The Unz Review - Mobile

The Unz Review: An Alternative Media Selection

A Collection of Interesting, Important, and Controversial Perspectives Largely Excluded from the American Mainstream Media
 Andrew Napolitano Archive
The Forgotten Man

Email This Page to Someone


 Remember My Information



=>

The forgotten man decided the presidential election. Donald Trump persuaded the forgotten man to repose his anger and frustration and power into Trump’s hands. Who is the forgotten man? What does he want from government? Why did he vote for Trump?

When the tide began to turn against Hillary Clinton on Tuesday night, I planned to write this column about the unwarranted and unlawful injection of the FBI into the political process. At the time, I was seated with the Fox News number crunchers and generally was exposed to trends and vote totals — and the number crunchers’ lucid explanation of them — long before they were revealed on-air. I am more an ideas guy than a numbers guy.

On Tuesday night, the numbers were so overwhelming it was clear that the FBI had nothing to do with the outcome of the presidential election. The numbers on Tuesday told a tale that needs to be related. What the FBI did and failed to do assaulted the rule of law, but that is for another column.

Whatever the impression Trump may have given you — a carnival barker, a hero, a jerk, a courageous leader — he brilliantly tapped into a deep vein of millions of American men and women who believe they have been forgotten by the government they pay for. These good people have been alienated by the elites who dominate American government and culture and civic life.

On Tuesday night, they found a home.

The forgotten man believes that the Obama administration doesn’t care about him. The forgotten man knows that the government put into place regulations of economic activity that put him out of work or into a lower-paying job. These forgotten men and women resent the Obama administration’s telling them they must have health insurance or they will be taxed for it and then so incompetently manipulating the marketplace as to cause the cost of that insurance — often an unwanted product — to skyrocket.

These good folks cringed when their family doctor told them that he could no longer afford to treat them because the feds had overregulated the practice of medicine. They simply couldn’t believe that their own government would make the practice of medicine so expensive that doctors in droves could not afford to stay in business. And they were outraged when their doctors told them the feds could see their medical records and dictate their medical treatment.

The forgotten man has profound resentment for a government that is telling him how to live. The forgotten man’s union dues have shot up. His union leaders use his dues to support political candidates he doesn’t know or like. Yet he has usually voted for the Democrats — out of a traditional belief that the Democrats would think of him and his needs when framing federal legislation. They haven’t.

The forgotten man speaks his mind but isn’t drawn to lofty arguments about the freedom of speech. The forgotten man wants the government to work but couldn’t tell you which aspects of its behavior are unconstitutional. The forgotten man wants elected officials who don’t and won’t forget him. The forgotten man hopes he never sees a judge in a courtroom, but if he does, he wants to be judged by someone who understands him.

The forgotten man wants sexual freedom and privacy, but not babies being ripped from the womb for convenience. The forgotten man doesn’t want war but loathes military defeat even more. The forgotten man wants inexpensive goods but will pay more if they are made here by people like him. The forgotten man doesn’t want the government to take so much money from those who work hard that they lose their incentive to work or close up their businesses and kill jobs. The forgotten man wants everyone to be able to keep the lion’s share of what he earns. The forgotten man forgives but doesn’t forget.
Trump got all that. Trump tapped into all that as no presidential candidate had since Ronald Reagan in 1980.

The forgotten man viewed Clinton as having no interest in him. The forgotten man believed that Clinton would work for special interests and not for him. The forgotten man saw that what Trump grasped, Clinton overlooked; what Trump understood, Clinton ignored; and what Trump turned into votes, Clinton took for granted.

I doubt that the forgotten man saw what I did recently. At the Al Smith dinner in New York City last month — a 1,500-person black-tie fundraiser for the Archdiocese of New York at which Trump’s speech was mediocre and Clinton’s was stellar — I tried to shake the hands of both of them but ran into a Secret Service roadblock around the head table. Trump waved to me with a twinkle in his eye. When I saw Clinton, I saw a lonely face without joy. On Wednesday morning, it dawned on me that she was doomed and she knew it.

The forgotten man knew it, as well.

Copyright 2016 Andrew P. Napolitano. Distributed by Creators.com.

 
• Category: Ideology • Tags: 2016 Election, Donald Trump 

7 Comments to "The Forgotten Man"

Commenters to Ignore
...to Follow
Endorsed Only
[Filtered by Reply Thread]
  1. Once in a while he gets it right.

    Reply More... This Commenter Display All Comments
  2. They’re screwing the forgotten backbone of the country so badly, that a lot of ordinary folks voted for the only candidate, whatever his personal history, who gave their grave concerns weight. It’s no longer enough for cynical politicians to make the right genuflections to the voters at election time, then return to their regularly scheduled programs in favor of their donorist owners.

  3. At the Al Smith dinner Trump blew out a roomful of fatcat establishment types with anti-comedy. He took a giant dump on that place and it was beautiful.

    Judge, do you remember Trump’s joke about Haiti at the dinner? It went something like:

    “Mrs. Clinton has said that it takes a village. She should know, because in Haiti she has taken a number of them.”

    Now, when I heard it I got the obvious reference to her old book’s title and assumed, like those in the know, that it was a jab at the Clinton Foundation regarding the money Hillary made from that wretched place’s misery. But the wording of the joke makes it ring a little off.

    The very next day we learned from Wikileaks in one of the Podesta emails that Hillary was directly involved with the story of Laura Silsby and her effective kidnapping of 33 Haitian children.

    Ms. Clinton’s joylessness and Mr. Trump’s twinkle weren’t there for nothing.

  4. says:
         Show CommentNext New Comment

    Nobody seems to remember Trump was a presidential candidate back in 2000.

  5. I’ve always liked the Judge. No nonsense and get to the point. This boils the election down to its basic essence. Well done.

  6. The forgotten man believes that the Obama administration doesn’t care about him.

    Actually, we know the government doesn’t care about us. That is why it imports foreigners and opens the borders to illegal aliens to take our jobs and keep wages down in the middle of a depression and the highest unemployment rates since the Great Depression. I don’t want the government to care about me, I want it to leave me alone, stay out of my business and to stop trying to destroy us and divide us.

  7. Having cast a vote, not for Trump but against Clinton, I can only say that I wish him luck but have very little faith in his ability to change things in this country. The thoroughly corrupt Hillary Clinton, a “congenital liar” in the words of the late William Safire penned over twenty (!) years ago, simply had to be kept out of the White House office at whatever price. And that price may yet turn out to have been steep. Very steep.

    If so, then the Wall Street/Beltway/Hollywood Elite have no one to blame but themselves.

Current Commenter
says:

Leave a Reply



 
Remember
My Information
Why?

 Email Replies to my Comment

Submitted comments become the property of The Unz Review and may be republished elsewhere at the sole discretion of the latter

Subscribe to This Comment Thread via RSS Subscribe to All Andrew Napolitano Comments via RSS
Past
Classics
The “war hero” candidate buried information about POWs left behind in Vietnam.
Talk TV sensationalists and axe-grinding ideologues have fallen for a myth of immigrant lawlessness.
What Was John McCain's True Wartime Record in Vietnam?
The unspoken statistical reality of urban crime over the last quarter century.
Are elite university admissions based on meritocracy and diversity as claimed?
Hundreds of POWs may have been left to die in Vietnam, abandoned by their government—and our media.