Wednesday, March 25, 2026

The Naked Emperor of Election Integrity

The Naked Emperor of Election Integrity

The Naked Emperor of Election Integrity
AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

There are moments in history when the illusion collapses so completely, so spectacularly, that even the people propping it up cant keep a straight face anymore.

This week, watching Chuck Schumer and Raphael Warnock argue against the SAVE America Act was one of those moments.

Because what they did—whether they realize it or not—was walk out onto the Senate floor, grab the microphone, and admit the emperor has been naked this whole time.

They just tried to convince you that the nakedness was a fashion statement.

Lets be clear about what were dealing with.

The SAVE America Act is not radical. It is not extreme. It is not oppressive. It is, quite literally, the most basic, common-sense safeguard imaginable: verify that the people voting in American elections are… Americans.

Thats it. Thats the whole bill.

And yet, here comes Schumer, Warnock, and the entire Democrat chorus line—arms flailing, voices raised, clutching pearls like their political survival depends on it—because deep down, it does.

But heres where it gets deliciously absurd.

In attempting to argue against the SAVE America Act, they keep stepping on the same rake: they admit the very thing they claim doesnt exist.

They say illegal voting is rare.” They say it happens in small numbers.” They say itnot enough to affect outcomes.” Translation: it happens.

Thank you for finally saying it out loud.

Because for years, the American people have been told—mocked, really—that questioning election integrity was tantamount to heresy. Noticing irregularities made you dangerous. Asking for verification made you a threat to democracy itself.

And now? The same people who shouted you down are standing at the podium saying, Well, yes, it happens… just not a lot.”

Oh. So now we agree.

Now lets talk about not a lot.”

In Georgia alone—yes, the same Georgia where Warnock built his political brand on voter suppression” narratives—officials have acknowledged serious procedural failures involving hundreds of thousands of ballots. Fulton County admitted that roughly 315,000 ballots were tied to tabulator tapes that were not properly signed, a violation of established rules.

Three hundred fifteen thousand.

Thats not a rounding error. Thats not a couple of cases.” Thats an entire electorate worth of questions.

And before the usual chorus starts up—yes, audits were conducted. Yes, officials claim outcomes werent affected. But thats not the point, and it never has been.

The point is confidence. The point is integrity. The point is whether Americans—Republican, Democrat, or independent—can look at an election and believe the system is airtight.

Because if you admit that improper ballots exist—even in small numbers—you have already conceded the argument for verification. You dont get to say, Yes, contamination happens, but were against testing the water.”

Thats insanity. And yet here we are.

Schumer and Warnock are essentially arguing that securing elections is unnecessary because the cheating they now admit exists isnt big enough to worry about.

Imagine applying that logic anywhere else.

Sure, some people sneak through airport security—but not that many.”

Yes, some bank transactions are fraudulent—but its a small percentage.”

There are a few counterfeit dollars—but were not going to check them.”

No rational society operates like that. Except, apparently, when it comes to elections.

Why? Because deep down, everyone watching this knows whats really going on.

The SAVE America Act doesnt threaten democracy. It threatens a system that benefits from ambiguity. It threatens a political ecosystem that has, for years, relied on confusion, looseness, and just enough chaos to keep outcomes… flexible.

And heres where the emperor analogy really lands. Because the American people are no longer the naive crowd in the fairy tale, politely applauding something that doesnt exist. They see it. They see the contradiction of politicians claiming elections are both perfectly secure and vulnerable enough to require no additional safeguards. They see the hypocrisy of leaders who demand ID for everything—banking, travel, employment—but suddenly lose their minds at the suggestion of using it to vote. They see the fear.

And make no mistake—thats what this is.

Fear. Fear that if elections are truly locked down—if every vote is verified, every ballot accounted for, every process transparent—the political math changes. And for some, thats a terrifying prospect.

But heres the truth that Schumer, Warnock, and their allies cannot escape: You already admitted it. You said illegal voting happens. You said the system isnt perfect. You said the emperor… isnt fully dressed. And once that admission is on the record, there is no going back. 

Because the American people are asking the only questions that matter now: If even one illegal vote cancels out a legal one—why wouldnt we stop it? If confidence in elections is the foundation of democracy—why wouldnt we strengthen it? If integrity matters—why are you fighting so hard against it?

The SAVE America Act is everything precisely because it forces this moment of clarity. No more euphemisms. No more deflections. No more pretending.

Either you believe in secure elections—or you dont. Either you believe every legal vote should count—and only legal votes—or you dont. Either the emperor is clothed… Or he never was.

And the American people are done applauding illusions.

https://townhall.com/columnists/kevinmccullough/2026/03/20/the-naked-emperor-of-election-integrity-n2673174?utm_source=thdailyvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-t63UqNsszy&utm_term=&_nlid=t63UqNsszy&_nhids=nc40pCXBHp4qls

Kathy Hochul: Oops, That Climate Law Was a Mistake...

Kathy Hochul: Oops, That Climate Law Was a Mistake...

AP Photo/Hans Pennink

Kathy Hochul is up for reelection this year, and has a big, big problem: for all the talk about an "affordability" agenda, every single policy the Democrats like to push increases costs, reduces quality of life, and drives people out of Blue states. 

And one of the worst problems she faces is skyrocketing energy bills, and the prospect that those prices will rise even more and faster in the next few years as climate deadlines rapidly approach. 

The pressure is so great, both because consumers are pissed off and businesses that can move begin doing so, that Hochul wants to "delay" the climate goals she and the Democrats were so excited about just a few years ago

Gov. Kathy Hochul on Friday moved to alter and delay the implementation of New York State’s landmark 2019 climate law, which calls for gradually decreasing greenhouse gas emissions by certain deadlines.

Those proposed adjustments include delaying issuing the regulations for enforcing the law — already two years late — until 2030 and amending how certain emissions are measured.

“We need more time,” Ms. Hochul wrote in an editorial that was published on Friday morning in The Empire Report, a news site that covers state politics. “So much has radically changed since the Climate Act was enacted, necessitating common-sense adjustments.”

The proposal, anticipated by lawmakers in Albany, comes late in the budget negotiation process. Although Ms. Hochul has considerable leverage to push for her agenda during this time, members of the Legislature will need to approve the final budget, which would include changes to the climate law.

So much has changed since 2019? Not really. Every sane person then knew that these goals were unattainable, but the pursuit of them would inevitably mean skyrocketing energy costs. 

HAHAHAHA: "Gov. Kathy Hochul’s top budget official elevated concerns about the cost of the state’s climate law that the governor once championed on Wednesday."To achieve New York's outrageous climate goals, it would "add more than $1.90 to gasoline prices and raise costs for a family with oil heat and a gas vehicle by $3,000 annually."

The only difference between then and now is that the deadlines are approaching and the cost increases are becoming a political liability. 

Activists and a growing number of legislators are alarmed by the governor’s decision, which has the potential to delay notoriously sluggish budget negotiations even more than usual. They argue that China and Pakistan — and even some U.S. states, including Texas — are ramping up renewable energy projects because they are cheaper and faster to develop than fossil fuel ventures and can serve as a bulwark against fluctuating gas and oil prices.

Ms. Hochul, whose move has the support of some moderate Democrats and business corporations, said that she needed more time to tweak the law for the realities of 2026.

When the climate law became official in 2019, it directed the state to issue regulations on reducing emissions by January 2024. The rules never surfaced, prompting climate groups to sue the state. Regulations are the engine of the Climate Act, said Rachel Spector, the deputy managing attorney for Earthjustice, an environmental nonprofit that is representing plaintiffs in the lawsuit.

“It is what gives teeth to the law,” she said. “Without it, there is no meaningful way to ensure emissions reductions.”

Last fall, the climate groups won their lawsuit against Ms. Hochul, who was told by a judge to publish the rules by February. She has appealed that decision, now hoping to extend that deadline by four more years. If the governor is successful, the 2019 law will not be enforced until 2030, the same year the state was supposed to have reduced emissions 40 percent.

In defending her proposed changes to the climate law, the governor cited a memo from the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, a state agency she oversees. If the state began penalizing polluters, the memo said, the cost of those fines would be passed on to oil and gas customers, with some paying about $4,000 more in utility bills each year.

There is not a serious person alive who didn't understand that imposing huge costs for not meeting impossible climate goals would raise costs for consumers. You had to have had a lobotomy or be a liberal to not predict this. 

Passing the climate law in 2019 was perfect for liberal politicians; it helped funnel money in great quantities to political allies for years, and the worst of the price increases was put into the seemingly distant future. But that "distant" future is not so distant now, and Hochul sees political trouble if she doesn't relieve the artificial price pressure the law has created. 

You know who has been warning about the consequences of these insane laws?

Republicans, of course. Costs have been skyrocketing for years, and that doesn't even include the insanely expensive subsidies for failing "green energy" projects. 

As always, the Democrats warn about a fake crisis, promise the moon, spend tons of money, make things infinitely worse, and then say they will fix the problem. 

Hey, folks, I have a better plan: get rid of these idiots and elect some Republicans. They aren't perfect, but you get a lot fewer butterfly bridges, fraudulent programs, insane green energy laws, and as a bonus, we won't put boys in girls' locker rooms. 

Give it a try. You may like it. 

https://hotair.com/david-strom/2026/03/21/kathy-hochul-oops-that-climate-law-was-a-mistake-n3813110?utm_source=twdailypmvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

ICE at the Airports Is One of Trump's More Brilliant Moves

ICE at the Airports Is One of Trump's More Brilliant Moves

AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura, File

Top O' the Briefing

Happy Tuesday, dear Kruiser Morning friends. Free crab cakes will be provided to everyone who attends the sunrise rage-yodel session. 

As we rush headlong towards what will probably be some very weird midterm elections, I firmly believe that the Republicans should be running as the party of law and order. The Democrats have been squirrelly on that issue ever since the Obama years, but have gotten really weak about it in the last year. They have to oppose everything President Trump and his administration do, of course, which includes getting violent scumbags off the streets and out of the country. 

A key part of that opposition has been the ongoing, deliberate demonization of the agents of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The Democrats praise criminals and treat ICE agents as if they're the lawbreakers. It truly is an exercise in insanity over there on the left. This is from something Matt wrote yesterday:

As PJ Media previously reported, over the weekend, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries went on CNN and literally claimed ICE agents would kill people at airports.

“The last thing that the American people need are for untrained ICE agents to be deployed at airports all across the country, potentially to brutalize or, in some instances, kill them,” Jeffries said.

And he wasn’t alone. Senator Richard Blumenthal piled on with his own apocalyptic vision, claiming, “ICE agents at airports will only aggravate delays & lines—disrupting checks, interrogating travelers, dragging parents from children, detaining citizens, brutalizing families, shooting & even killing.”

I don't know who the Democrats think this is a good look for. It's as if all they want to do is stir up the voters who are already voting for them. Joe and Edna Swing Voter in Flyover, USA probably aren't down the idea that federal agents want to kill them. 

When President Trump first said that he would deploy ICE agents to airports to fill in gaps left by unpaid Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents, Democrats immediately began falling all over themselves. The president is always thinking four steps ahead of the Democrats and all they've got is reactive flailing. They have been trying to keep travelers miserable and blame Republicans for the lack of TSA funding, but everybody has internet and the Dems are not that great with messaging anymore. 

This is from Victoria:

Only Trump can find leverage in the Democrats' TSA defunding — turning those broke, unpaid TSA agents and the disastrously long lines at the nation's airports into a teachable, brilliant, GOTCHA moment to behold. When Democrats figure out what hit them, they'll be so tattooed with this disaster, even the leftist screechers will lead the effort to restore TSA funding. 

Things will change soon because local media in the woke cities are covering the increasing freak out by leftists because Donald Trump is replacing missing, unpaid, TSA agents with paid, and perhaps even masked, ICE agents to help process passengers.

This should play out like another instance of Trump playing 4-D chess while the Democrats are just learning checkers. Despite all of the lying about the president by the Democrats and their flying monkeys in the mainstream media, the Trump 47 administration doesn't let any of the false  narratives get legs. This is because they are proactively doing things that are good for the country while the Democrats can only keep reassuring people that they hate President Trump. That's the only policy they have now. 

It's a lot of fun watching President Trump make the Democrats dance. Reading about it in the MSM is always an intense exposure to pathological denial. The dystopian fiction that the leftists are living in is intensely awful. Thankfully, none of it is real. 

https://pjmedia.com/stephen-kruiser/2026/03/24/the-morning-briefing-ice-at-the-airports-is-one-of-trumps-more-brilliant-moves-n4950995?utm_source=thdailyvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-nurdUMASGb&utm_term=&_nlid=nurdUMASGb&_nhids=ncyGZHm8C1kbls

CA Mayor Says State Makes It Impossible to Protect Kids — You Might Unwittingly Uncover an Illegal Alien

CA Mayor Says State Makes It Impossible to Protect Kids — You Might Unwittingly Uncover an Illegal Alien

AP Photo/Don Boomer

El Cajon Mayor Bill Wells has a rather stunning allegation to make against the state of California. Oh wait, maybe it’s not that stunning, considering Gavin Newsom’s Golden State is often at the heart of some of the most bat guano policies you’ll ever come across.

Wells says that officials actually hamper child welfare checks because they wouldn’t want to inadvertently come across an illegal alien and have to do something about it.

He wrote an op-ed for Fox News Thursday where he detailed the insanity:

His tweet continues:

Think about that. A child who may have been trafficked or abandoned. And the state says checking on them is the problem.

Earlier this week, I sent a formal letter to AG Bonta demanding a real answer: Do California's sanctuary laws conflict with federal law that makes it a felony to encourage someone to remain in the country illegally?

Un freakin’ believable.


CALIFORNIA DREAMIN’: From Hero to Pariah Overnight: Officials Scramble to Remove Any Mention of César Chávez From Public Life

CA Dems Want Human Trafficking to Remain and Wonder Why Parents Are Fleeing the State


Wells had more to say in his op-ed, and it will make your blood boil. This is the definition of one-party progressive rule run amok:

Last summer, a member of the El Cajon City Council asked California Attorney General Rob Bonta a question: Can our police officers conduct welfare checks on unaccompanied children using information provided by federal authorities?

The answer should have been yes. Instead, the attorney general's office warned that even confirming a child's location to federal officials could violate SB 54 — the state law that limits local cooperation with immigration enforcement. In other words, checking on a kid who might be in danger could put our officers on the wrong side of California law.

The city of El Cajon is caught between a state government building an extensive legal wall between local police and federal immigration authorities, and an obligation to follow federal criminal law that conflicts with those same state policies.

This reply to Wells’ tweet is pretty hardcore, but it’s hard to argue with:

Imagine the predicament for law enforcement officers as they try to combat crime while also adhering to California’s criminal-loving, illegal alien-coddling policies:

Consider this confusion from a patrol officer's perspective. SB 54 says our officers cannot inquire about immigration status, cannot honor ICE detainer requests without a judicial warrant and cannot use city resources to assist with federal immigration enforcement. Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Justice has signaled that officials who obstruct federal immigration operations could face prosecution. Our officers didn't sign up to be referees (or punching bags) in a fight between Sacramento and Washington.

Wells had tweeted earlier about the vagaries of SB 54:

State law extends government benefits, driver's licenses, and health care regardless of legal status.

These policies were designed to let people stay in California without fear of deportation.

The laws were designed to “let people stay in California without fear of deportation,” because more illegal immigration is exactly what they want. Like former President Joe Biden, Gavin Newsom and Co. think flooding the country with “undocumented people” will keep them in power forever.

Even if a few kids are left unprotected along the way.

https://redstate.com/bobhoge/2026/03/19/ca-mayor-says-state-makes-it-impossible-to-protect-kids-you-might-unwittingly-uncover-an-illegal-alien-n2200406?utm_source=rsmorningbriefingvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl

The $441 Billion VA System Still Can’t Do What One Private Project Just Did

The $441 Billion VA System Still Can’t Do What One Private Project Just Did

AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File

More than 35,000 veterans are homeless in the United States, according to recent federal housing data, and more than 15,500 of them were living unsheltered on the streets, in vehicles, or in places not meant for human habitation. Unsheltered veteran homelessness jumped 14 percent in a single year, while overall veteran homelessness rose 7 percent.

At the same time, the Department of Veterans Affairs’ own most recent suicide report shows that 6,392 veterans died by suicide, with a rate of 33.9 per 100,000 compared with 16.7 among non-veterans. Even after adjusting for age and sex, the veteran rate was nearly 72 percent higher, while the rate among women veterans rose by more than 24 percent in a single year.

These are the most recent nationwide indicators available, and they show that even as oversight continues into 2026, the system is not delivering results that match its size or cost.


Read More‘Your Bills Don’t Get Cut in Half’: Lawmakers Push to Double Benefits for Gold Star Families

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Congress has been hearing these warnings for years, even as the system continues to expand.

The Department of Veterans Affairs employs roughly 412,000 people and is backed by a fiscal year 2026 budget request of $441.3 billion. Even with that scale, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) told Congress in March 2026 that core problems in how the department delivers care remain unresolved, echoing warnings it has raised for years.

GAO reported that many VA facilities still lack the staffing needed to manage community care referrals, even as key recommendations remain unimplemented years after they were issued. The department has yet to define how quickly veterans should receive care once referred outside the system. Referral coordination remains uneven, communication between central offices and local facilities continues to break down, and recommendations issued as far back as 2020 remain only partially implemented or still open.

“VHA facilities did not always have the staffing needed to manage community care referrals… and VA has not established a time frame for when veterans should receive care.”

This is a failure of basic execution, and the consequences show up in the data: rising homelessness, elevated suicide rates, and a system that still cannot do the basics well. And after years of spending increases, staffing growth, and promised reform, those outcomes are not abstract. They are measurable.

In Sarasota, Florida, a 10-unit housing development is doing something a $441 billion federal system has struggled to accomplish at scale: moving veterans from homelessness into stable housing.

Heroes’ Village was built through a partnership between local government, philanthropy, and nonprofit operators rather than through a large federal initiative. Its impact is immediate because the structure is simple.

“I lived under a palm tree in a tent for 3 weeks. I needed a solid home base… [Heroes’ Village] gave me a solid platform to build off of.”

That kind of stability is the difference between crisis and recovery for veterans trying to rebuild.

“Having the time to not have to worry so much about rent and bills… has enabled me to concentrate on finally finding something that’s a career… and taking care of my health.”

Remove the immediate barriers, and progress becomes possible.

Meanwhile, a federal system with vast resources continues to struggle with staffing, coordination, and timelines, while smaller local efforts are removing the barriers that keep veterans from stabilizing their lives.

The pattern does not stop at housing. Local organizations are stepping in to provide services the VA does not consistently cover, including dental care that many veterans cannot access unless they meet strict eligibility rules. Those gaps directly affect whether veterans can work, maintain stability, and move forward.

At that point, the issue is no longer complexity; it is execution.

The United States has built an enormous system to serve veterans, one that continues to grow while failing to deliver the outcomes it was built to achieve. Yet the most recent data still shows more than 35,000 veterans without housing, suicide rates far above the national average, and a federal watchdog warning that core operational issues remain unresolved. That's a problem.

https://redstate.com/ben-smith/2026/03/20/the-441-billion-va-system-still-cant-do-what-one-private-project-just-did-n2200431?utm_source=pjmediambvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl_pm

Democrats Don’t Have a Growth Program

Democrats Don’t Have a Growth Program

They’re not even interested.

Democrats once understood the importance of economic growth. That’s because growth, particularly productivity growth, is what drives rising living standards over time. Democrats sought to harness the benefits of growth for the working class, not to interfere with the economic engine of progress. They believed in the future and the possibilities for dramatic improvement in human welfare.

Democrats’ 21st century project has, at its core, been dedicated to other goals. They now prize goals like fighting climate change, reducing inequality, pursuing procedural justice, and advocating for immigrants and identity groups above promoting growth. For example, the “Deciding to Win” report analyzed word frequency in Democratic Party platforms since 2012 and found a 32 percent decline in the appearance of the word “growth” compared to a 150 percent increase in the word “climate,” a 1,044 percent increase in “LGBT/LGBTQI+,” a 766 percent increase in “equity,” an 828 percent increase in “white/black/Latino/Latina,” and a 333 percent increase in “environmental justice.”

This is remarkably short-sighted. The key to substantially rising living standards for the working class—once the Democrats’ prized goal—is precisely more economic growth, especially higher productivity growth. You cannot make up for that by redistribution nor by simply spending more money on government programs. A fast-growth economy provides more opportunities for upward mobility, generates better-paying jobs, creates fiscal space for priorities like infrastructure projects, and, as Benjamin Friedman has argued, has positive “moral consequences” by orienting citizens toward generosity, tolerance, and collective advance. Slow growth has the opposite effects.

It is therefore completely unrealistic for Democrats to think they can accomplish their goals and build support without centering the goal of economic growth. Attempts to elide this problem have resulted in heavy reliance on chimerical projects like a rapid green transition which have not and cannot deliver the benefits of overall growth. Or, as in the Biden administration, just spending money on various party priorities and hoping for the best. (“Make Spending Money Great Again,” did not work.)

With that in mind, it is instructive to examine the Democrats’ latest economic proposals and see where they fall short—and frequently massively so.

Start with “affordability”—the Democrats’ mantra of the moment. One does not have to be a cynic to see that affordability is not a program but a slogan, designed to take advantage of voters’ strong dissatisfaction with the Trump administration’s economic management. They feel the prices they pay for key commodities are no better aligned with their incomes than they were under Biden (perhaps worse)—and they weren’t happy about it then.

Hence the slogan “affordability.” If voters don’t feel things are affordable, well, we’ll promise to make things affordable. Of course, that’s not much of an economic program and, by definition, has nothing to do with growth. The result has been a grab bag of price caps and controls, subsidies and new regulations that may or may not do much to make everyday life more affordable but at least signal that Democrats want to do something about the problem. Long-term beneficial effects on the economy are neither claimed nor likely.

Nearly as popular as affordability—and frequently twinned with the affordability pitch—is a populist denunciation of the rich and big companies who are alleged to be responsible for high prices and nearly everything else that’s wrong with the economy. As James Talarico, Democratic candidate for the Senate in Texas put it:

What I would say is that the only minority destroying this country is the billionaires…We are all focused on the wrong 1 percent...Trans people aren’t taking away our healthcare. Undocumented people aren’t defunding our schools…It’s the billionaires and their puppet politicians.

Countless Democratic politicians have made variations of this claim. But such claims have no logical connection to a coherent economic program and certainly have nothing to do with economic growth. What they do connect to is, well, taxing the rich. In particular, there is now a vogue for wealth taxes in Democratic circles including the notorious “billionaires tax” in California, a ballot initiative that would levy a 5 percent tax on net worth over $1 billion using estimates inflated by voting control rather than economic interest.

Going further, Democrats on the national level have twinned taxing the rich with free money and that old Republican favorite, tax cuts. The Bernie Sanders-Ro Khanna proposal would go California one better and makes the 5 percent wealth tax annual rather than a one-time levy, directing the revenue toward, among many other things, “a $3,000 direct payment to every man, woman and child in a household making $150,000 or less — $12,000 for a family of four”. Free money—now that’s an economic program!

The Van Hollen proposal taxes income rather than wealth and imposes escalating surtaxes on incomes over $1 million, starting at 5 percent and topping out at 12 percent on incomes over $5 million. In this proposal, the revenue raised will be used to eliminate federal income taxes for about half of working Americans ($46,000 individual income; $92,000 if married and filing jointly). Take that, Republicans. We may have no idea how to promote economic growth but we can beat you on tax cuts!

A more promising Democratic idea, with more serious economic content, is the idea of “abundance.” A Washington Post article described the abundance approach as “cutting back on the environmental reviews, strict zoning, labor rules and other obstacles that prevent government from efficiently building, fixing and fostering the things people want, from housing to energy.” An Axios article summarized the new approach as “respond[ing to governing failures in blue cities and states] by cutting excess regulations to build more housing, energy projects and more.”

There has been some movement, at least on the state front, in implementing this approach. But resistance has been fierce from key sectors of the Democratic Party. After all, those most directly connected to the regulations, procedures and bureaucracies that the abundance approach wants to attack, not to mention the countless NGOs that defend them, are by and large Democrats. They’ve got a lot of power within the party and are exerting it to the maximum to protect their self-interest.

A bigger problem is the ultimate goal of this approach. There is a distinct whiff of professional class coastal liberal preferences in the Democratic vision of abundance. That vision is heavy on infill urban housing, urban infrastructure, and building out clean energy to stave off climate catastrophe. Indeed, in the seminal text of the Democratic abundance movement, Abundance, by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson, the book’s introduction waxes rhapsodic on their vision of a 2050 socially liberal ecotopia, where, to paraphrase President Trump (“everything’s computer!”), everything’s electric! Fossil fuels are but a distant memory; it’s all clean energy that is dirt cheap with towering skyscraper farms for food and drones that seamlessly deliver everything your heart desires.

This is catnip for the book’s target audience of liberal Democratic-leaning professionals but for the rest of the population—not so much. Democrats have not yet grappled with the fact that the goals of their abundance approach are linked to a concept of abundance that does not line up well with the preferences of actually-existing working-class voters. These voters, quite simply, want to be richer and have more stuff. Abundance Democrats, on the other hand, seem to have in mind a socially liberal ecotopia that is highly appealing to educated, upper middle class liberals but much less so to the working class. As Josh Barro has noted Democratic abundance advocates tend to support “policies that would make energy, and the aspirational suburban lifestyle, more expensive.” And that lifestyle, he points out, is what “abundance” means for most ordinary Americans. Arizona Democratic senator Ruben Gallego underscored the issue: “Every Latino man wants a big-ass truck.”

That connects to an even more profound limitation of the Democrats’ abundance approach. As an economic program, it is not really a growth program but rather one that promises to deliver more of what Democratic liberals want. But what the country really needs—and what most voters want—is to become richer faster. And that can only be delivered through economic growth that outstrips population growth (rising GDP per capita).

Of course, promoting economic growth at this level is challenging. It depends above all on promoting sustainable, strong productivity growth. This in turn depends centrally on technological change and its incorporation into the economy, typically linked to the rise of new general purpose technologies (GPTs). Think electricity, the internal combustion engine, semiconductors/computing and so on.

Might such a GPT be on tap today? Of course there is: AI. AI boosters are not wrong to claim that AI is, in fact, a new GPT. If so, the effects on productivity growth could be game-changing and era-defining.

Democrats, however, who have long had a streak of techno-pessimism, are not reacting terribly positively to this development and its enormous growth potential. Indeed, the evolving reaction seems to be downright negative. Senator Chris Murphy, a reliable barometer of party trends, had this to say:

The cultural and economic impact of AI is going to be the biggest issue in politics over the next decade…There is going to be a growing appetite from voters to support candidates that are going to help them manage the potential coming disaster as AI poisons our kids and destroys all of our jobs.

Murphy made this judgement on AI back in December. Democrats’ views on AI have not improved since then. The current favorite trope is to bash data centers linked to AI and call for regulatory measures ranging from a mortarium on new ones to insisting that data centers provide and pay for their own power. Other proposed regulations aim at AI companies directly around issues of online safety, especially for minors.

Leaving aside the likely policy efficacy (or lack thereof) of these measures they have nothing to do with maximizing productivity growth from AI and channeling the benefits as widely as possible. They are, instead, measures to take advantage of public fears about AI, which are considerable. Blue Rose Research recently found that a fire-breathing AI-specific populism maximizes political benefits for Democrats. An example from their research of such an approach:

Within 5 years, AI is projected to eliminate 75 percent of our jobs. The biggest change in human history is here. Your job, my job...they’re on the line. What happens next is a choice. Their choice? Let mega-corporations fire everyone, keep all the profits, and leave you with nothing. A future of mass unemployment, foreclosures, and chaos.

I don’t doubt that such an approach could be politically effective in the short-run, especially as we approach the 2026 election. But is is woefully inadequate as an approach to AI as a new GPT that could make the country and its workers richer. For that, you’d need a growth program and Democrats don’t have one.

https://www.liberalpatriot.com/p/democrats-dont-have-a-growth-program