will be positioned to carry out threats and menacing promises he harped on during the campaign:

  • Repudiating the independence of the U.S. Justice Department, via appointment of a servile Attorney General to transform it into a weapon of Trump’s political and personal retribution;
  • Betraying U.S. allies like Ukraine while kowtowing to dictators like Vladimir Putin, rewarding and encouraging bloody, unprovoked aggression against sovereign nations;
  • Deploying the U.S. military, not only to quash legal political protests, but also to round up millions of migrant workers into camps, before deporting them, heedless of legal status;
  • Wielding tariff increases by whim and impulse, roiling the global economy and fueling inflation, in furtherance of corrupt crony capitalism;
  • Employing federal agencies like the FCC and the IRS to target and attack news organizations critical of Trump;
  • Bullying and endangering non-Trump states like California, by conditioning federal aid for wildfire and other emergencies on compliance with his political caprices.

And that’s before his Administration gets around to the right-wing extremism of Project 2025.

As Zack Beauchamp explained over at Vox:

Having won power democratically, Trump is now in a position to enact his long-proposed plans to hollow out American democracy from within.

Trump and his team have developed detailed plans for turning the federal government into an extension of his will: an instrument for carrying out his oft-promised “retribution” against President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, and anyone else who has opposed him.

Trump’s inner circle, purged of nearly anyone who might challenge him, is ready to enact his will. And the Supreme Court, in its wisdom, has granted him sweeping immunity from his actions in office.

In other words, democracy was on the ballot Tuesday, and democracy lost.

How we see it.

Historians, political scientists, and journalists will spend decades studying, dissecting, and debating the myriad aspects of Trump’s inglorious 2024 success.

Not to put too fine a point on it, but his primary motivation for seeking the presidency again was to stay out of jail. Escaping the scores of well-evidenced felony charges he faced, most stemming from his failed coup attempt in 2020, now will be the first fruit of his victory.

Gracious, if disheartened, about the dread-inducing outcome of the election, Newsmakers salutes his political base – white Christian nationalists; greedheads lusting for more tax cuts while despising free breakfasts for school kids; misogynist bros, racists and other deplorables; mooncalves who think this is all a hilarious reality TV show; innocent voters who don’t yet know they’re the marks in his long con – with the words of our all-time favorite, old cranky journalist:

“Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want,” H.L. Mencken said, “and deserve to get it good and hard.”

Here are five takeaways from the 2024 election.

It’s the fundamentals, stupid.

Media drongos misspent an infinite number of words chronicling every twist and turn, public appearance and gaffe of the day, but in the end the candidates and their campaigns proved less important than one, foundational macro-factor that shaped the election: whether well or ill-informed, fewer than one-third of Americans believe their country is on the right track.

This dynamic is replicated by Western and other nations around world, as voters have sacked incumbents everywhere, blaming them for post-pandemic economic conditions that have included high inflation, amid waves of global, southern-to-northern hemisphere immigration.

Harris, apparently because her loyalty precluded it, never tried very hard to put distance between herself and Biden. The result: she ended up as the face of status quo incumbency., while Trump, astonishingly, ended up with the mantle of change candidate.

In a piece headlined “Democrats join 2024’s graveyard of incumbents,” the Financial Times on Thursday reported:

All over the world, government incumbents have been sacked this year, punished by widespread anger over post-pandemic economies featuring high inflation amid mass waves of immigration from the southern to the northern hemipshere; As the Financial Times reported Thursday: :

Economic and geopolitical conditions of the past year or two have created arguably the most hostile environment in history for incumbent parties and politicians across the developed world. From America’s Democrats to Britain’s Tories, Emmanuel’s Macron’s Ensemble coalition to Japan’s Liberal Democrats, even to Narendra Modi’s erstwhile dominant BJP, governing parties and leaders have undergone an unprecedented series of reversals this year.

The incumbents in every single one of the 10 major countries that have been tracked by the (Parliaments and Governments Data Base) global research project and held national elections in 2024 were given a kicking by voters. This is the first time this has ever happened in almost 120 years of records (emphasis added).

Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.

Harris deserves nearly zero blame for the Democrats’ loss; thrust onto the top of ticket barely 100 days before the election, she worked indefatigably, and with great dignity and good cheer to save her party’s sagging fortunes, and she left it all on the field. Every hot take that smugly asserts a particular reason for her defeat — Snubbed Palestinians! Disregarded Jews! Didn’t pick Josh Shapiro for Veep! Kept Tim Walz under wraps! Focused too much on women! Didn’t center women’s needs enough! — is just bushwah.

Because of (1), it’s likely that no Democrat would have defeated any Republican in 2024, but it would have been nice if Joe Biden had given the younger generation of Democrats the chance to try. Biden campaigned in 2020 as a bridge to the future, but after the Dems had a better-than-expected showing in the 2022 mid-terms, he and his insular coterie of handler/enablers decided it must have been because he was so beloved and doing such a swell job.

Starting in 2023, however, poll after poll after poll showed Americans overwhelmingly believed he was too old for a second term; but Biden’s arrogance, coupled with an apparent lack of candor among his kitchen cabinet, pushed him into I-alone-can-do-it mode. A legend in his own mind, he stumbled and bumbled against Trump before thoroughly humiliating himself before the world in the June 23 debate.

By the time he was forced out by his own party, it was too late for a proper primary process that might have sharpened Harris’s campaign skills — or surfaced a stronger Democratic contender — and she was left to clean up the epic political mess of Biden’s making. With her defeat, that mess now includes the ruination of his own legacy, which might have been revered if he’d stepped aside with grace and announced last year he wouldn’t run again.

House call.

Trump has the Supreme Court in his pocket and Republicans have clinched control of the Senate, where a more MAGA-inflected membership will predominate and ram through whatever he demands, while the GOP is on the verge of securing hegemony in Washington if they can nail down a few more House seats.

There’s still a greater-than-zero chance Democrats pull out a semi-miraculous teeny-tiny majority, as vote counting continues in a handful of districts around the county (including four on the California Secretary of State’s “Close Contests” list). Regardless, Dems should be singularly focused, starting now, and for the 726 days until the 2026 mid-term election, on capturing the House. It’s their one and only chance for a shred of power during Trump The Sequel which, who knows, may find ihim deciding we no longer need to bother with pesky presidential elections.

(Here’s hoping Salud Carbajal, Santa Barbara’s Man in Washington, finds a few minutes to spare from his incessant pussyfooting with MAGA pals across the aisle on “bipartisan” baloney, to bring his well-developed fundraising skills to bear on that crucial and urgent effort. All hands on deck, to save democracy, big fella).

Laissez les bons temps roulez.

Mindful of the sour mood among the national electorate, Newsmakers over the past few months repeatedly forecast this economic crankiness would extend to voters in Santa Barbara, and bring certain doom to any tax and spending measures that would appear on the Nov. 5 ballot.

We couldn’t have been more wrong.

Not only did local voters approve more spending by government, they did so overwhelmingly: city voters passed the Measure I half-cent sales tax increase, 63-to-37 percent, while the controversial Measure P bond measure for city college was okayed, 65-to-35 percent. More: three of five school bonds in North County local districts won, and county voters also went big for Props 2 and 4, two statewide bond measures of $10 billion apiece (as did voters statewide – another surprise).

Guess Santa Barbarans didn’t get the memo about post-pandemic inflation and the price of eggs.

A personal note.

This column marks the 1000th post we’ve published on the Newsmakers site, since we launched on Labor Day 2017 (that’s 2.6 a week, for those keeping score at home).

We set out with the aim of joining the conversation around local news, with occasional forays into state and national affairs, and helping to frame public debate at in our own little burg, at a time when Trump was wearing everyone out nationally, running amok in his first term.

Now he’s back, and we’re already exhausted; it’s all a bit much for a couple of alter kockers.

So after Friday’s weekly bout of journalistic mud wrestling with the Usual Suspects Panel, Newsmakers will be taking some time off, to refresh and reflect on what our future mission, if any, should look like, with the new and scarier specter of Trump hanging over us. Again.

We’d appreciate any thoughts, comments or savage insults on the subject you’d care to share or send our way: newsmakerswithjr@gmail.com.

Thanks, as always, for watching, reading and supporting Newsmakers.

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Written by Jerry Roberts

“Newsmakers” is a multimedia journalism platform that focuses on politics, media and public affairs in Santa Barbara. Learn more at newsmakerswithjr.com

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11 Comments

  1. Kamala Harris said she was in lockstep with Biden and wouldn’t have done anything differently.
    This was an obvious lie. She was just afraid to offend her boss. She didn’t hold press conferences because she was afraid she would say the wrong thing. She pandered to her left wing base even though she doesn’t believe in half that crap. Basically she was just afraid of making a mistake and offended people. Contrast that with Trump who doesn’t care who he offends.

    Weak and afraid is not what Americans want in the leader of the free world.

    • David – compared to “strong,” like a crazed bull in a China shop? To think of Donald Trump as the “leader” of anything is downright scary. A question: can a country declare bankruptcy? That’s his usual M.O. after failing at every business he’s ever tried to run. I know I’m right because I have a degree from Trump University and eat Trump Steaks and gamble at the Taj Majal – at least until they all went broke. (How in the world can someone bankrupt a casino? That takes special talent!) Yeah, let’s give this guy the keys to the Treasury!

  2. No one knows what will happen but we do know what has happened. Expecting a man who lies with every breath, who has no moral beacon, no ideology and no plan or polices, to save you from your poor choices is one heck of a way to cut off your nose to spite your face. And to do that for a small perceived gain? A few bucks a month in gas or food? That’s beyond asinine. But that’s America. We are spoiled children who have no idea about how good we have it… think the last few years were harsh? What are you people going to do when the actual economic downturn hits? A real, actual depression. None of you have known any such event, but you will. Its coming. We are floating on fumes and debt. One small shift in global consumption or worse, conflict, and we’re in the tubes.

    Those of us with millions in the bank and the freedom to move, dont worry. I’ll / we’ll be fine. Great in fact. But you W2 earning folks, people who make less than $400k a year. People whose SS checks matter and whose Medicare is a necessary life saver, will find themselves in a world of pain. Who will they blame then? Who will save you?

    If you couldn’t make loads of money in the last 4 years, you’ll never make loads of money. Its never been easier, we’ve never been richer. That’s the rub. You folks who think that Trump will make it easier for you are about to find out what every rube eventually figures when its too late. They’ve been fooled. You’ve been swindled.

    Good luck!

      • Yet you’re still benefitting from the roads you drive on, the parks you visit, the response from fire/police, the schools, the library, etc. etc.
        Will Americans ever think of our country as a collective or will we continue to whine and bemoan me, me, me.

        • Yup, Anon, lots of benefits.
          I voted for the increase because cities suffer from inflation just like individuals do and need a COLA.
          Also because of these exemptions:
          “The proposed tax increase would be collected in the same manner as the existing City sales and use tax and would be subject to all the same tax exemptions, such as services, rent, groceries, prescription medicine, utilities, diapers, and feminine hygiene products. For a complete list of all the sales and use tax exemptions, please visit the California Tax Service Center.”
          I’m not a typical consumer; I don’t consume much at all aside from food and magazine and newspaper subscriptions. If people, rich and poor, bought less unnecessary stuff… but that’s what our society and economy is predicated on. Oh well.

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