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How the past informs Trump's vision of America's future

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How the past informs Trump's vision of America's future
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News

How the past informs Trump's vision of America's future

2019-09-22 20:19 Last Updated At:20:40

President Donald Trump's vision of America's tomorrows looks much like its yesterdays.

He loves "beautiful" coal. "Beautiful" warships. And "those four beautiful words: MADE IN THE USA!" He speaks of the country's might as measured by its steel mills, farms and cars rolling off Detroit assembly lines.

He's not merely summoning happy memories. His nostalgia shapes policy and lives, too.

FILE - In this July 22, 2017, file photo, President Donald Trump shakes hands with Ship Captain Rick McCormack as he arrives for the the commissioning ceremony of the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) at Naval Station Norfolk, Va. Trump’s vision of America’s tomorrows looks much like its yesterdays. He loves “beautiful” coal. “Beautiful” warships. And “those four beautiful words: MADE IN THE USA!” He speaks of the country’s might as measured by its steel mills, farms and cars rolling off Detroit assembly lines. (AP PhotoCarolyn Kaster, File)

FILE - In this July 22, 2017, file photo, President Donald Trump shakes hands with Ship Captain Rick McCormack as he arrives for the the commissioning ceremony of the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) at Naval Station Norfolk, Va. Trump’s vision of America’s tomorrows looks much like its yesterdays. He loves “beautiful” coal. “Beautiful” warships. And “those four beautiful words: MADE IN THE USA!” He speaks of the country’s might as measured by its steel mills, farms and cars rolling off Detroit assembly lines. (AP PhotoCarolyn Kaster, File)

Trump glorifies the muscle and sweat (but not the labor unions) of those who toil in factories and till the soil, like those idealized depictions of labor in century-old murals .

He does not love wind power. He's a fossil fuel guy. A meat and potatoes man, too, he steers an administration that reflects not just his agenda but his pre-woke diet, as when it pulled back on requirements for whole grains in school lunches.

He's had it out for those newfangled light bulbs for years, ever since he warned flatly and falsely that they "can cause cancer."

He waves off modern worries about global warming by pointing to a cold snap. His campaign sells plastic straws to thumb its nose at what Trump considers political correctness.

Meantime the world moves on.

Industry, technology and much of the culture are finding new ways of doing and living.

Even the auto industry, which doesn't like being told by government what to do, has found itself unhappy about how Trump is easing fuel economy requirements . Crusty old Detroit has already moved on from its most gas-guzzling days and invested massively in more efficient vehicles, kicking higher even as Trump lowers the goal posts.

U.S. prosperity has been driven for decades by services, technology and new things, not the grunt work of old that is celebrated by Trump. He sees trade in terms of the exchange of goods and he ignores services, where long-standing U.S. strength in global competitiveness does not fit his world view of an America under siege by rapacious traders like China.

"We are bringing BACK," he likes to say, and always with exaggeration. "We are bringing back America faster than anyone thought possible! We are bringing back our factories, we are bringing back our jobs, and we are bringing back those four beautiful words: MADE IN THE USA!"

"All those things come from the '50s and '60s," said Irving Rein, a professor of communications at Northwestern University who has studied cultural trends for more than a half century. He says that when Trump cheers things such as king coal, big steel and trade protectionism with the "big, beautiful tariff" on China, he knows his audience — a largely older one that takes comfort in a filtered view of the past.

Yet modernity advances.

"Popular culture is like a river; it just kind of floats by," Rein said. "Some of it stays." And Trump has captured those eddies.

In his own way, Joe Biden has, too.

While disagreeing with the 73-year-old Trump on almost all of the above, the 76-year-old Democratic presidential hopeful invokes a time of comity between political opponents — "the feeling that, nostalgically, there was more compromise," Rein said — and holds out the prospect of bringing back those days. This, while Trump and most of Biden's rivals seem ready to lunge at each other.

Trump's throwback tendencies are not unique in leadership. Ronald Reagan could be steeped in sentimentality, too, if without the sharp edges of this president.

Constantine Sedikides, a psychology professor who studies nostalgia from Britain's University of Southampton, said right-wing populists in Europe have romanticized the past to advance goals such as Britain's exit from the European Union and the marginalization of "outgroups" such as Islamic migrants and refugees.

"Trump is using collective nostalgia — sentimental longing about the country's rosy past — to his political advantage," Sedikides said by email.

By its nature, such cultural observers say, collective nostalgia is history seen through a veil, with old hardships and prejudices put out of mind in favor of wistful remembrance. "You cherry-pick things," Rein said.

Some of Trump's retro impulses are reflected by now in law or in the lifting of regulations, a trend most pronounced when it fits his pro-industry conservatism as well.

This past week his administration barred California's longtime authority to set stricter car and truck emission standards than federal rules require. Nearly half the states sued to block the Trump administration's action, which by its own reckoning is likely to result in additional fuel consumption of 500,000 barrels a day.

The auto industry, instead of being relieved, warned that their vehicles will become less competitive globally if the incentive to increase fuel efficiency is lost. Trump called them "politically correct Automobile Companies."

Trump has eased up a variety of environmental regulations, in part to serve his interest in reviving coal. But that effort is up against forces of the modern free market, awash in natural gas, as utilities continue closing coal-fired plants in favor of energy sources that are cleaner, cheaper or both.

This month the administration slowed a long push by Congress to wean the country from old-time incandescent bulbs in favor of LEDs and other lights that use less energy. Trump argues the savings aren't worth it, consumers should have a choice and under those new bulbs "I always look orange."

"And so do you," he told a Republican gathering, as if realizing he has been associated with that color anyway.

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US Election 2024-The Daily Rundown

2024-05-03 19:20 Last Updated At:19:51

Here’s a rundown of the AP’s latest Election 2024 coverage plans, including live video and text plans, our explanatory journalism and highlights from previous cycles. Candidate schedules are included when available. All times are EDT.

You can find US Election 2024-The Daily Rundown in your CMS or in AP Newsroom.

For up-to-the-minute information on AP’s coverage, visit AP Newsroom’s Coverage Plan. Find our election coverage in the U.S. Elections hub in AP Newsroom.

To sign up for our Politics Advisory, delivered afternoons Monday through Friday to your inbox, click here.

TRUMP-HUSH MONEY-AP EXPLAINS — Lawyer Keith Davidson concluded his testimony in Donald Trump’s hush money trial after spending about 6 1/2 hours on the witness stand over two days. An AP reporter debrief. Newsroom Ready and Consumer Ready video. Sent on May 2.

TRUMP-HUSH MONEY — Donald Trump said the judge in his hush money trial is conflicted and should not be hearing his case after being held in contempt of court and threatened with jail time for violating a gag order. Newsroom Ready and Consumer Ready video. Sent on May 2.

TRUMP-HUSH MONEY-PIZZA — After Donald Trump’s hush money trial adjourned, the former president delivered pizzas to a New York City firehouse. Newsroom Ready video. Sent on May 2.

ABORTION-POLITICS — Two years after a leaked draft of a U.S. Supreme Court opinion signaled that the nation’s abortion landscape was about to shift dramatically, the issue is still consuming the nation’s courts, legislatures and political campaigns — and changing the course of lives. An AP reporter debrief. Newsroom Ready and Consumer Ready video. Sent on May 2.

TRUMP-RUNNING MATES — Donald Trump is scheduled to hold a donor retreat Friday in Palm Beach, Florida. Guests include Republicans considered to be prospective running mates. There is no indication if this event is open to the media. AP will cover if it is. If not, the AP will offer analysis on the event, and Trump’s potential running mates.

Donald Trump is scheduled to hold a donor retreat in Palm Beach, Florida.

++ Candidate schedules are subject to change. Coverage of some events is on merits. ++

7 a.m. — Live NY TRUMP POOL coverage outside of Trump Tower in New York is planned.

8:30 a.m. — Live POOL coverage from the courthouse hallway in New York is planned.

8:45 a.m. — Live AP coverage outside of the courthouse in New York is planned.

ELECTION 2024-HOUSE-CALIFORNIA — Nearly two months after the election, a recount settled the outcome in a Northern California U.S. House primary contest, breaking a mathematically improbable tie for second place but also spotlighting the lengthy stretch it took count the votes. SENT: 700 words, photos.

TRUMP-HUSH MONEY — The key prosecution witness has yet to take the stand in Donald Trump’s hush money trial. But jurors are already hearing from Michael Cohen as prosecutors work to directly tie Trump to payments to silence women with damaging claims about him before the 2016 election. SENT: 560 words, photos. UPCOMING: 980 words after trial resumes at 9:30 a.m.

ELECTION 2024-TRUMP-NEW YORK — After a years-long breakup with his hometown city, Donald Trump is back in New York, this time as a criminal defendant. The felony trial has curtailed Trump’s ability to campaign across the country, but it also means he is often spending four days a week in the nation’s media capital. SENT: 1,160 words, photos.

ELECTION 2024-MICHIGAN-SENATE — The race to replace retiring Democratic Sen. Debbie Stabenow of Michigan is expected to be highly competitive with control of the upper chamber on the line. Rep. Elissa Slotkin has coalesced support on the Democratic side, while Republicans have rallied behind former Rep. Mike Rogers. SENT: 1,390 words, photos.

ELECTION 2024-DECISION NOTES-INDIANA — The race for the White House tops the ballot Tuesday in Indiana’s presidential and state primaries, but voters will also have to settle more competitive contests for governor, Congress and the state legislature. SENT: 1,230 words, photo.

ELECTION 2024-ABORTION-ARIZONA — Arizona’s 1864 abortion ban will soon be gone from the state’s law books, but not from the campaign trail. Even as Gov. Katie Hobbs signed a repeal of the law — one day after the state Senate passed it — Democrats running in the battleground state say they will make the Civil War-era law a centerpiece of their focus on reproductive rights. SENT: 860 words, photos.

ELECTION 2024-BIDEN — President Joe Biden spent several hours in Charlotte, North Carolina, with the families of law enforcement officers shot to death on the job. SENT: 700 words, photos.

May 7 — Indiana presidential primary.

May 14 — Maryland presidential primary, Nebraska presidential primary and West Virginia presidential primary.

May 21 — California 20th Congressional District special election, Kentucky presidential primary, Oregon presidential primary.

May 23 — Idaho Democratic caucuses.

May 28 — Texas state primary runoff.

For coverage and planning questions, the Nerve Center can be reached at +1 800 845 8450 (ext. 1600). For access to AP Newsroom and other technical issues, contact apcustomersupport@ap.org or call +1 844 777 2006.

Former President Donald Trump, seen through a camera viewfinder, speaks to members of the media at Manhattan criminal court in New York, on Thursday, May 2, 2024. (Jeenah Moon/Pool Photo via AP)

Former President Donald Trump, seen through a camera viewfinder, speaks to members of the media at Manhattan criminal court in New York, on Thursday, May 2, 2024. (Jeenah Moon/Pool Photo via AP)

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