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Gutfeld: Why Trump uses words even a high school dropout understands

Gutfeld: Why Trump uses words even a high school dropout understands

Fox Newsa day ago
Fox News host Greg Gutfeld and the panel assess President Donald Trump's speaking style and how it resonates on 'Gutfeld!'
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This Democrat Thinks Voters Seeking Order Will Make or Break Elections
This Democrat Thinks Voters Seeking Order Will Make or Break Elections

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

This Democrat Thinks Voters Seeking Order Will Make or Break Elections

FALL RIVER, Mass.—Democrats' bruising loss to Donald Trump in last November's election could be explained in a single word: inflation. It should be the last thing a Democrat would want to raise with voters now. Yet it is the first thing that Rep. Jake Auchincloss of Massachusetts brings up with them. 'Prices are going up. We've all felt that,' he declares to a group of seniors at a cookout outside this former mill town 50 miles south of Boston. Meta Freezes AI Hiring After Blockbuster Spending Spree McDonald's to Cut Combo-Meal Prices After Convincing Franchisees From $24,000 to $147,000: How Much Daycare Costs Across America Trump Turns Up the Heat. Fed Chair Jerome Powell Tries to Keep His Cool. Child Care in America Is Broken. Here Are Five Ideas for How to Fix It. Then comes a mini economics tutorial. Prices for some things usually stay the same or fall, like electronics, he says. Others rise, year after year, like housing, utilities and healthcare. These sectors have what he calls 'cost disease,' which, like any disease, requires intervention. 'Policymakers need to start treating cost disease.' That, he says, means going after local-government red tape that holds down the supply of housing, and health insurers who are 'price gouging simply because they have a monopolistic position.' The Democratic Party, shut out of power and mired at its lowest approval in over 35 years, is in crisis. On culture and quality of life, voters see it as out of touch. On economics, its populist positions on trade and entitlements have been co-opted by Trump. Auchincloss thinks he knows the way out of the wilderness. A cerebral former Marine who looks younger than his 37 years, Auchincloss is a fan of social psychologist and author Jonathan Haidt's theory that the public associates morality with care, fairness, authority and loyalty. Auchincloss sums them up as 'social order.' Democrats lost, he says, because 'we were not perceived as upholding social order.' The cost disease, he argues, is one of the forces eating away at Americans' sense of social order. The late economist William Baumol coined the term to describe how prices rise most where productivity grows most slowly, such as health, education and housing. Historically, Democrats didn't give priority to costs, but rather creating jobs and expanding government benefits. That strategy backfired spectacularly on former President Joe Biden when inflation soared and his popularity plummeted. Biden is gone, but cost anxiety isn't. Some polls find Trump's approval on inflation as low as Biden's. A recent poll by NORC, sponsored by The Wall Street Journal, suggests costs are eating away at the American dream: 56% of respondents weren't confident they could buy a home, and 47% felt that way about a car, compared with 42% who weren't confident about finding a good job. The son of physician-scientists, Auchincloss studied government and economics at Harvard and business at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, joined the Marines out of college, and served in Afghanistan and Panama. Having spent 2014 helping to elect moderate Republican Charlie Baker as governor of Massachusetts, Auchincloss calls himself an 'Obama-Baker Democrat.' While he eschews the labels 'moderate' or 'centrist,' his impatience with his party's progressive wing is palpable. His formative political experience came when he ran for Congress in 2020. Despite public-health experts recommending schools reopen, Democratic-run cities and states kept them closed. They were 'too focused on process, not enough on outcomes that mattered, which was getting kids back in schools. And there was a condescending attitude to parents who were rightfully frustrated watching kids atrophy at home.' Auchincloss's district is reliably Democratic thanks to affluent liberal voters in Boston's suburbs. But its largest city is Fall River, a blue-collar city once dominated by textile mills whose residents voted last fall for the Republican presidential candidate, Trump, for the first time in a century. Here is where Auchincloss is fine-tuning his message on costs and social disorder. At a municipal services fair in a local park, a police officer relates how a railroad track converted to a recreational trail soon attracted a homeless encampment. 'You should be able to clear these open air encampments,' Auchincloss responds. Democrats, he says later, haven't been 'muscular' enough on issues like homelessness and crime. Auchincloss argues Trump and Republicans also contribute to cost disease through their closeness to corporations. At a meeting with independent pharmacist Tom Pasternak who complains about low insurance-reimbursement rates, Auchincloss blames pharmacy-benefit managers for steering patients away from cheap generics and toward their captive drugstore chains. He notes a bill to regulate such companies had wide bipartisan House support last year, but was excluded from a funding bill 'at the behest of Elon Musk and has yet to get another hearing on the floor,' which he blames on lobbying by health insurers. Auchincloss has singled out Brad Smith, who served on Musk's Department of Government Efficiency at the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees Medicare. Auchincloss said that raised conflict of interest concerns since Smith's company, rural health provider Main Street Health, is backed by health insurers that provide Medicare Advantage plans and are regulated by or transact with the department. A spokesman for Smith said that while at DOGE, he wasn't involved in any issues related to the setting of Medicare insurance rates and that any suggestion to the contrary is false. Auchincloss has also targeted social-media companies for delivering 'digital dopamine' to children. Here, too, Haidt was an influence. Last year, Auchincloss invited Haidt, who had just published the bestseller 'The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness,' to address about eight to 10 members from both parties of the Congressional Dads Caucus. 'Jake is emerging as a major policy thinker among the Democrats,' said Haidt, noting the congressman's authorship of a bill to raise the minimum age for certain social-media protections to 16 from 13. Auchincloss might have a coherent message. Whether it can win elections outside deep blue Massachusetts is another matter. In this purple part of his district, reaction to his cost-disease remarks fell along party lines. Tony Branco, a Democrat, congratulated him: 'When you correct the smaller things, it tends to help with the larger things.' Judy Reese, a Republican, was dismissive. 'President Trump is trying to work on [costs] if people would just work with him.' Somewhere in between was Republican Dale Herbert: 'He was honest. He was open to anyone that had their opinions.' Write to Greg Ip at Target Shares Tumble After Retailer Names a Lifer to Steer Its Turnaround Google Is Beating Apple on Smartphone AI Fed Minutes Reveal Broad Support for Holding Rates Steady Last Month Smartmatic Case Documents Show Some Fox News Hosts' Drive to Help Trump UnitedHealth Group Names Lead Independent Director Sign in to access your portfolio

Uganda backtracks on US third-country deportation deal, sets conditions for receiving migrants
Uganda backtracks on US third-country deportation deal, sets conditions for receiving migrants

Business Insider

time28 minutes ago

  • Business Insider

Uganda backtracks on US third-country deportation deal, sets conditions for receiving migrants

Uganda has backtracked on its earlier denial of a migration deal with the United States, confirming it will receive certain third-country nationals denied asylum in America under specific conditions. Uganda has confirmed an agreement with the U.S. to receive certain third-country nationals denied asylum. The decision came after publicly denying the existence of such arrangements initially. Uganda has stipulated conditions, excluding individuals with criminal records or unaccompanied minors. Preference will be provided to migrants of African nationalities, reflecting regional intents. Uganda's Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced the third-country deportation agreement on Thursday, less than 24 hours after insisting no such arrangement existed. Reports earlier in the week suggested that Washington had concluded a deal with Kampala to transfer some deportees to Uganda as part of President Donald Trump's immigration policy, which has sought to relocate migrants with rejected asylum claims or questionable documentation to third countries. The Ugandan government, in a statement released by State Minister for Foreign Affairs Henry Oryem Okello initially dismissed the reports, but has now acknowledged the agreement while stressing that individuals with criminal records or unaccompanied minors will not be accepted, and that preference will be given to African nationals. The agreement follows President Donald Trump's immigration policy, which has included the deportation of convicted felons and migrants with questionable documents to third countries. Uganda seals deal, outlines conditions The Ugandan government has outlined strict conditions under which it will receive migrants under its new agreement with the United States. According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Uganda will only take in third-country nationals who have been denied asylum in the U.S. and are unwilling to return to their countries of origin. However, the arrangement excludes certain categories of people. '' This is a temporary arrangement, individuals with criminal records and unaccompanied minors will not be accepted,' Vincent Bagiire Waiswa, the ministry's permanent secretary, said in a statement. He further stressed that Uganda would give preference to receiving migrants of African nationalities, reflecting Kampala's intention to manage the program within a regional and cultural framework. By setting these conditions, Uganda has positioned itself among the few African nations openly cooperating with Washington on migrant resettlement under the U.S. third-country deportation program, joining South Sudan, Rwanda, and Eswatini.

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