May 03, 2018

Source: Bigstock

At a rally in Michigan last weekend, President Trump promised to bring in lots of guest workers to—I quote—“do your jobs.”

Once, long ago, Trump was against replacing American workers with cheap foreign labor.

Back when Trump was invincible, he sounded more like this:

Breitbart News: “Hundreds of workers at Disney were forced to train their foreign replacements. … (Rubio’s new bill) has zero protections for American workers. … Rubio’s bill is even endorsed by the CEO of Disney. What do you think of Rubio’s bill?”

Trump: “It’s a disaster. It would allow any company in America to replace any worker with cheaper foreign labor. It legalizes job theft. It gives companies the legal right to pass over Americans, displace Americans, or directly replace Americans for good-paying middle-class jobs. …

“I am calling TODAY on Disney to hire back every one of the workers they replaced, and I am calling on Rubio to immediately rescind his sponsorship of the I-Squared bill and apologize to every Floridian for endorsing it.”

To paraphrase Ray Donovan, where do I go to get my Trump back?

“The president needs to understand, unless he drops his bizarre and totally uncharacteristic desire to bring in people to do your job, the voters might just bring in someone else to do his.”

Now that he’s president and could actually implement all those great things he ran on, Trump sounds like Liddle Marco.
This was Trump on Saturday night: “We need people to be able to come into our country, do your jobs, help you on the farms. … Guest workers, we’re going to take care of that. Guest workers. Don’t we agree? We have to have them. We have to have them.”

It went on like this for an eternity.

Liberals love to sneer about the bovine idiocy of Trump supporters, who are allegedly incapable of processing basic information. (See Evan Osnos, every week in The New Yorker.) The dead silence that greeted Trump as he blathered about replacing Americans with guest workers proves that Trump voters are listening quite closely.

The president needs to understand, unless he drops his bizarre and totally uncharacteristic desire to bring in people to do your job, the voters might just bring in someone else to do his.

The plus side of the midterm elections is that liberals have gone mad. The minus side is that voters intensely hate Republicans. Liberal insanity is not going to save a GOP dead set on pleasing the donor class by screwing over ordinary Americans. As usual.

It was hatred for Republicans that drove millions of voters to Trump in the first place.

The same conservative talking heads who think the GOP is going to be fine by focusing on those great tax cuts—we’ll get to immigration soon, promise!—spent the first six months of Trump’s candidacy indignantly informing us that he was “not a Republican.”

They said it was “unhealthy” for the party to be debating mass deportations. Trump “hasn’t really stood for Republican things.” The “summer of Trump” would come to a quick and deserved end. The danger, standard-GOP conservatives told us, was what Trump’s candidacy “can do to the GOP brand.”

I thought the 2016 election would finally be enough to convince everyone that the Republican “brand” is not worth saving. It’s like trying to buy the rights to the name “the U.S.S.R.”

Trump won by making the election about all the things Republicans would never talk about. Principally, this was immigration. (Duh.) Trump also had a refreshing new approach to dealing with ISIS: Don’t bring them here. This is what happens when you run around the world kicking over hornets’ nests.

The cowardly GOP was too terrified of the media to ever run on any awesome issues. Only Trump did, and, for that reason, nothing could stop him.

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