Marc Thiessen, The Pandemic will Fuel the Populism that sent Trump to the White House
By
If anything,
the opposite is likely to be true. When the after-action reports for
this pandemic are written, the elites are not going to come out looking
very good. Why is America in lockdown today? Because despite more than 15 years of warnings that
a pandemic was coming, the political establishment in Washington failed
to prepare for its arrival — leaving us with inexcusable shortages
of
masks, gowns, protective equipment and ventilators. And the same
politicians who led the drive for globalization — sending millions of
manufacturing jobs overseas — also let our supply chains for critical
drugs and medical supplies move abroad, leaving us scrambling to ramp up
domestic production while the virus raged. The experts who for decades
said we could manage China’s rise by integrating Beijing into the global
economy left us dangerously dependent on a brutal totalitarian regime
whose lies fueled the spread of the virus.
That’s not all.
To contain the virus early and prevent the need for broad
population-based mitigation measures, we needed to get testing in place
quickly. But the experts blew it. Instead of clearing bureaucratic
obstacles, the Food and Drug Administration refused to allow private labs to develop tests for six weeks. And scientists at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention contaminated the
only approved test kits with sloppy lab practices, rendering them
ineffective. The delays cost us our only chance to prevent a nationwide
lockdown.
As a result, we are now experiencing the worst economic devastation since the Great Depression, with more than 33 million Americans losing
their jobs in just six weeks. The brunt of the damage is not being
borne by the elites who work in the information economy but by those at
the middle and the bottom of the economic ladder — the forgotten
Americans who were finally doing better under President Trump until this
crisis arrived. Before the pandemic, the U.S. economy had added a half-million manufacturing jobs and low-wage workers were experiencing the fastest pay increases. Most of that progress has been wiped out.
For these Americans, today’s lockdown seems like a return to the nightmare they experienced following the 2008 financial crisis,
when they saw persistent job losses coupled with a dramatic rise in
deaths of despair — suicides, alcohol and opioid abuse, drug overdoses
and chronic diseases concentrated in economically distressed regions of
the country. Nobody in Washington seemed to care about their struggles,
until Trump came along and promised to fight for them.
Now, these
Americans see the same elites dismissing their suffering once again —
insisting we must continue draconian lockdown measures that are putting
them on the brink of financial ruin. They see the contempt of the media
elites who mock the anti-lockdown protests taking place across the
country (look at those rubes, they’re not even social distancing while they march!)
and who heap scorn on Trump for his focus on reopening the economy. The
message they get is: The elites don’t understand the utter devastation I
am experiencing, but Trump does.
They also see
increasing evidence that the politicians and experts got a lot wrong
about how the virus is spreading. In New York, for example, 96 percent of
those hospitalized for covid-19 had an underlying medical condition,
while only 17 percent were employed and only 3 percent had been taking
public transportation. “We were thinking that maybe we were going to
find a higher percentage of essential employees who were getting sick
because they were going to work,” New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D) said,
but “that’s not the case.” If those who continued going to work are not
getting sick, then many unemployed Americans can rightly ask: Why can’t
more of us be working with increased safeguards?
The idea that
Americans are going to reward the elites who failed so miserably to
prepare for and manage this pandemic is a fantasy. To the contrary, the
longer this lockdown continues, the more likely it is we will experience
a growing populist rebellion against the elites who insist we must
continue to impose wreckage on the economy indefinitely. Indeed, the
forgotten Americans whose lives and livelihoods are being annihilated
may well decide that there has never been more need for disruption in
Washington than there is today.
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