Economic Liberty Now Has No Place In Either Party
The rise of neopopulism means those who prioritize free markets have no political home.

For years, populists on both the left and right have griped that Washington is in the thrall of libertarians, market fundamentalists, or perhaps neoliberals—despite the rarity of any politically powerful figure identifying as such.
Recent events should put those complaints to rest: With the elevation of Sen. J.D. Vance (R–Ohio) to the Republican presidential ticket, and, in a different way, Vice President Kamala Harris, American politics is now in the grips of a kind of neopopulism, one implicitly founded on the rejection of that synthesis, and in particular on the abandonment of the free-market, limited-government worldview.
That, in turn, has created a new class of politically homeless: Call them fusionists, call them classical liberals, call them libertarians—but those who prioritize economic liberty have essentially no place in either major party. That's a significant shift away from foundational American values—and an unsettling departure from the worldview that made America prosperous and powerful.
The transformation is clearest in the GOP, thanks to the elevation of Vance to the GOP presidential ticket. Vance, according to most accounts, was selected in a moment of confidence, as an heir apparent meant to extend and intensify Donald Trump's core appeal rather than as a counterweight to the former president's electoral weaknesses.
Vance spent the last half-decade transforming himself into one of the GOP's most prominent neopopulists. He's an advocate of tariffs and trade restrictions, a walker of auto-worker picket lines, and a harsh critic of foreign labor. He's even complimented Lina Khan, the Federal Trade Commission chair who has helped lead the Biden administration's newly aggressive (if mostly unsuccessful) approach to antitrust enforcement. Vance, who is among those who have a habit of taking swipes at libertarians, combines a rejection of individual liberty with a rejection of economic liberty—and he's Trump's newly anointed successor.
Modern Democrats have never exactly been the party of limited government. But Harris looks primed to expand on the big-government largesse of the Biden era, during which the party pursued a variety of policies designed to prop up labor unions and industrial policy to support favored industries and factory jobs through multiple large-scale spending bills.
That spending legislation was followed by, and helped cause, the largest inflation spike in four decades. So now Harris is also running on a policy of prohibiting food and grocery price gouging. Some Harris backers have defended the policy as merely an exercise in antitrust enforcement, but critics have argued quite persuasively that the policy as described amounts to a worrying new system of federal price controls.
She's also proposing a large-scale program of subsidies for first-time home buyers, paired with $40 billion in tax incentives for builders to construct new homes.
If Biden was a big government liberal, then Harris is a bigger government liberal.
What's striking about this particular political moment is that on both the left and the right, a new elite consensus appears to be forming, one that is skeptical of, and in some cases quite hostile to, free market ideals and principles.
The neopopulist consensus is still rough, but in broad terms, it favors propping up domestic labor, cracking down on immigration, using taxes and spending incentives to carry out industrial policy, and implementing tariffs and trade restrictions for reasons of national security, job creation, or international competitiveness. Notably, the Biden administration left most of Trump's tariffs in place—and in some cases increased them.
Whatever their other disagreements, the leaders and rising intellectuals in both parties seem to agree that the important thing is to leave out classical liberals, libertarians, and believers in economic liberty.
It's true that the parties have never fully embraced these values, and at times have distanced themselves from them. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.), a self-described socialist, has long helped pull Democrats to the left on economics. Former President George W. Bush implemented tariffs on imported steel, and his brand of "compassionate conservatism" was partly an attempt to dampen the party's libertarian tendencies.
Until recently, there was a place for those who prized individual freedom and markets. They were seen as valuable, or at least necessary, partners: As recently as 2012, none other than Democratic stalwart Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) pitched herself to libertarians. That same year, former House Speaker Paul Ryan (R–Wisc.), who was probably most well-known for proposals to reform entitlements, appeared on the GOP ticket. Trump's first vice president, Mike Pence, was similarly a link to the GOP's Reaganite past.
There may be some holdouts in the party who still embrace a more orthodox pro-market economics. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson's Republican National Convention speech paid homage to the "core principles of American conservatism," which included "fiscal responsibility," "free markets," and "limited government." But with Trump and Vance as the party's reigning avatars, it seems likely that these values will remain only as limp, legacy platitudes.
That's a shame. Personal liberty and market freedom are bedrock American political and economic values: That synthesis is explicit in the American founding, and it has long been deeply embedded in American life. In the 1830s, when America was still a young nation, Alexis de Tocqueville wrote that "boldness of enterprise is the foremost cause of its rapid progress, its strength, and its greatness." That boldness has made America wealthy on a scale that is almost taken for granted: Today, the vast majority of American states are richer than most European countries. The neopopulists take this wealth for granted, and then propose policies—tariffs, labor regulations, vast new spending programs—that would make America poorer, that would slow its progress, that would deplete its strength and greatness.
The rise of neopopulism, and its rejection of the free market, means that those who still favor boldness of enterprise have no one to root for in this year's presidential contest.
What are the politically homeless to do? Besides mourning—and, perhaps, drinking—they can advocate for narrowly focused cross-partisan dealmaking. This is, after all, where some of the country's most effective—if not always most heralded—policy advances, from prison reform to pot legalization, have come from. And they can lay the groundwork for a comeback, by building (or modifying) institutions to support their ideas, understanding that this approach may take years to pay off.
Mostly, they can look beyond the current moment, knowing that their outlook is embedded in America's constitutional design, with its checks and balances, judicial review, suspicion of both mob enthusiasms and individual power, and guarantees of individual rights.
In the meantime, if nothing else, today's politically homeless can take solace in the fact that at least no one can credibly complain that libertarians are in charge right now.
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Personal liberty and market freedom are bedrock American political and economic values
Oh, so *those* are the "American values" I keep hearing Harris et al. refer to!
No place on earth has ever had “economic liberty”.
Economically dubious”
Is it more dubious than a fictional economy where money grows and shrinks with interest and debt and is “controlled” with recessions and depressions that ruin everyone but the elite?
I think America was the closest to the ideal/pure econ liberty as humans could get (no system is ever “pure” when human interaction is involved). Unfortunately, we have been drifting away from this for quite some time now…..mostly because of the Dems but also the GOP to some extent.
The reason for this drift, I believe, is that gov run schools simply do NOT emphasize these bedrock concepts because the schools were originated by progressives who did not believe in free markets nor individual freedom. And of course the media is overwhelmingly not journalizing about such concepts or even poo poos them. Academia also has rejected these idea in favor of Marxist thinking.
Like I said, no place on earth has ever had “economic liberty”.
Mainstream libertarianism values greed. We’ve seen this before. Fortunately mostly in fiction. Although some satanist cults practice it.
In the fiction Star Trek, “Ferengi culture, especially as portrayed on Deep Space Nine, is depicted as hyper-capitalistic, focused on the acquisition of profit as the highest goal. Deep Space Nine writers have described how they saw the Ferengi as a satirical presentation of 20th century humans.”
Unfortunately for libertarians, real life isn’t fiction and acquisition isn’t an ethic.
Greed is an uncivilized, unintelligent reaction to fear. Ironically, the fear that someone else will be greedier.
The greedy cult can only exist as a minority or unrecognized in secret. In a closed system as earth is, like a mars colony, greed results in total breakdown of civilization. The mad max storyline.
This is the irony of libertarianism, that wants to become mainstream.
Yep. Libertarians didn’t leave the GOP. The GOP left libertarians when they abandoned their support for economic liberty. Now Republicans are angry and confused because they believe they own libertarian votes, but they truly can’t understand why principled libertarians don’t like them anymore.
Eh, maybe. There was plenty of reasons for libertarians to dislike R's under the direction of NeoCons. They may have been a little better at lip service to free markets, but terrible on follow-through. They were no better on deficits.
They may have been a little better at lip service to free markets, but terrible on follow-through.
True. Difference is that today the GOP doesn't even pay lip service to economic liberty. They openly spit on it.
While the leading Democrat candidate just proposed price controls on food and more handouts to interfere in the housing market...
Spending cuts seem to be off the table for whatever reason, for both parties. How about a spending freeze? If spending had been frozen since 2019, the budget would be balanced already.
"While the leading Democrat..."
Blah blah criticizing Republicans isn't praising Democrats fuck you.
I know right. Deregulation and tax cuts do nothing for economic liberty. Just the same as tax controls, regulatory controls, takeover of entire industries...
Libertarian - everyone is a Boss and there are no Workers !
More like no one is your boss, and everyone is an independent contractor.
So what is the *principled*, *libertarian* argument to vote *for* Trump?
Not the utilitarian one of "least bad", not an argument to vote *against Kamamalama*, but an affirmative one to vote in his favor. Especially when there is a libertarian candidate actually running who is far more libertarian in his policies than Trump will ever be on a good day.
Based on Trump's previous accomplishments as POTUS:
No new wars
Tax cuts
Scaled back Federal government jobs
Did not enact federal Covid mandates
Opened energy options
Immigration restrictions (yeah, you will bitch about this, but I said what I said)
+ Reduction of federal regulations; considering all of the above, which is like opposite day of any Democratic platform, my options are very clear.
Yeah, Trump is a jerk who can't keep his mouth shut or his fingers off the keyboard [so many mean tweets] and Vance seems somewhat all over the place, but when it comes to who will cause me and my country the least harm the choice is obvious.
He is the lesser of the two evils. For sure.
However if I vote, which I likely won’t and even if I did I’m in a solid blue state so it doesn’t matter, I’ll yank on Chase's Oliver.
I’ll yank on Chase’s Oliver.
Probably the only person running who would appreciate it.
You call yours "Oliver"?
You just admitted you’d yank it.
“I’m in a blue state, so my vote won’t count, so I vote for another guy who has absolutely no chance at all.”
Sarc logic.
It actually makes sense for once.
Every vote is insignificant, especially in a state where the winner is a forgone conclusion. Why not cast your vote as a signal for the type of candidate you would prefer?
“Immigration restrictions”. Don’t fall for the Reason/Cato/Democrats rewriting of the appropriate terminology: public charge open borders, with NGO public charge jobs programs thrown in for good measure.
Did not enact federal Covid mandates
Under Donald Trump the CDC/HHS claimed that they were authorized to implement an eviction moratorium (outside of the Cares Act E.M. which only covered fed backed mortgages), the Trump admin lost after defending it all the way up to Scotus. And yes I'm aware Biden proceeded to issue his own EO of his own and he also lost at Scotus and is equally a shitburg. See Alabama Assoc Realtors vs Health & Human Services.
Don't bring facts to a fact-free fight with a MAGA. They'll never believe you.
No new wars
Check.
Tax cuts
Some nibbling around the edges. Better than nothing or raising them, I suppose.
Scaled back Federal government jobs
False. The total number of federal employees increased every year during the Trump administration.
Did not enact federal Covid mandates
– Trump administration enacted federal travel bans.
– A huge fraction of state level mandates came directly from guidelines produced by Trump’s CDC led by Fauci.
– Fauci worked for Trump, and his actions had Trump’s approval. Trump gave Fauci a Presidential Commendation during his last few days in office, giving a stamp of approval to what the CDC did.
– Of course Trump now lies about issuing the commendation, and having ultimate responsibility as chief executive for every single thing the CDC did.
Opened energy options
Loosened up domestic production rules for federal lands, which is good. Net effect on fuel production and availability, minor.
Immigration restrictions
Neither principled nor libertarian, but it’s true that he tried. Overall effect on border crossings or total undocumented population unimpressive. Main “accomplishment” was getting media to criticize a bunch of harsh stuff that Obama had done without criticism., and making life harder for people under DACA and similar programs.
Why is the flow of new regulations so small under Trump? His administration did propose large cuts in the budgets of regulatory agencies, though Congress largely failed to adopt them even when it was controlled by Republicans.
And likewise The Resistance ignoring his 1 in 2 out mandates.
https://www.cato.org/regulation/summer-2020/deregulation-under-trump#findings
Trump’s dislike for existing regulations was simply, and only, part of his contempt for anything and everything that he didn’t do himself. He imagines he can do better than anyone, on anything, every time.
Certainly getting rid of those regulations would’ve been a good thing, even if his motivations were pure egomania. But then he wanted to put in other regulations of his own, for example, limiting or penalizing my purchases of foreign-made goods and services, or making it harder for me and my non-citizen friends to come and go as we please. The same deep state that thwarted him on the repeals of old regulations, thwarted him on instituting the new ones.
IMO there are only two positive things one can say about Trump:
– Excellent Supreme Court picks, in particular Gorsuch.
– He pulled back from wars where most of his predecessors would have gone in.
Well said.
Facts that get in the way of the narrative are leftist.
Compared to the Biden regime Trump and Obama had the borders on lockdown.
What new wars were declared under Biden to which US troops were sent? I can't remember any. Please refresh my memory. TIA!!!
BTW, Biden ended the US war in Afghanistan that Trump promised but failed to.
Hush! Your leftist facts are fucking up the narrative.
Will you ever stop being a dumb faggot?
The pentagon deliberately obstructed Trump, and didn’t allow him to leave earlier.
No new wars
Okay, but he did bomb people that he didn't like.
Besides, Chase is better on this. He has been consistently and unapologetically anti-war for 20+ years.
Tax cuts
A tax cut without a corresponding spending cut is not a true tax cut, it is instead tax deferral. Because the spending still occurs, it's just paid for by borrowing instead, which must be repaid by *future* taxpayers (with interest). The tax "cut" of today is really just deferred to the taxpayers of tomorrow. So no, Trump does not get kudos here.
Scaled back Federal government jobs
He did? His Schedule F would have replaced - not eliminate - certain civil servants with political lackeys.
Did not enact federal Covid mandates
As others noted, it was his CDC/HHS/OSHA that started the COVID lockdown craziness.
Opened energy options
Okay, he gets credit for this one here. But Chase is still better, he wants to outright sell federal land.
Immigration restrictions (yeah, you will bitch about this, but I said what I said)
Sorry, not libertarian.
So, Trump gets maybe 1.5 points out of 6, and is still worse compared to Chase.
Kamalamala bing bang is definitely worse than Trump. More worse than say comparing cat shit and dog shit. She’s just plain terrible. If Trump is dog shit in a bag then she’s Hershey’s squirts followed by explosive diarrhea. Trump is how my lactose intolerant gut feels after too much cheese, while Harris is how I felt after I mistook a Jack-o'-lantern for a chanterelle.
By the way, that was no fucking fun. Eating the wrong wild mushroom. It didn't taste like anything. That should have been a warning sign. Didn't drink that night. Woke up at 1am and I wasn't sure if I was to puke or shit. First the ass blaster. Then vomit machine. Another blast. Dry heaved for a bit. And that was that. Cleaned myself up and went back to sleep. Won't make that mistake again.
Didn’t drink that night.
I’ll take “things that never happened “ for $100, Alex.
The maintenance dosing to stave off the DTs doesn't count...
Arguing with Jeffy and then writing this literal shit-story. So much for any plausible deniability of your mid-week day-drinking.
Unfortunately, the LP does simply does not have the fire power to mount a campaign capable of even coming closed to winning a presidential election.
Based on that reality....Trump is the pick for LP's
You understand that you don't get an extra pat on the head for voting for the "winning team", right?
You know you’re in trouble when one of the resident pedos puts you down.
Helping to elect a non-libertarian is not a win for the LP.
There isn't one. The best thing Trump did while in office was nominate Supreme Court justices who gave us Bruen. Other than that, Trump is the opposite of a libertarian in every way.
(Well, he would be if he had any principles at all.)
"Now"? Tell me how this situation is any worse than 50 years ago in the USA or some other country of your choice.
Federal government/grant funded/contacter/bureaucrat jobs compared to private sector employment per capita.
Federal reserve buying municipal bonds in bankrupt cities
No, I mean no major party having a place for economic liberty. That's no worse now than it has been in the past, and not even just in the USA.
Yeah, I remember those halcyon days of the GOP free market support when they did things like try to repeal Obamacare or make debt limit increases contingent on fiscal reforms.
Anyone who would have said things like "Repealing Obamacare without a replacement in place is just a stunt" or "Not going along unconditionally with the increase is irresponsible" would be a statist POS with no regard whatsoever for economic liberty. Right, Peter?
Notice, though, they haven’t talked about repealing Obamacare this time around.
I’m voting for Trump because I consider the Republicans the lesser of socialists. In this case pure old Soviet Union communism and corruption.
Betcha wish the debt "ceiling" had actually been enforced now, eh?
Reasonable point on ACA....back then.
Now? Trump 2024: "“I’m not running to terminate the ACA as crooked Joe Biden says all over the place,”
As far as the debt, it's always gone up during every administration of any party for my entire life. No major party has any credibility on this.
Have you figured out who largely controls the purse strings yet?
Have it either way.
If Trump had any influence over purse strings, then 2016-2020 proves he's a failure and/or a fake.
If Trump has no power over purse strings, then there's no reason to prefer him for economic reasons.
On debt and spending there is no doubt what the least-bad option is: divided government. Harris + GOP Congress or Trump + DEM Congress.
Bills that Republicans sign are only their fault if they were written exclusively by Republicans, and if they have a veto-proof majority.
Otherwise they’re just shaking their dix.
Oh come now.
The Reason Commenter Rule is: if even one Democrat exists anywhere, that Democrat is responsible for all Republican failures.
Trump + DEM Congress.
IF the DEM Congress can hold off on trying to impeach Trump once per day, and try to compromise and negotiate with him, then Trump + DEM Congress will probably be a nightmare, almost as bad as Harris + DEM Congress, since Trump is easily manipulated and swayed by the last person who said nice things about him. So it's not too hard to imagine a DEM House Speaker flattering Trump and then Trump "compromising" with them.
Let's agree to disagree and go with Harris and DEM congress.
Utterly stupid. Look what Dem control of the Executive has done to border enforcement, the DOJ/FBI, the DEI military, Ukraine, and stupid climate initiatives. That's right, I said stupid twice.
Fucking bastards were driving the car into the ditch. Not like your drunk friend in the back seat during COVID who was just trying to help.
did things like try to repeal Obamacare
Yeah, I remember the guy with the Reason byline who kept demanding that when the GOP put the Obamacare fire out, they didn't have anything to replace it with...
judicial review
Judicial review remains an extra-constitutional power that SCOTUS has claimed. It isn't fundamental to the founding.
This is just ridiculous. How is an appeals court supposed to judge a case if a party appeals to the law? How can you not have judicial review when someone says an administrative action is contrary to statute, or that an statute is contrary to constitution? What does "all cases at law or equity arising under this constitution" mean, then?
Seems like an obvious improvement though. Someone has to be the judge, short of states withdrawing from the union.
>>Economic Liberty Now Has No Place In Either Party
sweet. now do one on the Uniparty v. The Rest of Us
Politicians always promise free stuff utopias (in the case of unions a six figure paycheck and a jobs program) to stay in power and get elected. The fiat currency thing has run its course. Printing press combined with reserve currency, public /private partnerships was always going to end in hyperinflation, socialism and dictatorship.
BTW, public charge open borders is a fucking disaster. Vail Trustfunded mayor of Denver is going to ask paycheck to paycheck working class people for higher taxes to pay for free security from gang shakedowns, healthcare and housing for ~40,000 illegals.
Speaking of the economy, it looks like the current administration cooked the books on job growth over the past year to the tune of about 820k. That's a lot of fake jobs!
https://twitter.com/zerohedge/status/1826266824780267686
I saw that it’s all a big joke now.
Wow, who could have predicted the original numbers would turn out to be so much rosier than reality?
It's like tuning into the Trump v. Biden debate with anticipation, and discovering that Biden's mental faculties have severely degraded, almost overnight.
This is a big deal - it's in addition to the normal monthly / quarterly downward revisions. It's on top of those.
The neopopulist consensus is still rough, but in broad terms, it favors propping up domestic labor, cracking down on immigration, using taxes and spending incentives to carry out industrial policy, and implementing tariffs and trade restrictions for reasons of national security, job creation, or international competitiveness….Whatever their other disagreements, the leaders and rising intellectuals in both parties seem to agree that the important thing is to leave out classical liberals, libertarians, and believers in economic liberty….It’s true that the parties have never fully embraced these values,
The neopopulist impulse is a reaction against a previously established economic order. Maybe globalist neoliberal is a more appropriate pigeonhole for what is being reacted to – but with both parties reacting against it, it is very clear that both parties formerly fully embraced it [meaning squashing domestic labor, goosing immigration by choice or abdication, using taxes/spending to carry out anti-industrial policy, eliminating tariffs through multiWTO rounds for reasons of multinational corporate lobbying]. And since Reason economics is pretty much entirely based on selling what is now opposed, one could also rephrase globalist neoliberal as libertarian.
I agree the neopopulist consensus is rough. From the R’s in particular the economics is much fuzzier as a motive than the cultural xenophobia and hatred. From the D’s, the economics is, at best, confused, since public sector unions and academia don’t remotely understand non-bureaucrat anything.
But at a certain point, the neopopulist reaction will settle on some stuff that is really stuck on stupid — and some stuff that is an appropriate reaction against the excesses of the previous establishment global neoliberalism. The question is, at that point, which party will settle on the stupid and which will settle on the appropriate.
I see that ChatJFree 2.0 is up and running. Same unintelligible nonsense, but with a LOT more big words. So many big words...
HTTP 204: No Content
That's his point.
One party supports tariffs - which have existed for as long as the country - the other is pushing price controls.
But sure, no place for free marketers in the GOP.
+1
And much as Reason likes to play the Civil Rights vs. Market Rights Mott-and-Bailey or Liberty-for-security horse trading card:
One party is calling for an end to the collusion between corporations and the government - like colonists throwing tea into the harbor - the other is calling for more control over the corporations to better quell the unruly peasants.
No place for free markets *or* free speech in the GOP!
BOAF SIDEZZ
The article doesn't address the most interesting question: Why has free market ideology failed so miserably? Two opposing parties coalescing around this issue, despite the best efforts of Suderman and many others to denigrate it and shill for neoliberalism? What do the populists know that Suderman doesn't? I suggest Suderman be subjected to a struggle session of self criticism to get answers to this question.
There is one small subset of Congress who seeks to decrease spending. Ironically it is the so called populist in The Freedom Caucus. You know those guys you, sarc, and Reason generally hate.
We still get tax cuts, right?
Depends, if you’re in the top percentage of wealth /income that itemizes deductions (SALT deductions in bankrupt blue states) you’ll get a significant tax break with Democrats, tens of millions. (There’s a reason she raised .5 billion in three weeks for her campaign).
If you are in the majority of median earning or middle wealth, your standard deduction will be cut in half and you will pay significantly higher taxes under Democrats.
There is plenty of room for economic liberty in the GOP. But It is true that SOME Libertarians have no friends in either side, because one side is basically the antithesis of their ideology and they go out of their way to alienate the other side that's more friendly.
I've been reading this site for 15 plus years. Back when GOP sort of went libertarian during the tea party movement, what did they do? That's right, harp on them for not being libertarian enough. And denigrate them over differences, like immigration. They were among those who argued for GOP to relent on open borders to appeal to Latinos. Guess which republican made the most inroad with that demo? Ooops, Trump.
Republicans, unlike libertarians, are actually in positions of power. They have to contend with the fact that to pass any agenda, they need the presidency, crossover votes from the other side that considers any cuts to be pushing grandma off the cliff, and some level of public support. Anything they do will be vilified by the dem owned media. Why didn't they just cut medicare by 15% when they had both house and senate? The answer is obvious.
Do you think Chase Oliver's platform will be purely libertarian if he was trailing Harris by 3 points? Don't kid yourself. And he wouldn't be in that position in the first place if not for republican voters, who would be just interested in beating the dems at that point. If you have nothing to lose, you can remain pure and dogmatic in your principle as much as you want. In real life, even the greatest presidents had to form coalitions with some ugly people.
How did Milei win in Argentina? Why is he beloved by so many republicans here? By being the perfect libertarian? Or did he very much ride the momentum of populism, which is probably more nuanced than red necks screaming "no more jobs for illegal"? Could he win in America, a country with 30-40% immigrants?
Great summary of the delusional side of the LPe.
How did Milei win in Argentina?
Things had to get very bad in Argentina before they could get better.
On Milei: libertarian is small government + economic freedom + civil liberties. Milei has proven he is the real deal on the small government and economic freedom aspects. No verdict yet on the civil liberties until we see more on how he deals with serious pushback. The only true proof of commitment to free speech or fair trials is defending them for your opponents when your own side is clamoring for blood.
Do you think Chase Oliver’s platform will be purely libertarian if he was trailing Harris by 3 points?
Well, the real answer here is that if Libertarians were within 3% their nominee wouldn’t be someone like Chase Oliver. I think Oliver himself would stick to his platform if he magically rose in the polls, for better or for worse.
In real life, even the greatest presidents had to form coalitions with some ugly people.
Very true. But now Trump himself, and his true believers, are the ugly people I’m worried about. His “reluctant and strategic” supporters are ordinary people but Trump doesn’t give a shit what they think.
One thing I'm real damn sure about: Trump is not some secret libertarian making reluctant and strategic compromises with the yahoos. He is the chief yahoo.
Milei is actually cutting government jobs. The entrenched bureaucrats in the US have already proven time and again they will do anything to prevent that. What was the only job sector that had to be adjusted up this week (meaning it was underestimated)? That's right, the government sector. Even they can't believe how fucking lucky they are.
It comes down to which party wants to oppress you more via taxes, unnecessary laws, rules, regulations, licensing etc.
Gee, I wonder which party is favor of that kind of oppression?
Didn't one party try to set up a system to ban speech they deemed inaccurate? Things like:
Covid probably came from a lab
Hunter Biden laptop was not Russian disinformation
Joe Biden is senile, just two months ago the videos showing it were called "Cheap Fakes."
If the Reason editors followed this article up with a principled endorsement of the libertarian candidate/party, that would be one thing....
but instead I suspect this is 'cover' for them to endorse Harris because neither is libertarian even a little bit and Trump is "scarry".
Unfortunately I think your suspicions are correct. Multiple times Suderman reinforces the idea that there are only two parties and those are the only options.
Very scary.
The rise of neopopulism means those who prioritize free markets have no political home.
Isn’t this the logical result of the “Civil Libertarianism” that used to be touted around here since the Obama Administration?
People were free to be deplorable, racist, or deplorable racist, and participate in the free market economy but Civil Libertarians and other similarly “civil” people were free to toss them out of “their” party on their ear.
Guess you weren’t favoring liberty of any kind as much as just being a self-righteous asshole and, now that the chickens have come home to roost, it sucks to be you.
Free markets? That is a myth: the enemy of the free market is the capitalist, whose goal is to maximize profit, which is done by eliminating competition (or colluding with a small number of major players) in order to corner the market and fix prices. Free and open competition is the enemy of the capitalist class. Examples abound in energy , food, high tech, and nearly every major industry where either one player or a small handful dominate the markets, use their outsized influence to rig the market (by cutting production, as with oil producers) or by price gouging, as with monopolies like PG and E in Calfornia, using government as a kind of silent partner to craft laws, loopholes, and benefits.
Here is one example: Mosaic fertilize spent millions to buy Trump's support to enact a prohibitive tariff on foreign competition, leaving Mosaic with a 90% market share, which enabled them to raise the price of essential phosphate by 400% in one year, thus causing food inflation. This is in effect corporate fascism, showing how dominant players use government policy to gain control of the market and eliminate competition. So let's quit pretending that the capitalist class is anything but the chief enemy of free markets.
The ONLY way capitalists eliminate competition is through government action. The people give this power to government. Free markets do NOT allow this. You are brainwashed.
One party wants to lower taxes. The other wants to raise them.
One party wants to gut regulators and kill Chevron. The other wants to expand regulations and Chevron.
One party wants school choice and private healthcare. The other wants both nationalized and mandatory (including jabs).
But sure, Reason. Tell us both sides are equally bad. That's helpful!
Adding to your list...
One party got rid of the individual mandate of PPACA. But, apparently, since they failed to repeal it in total, they are just as bad as the party that voted it into existence -or some other non-sense.
Jesus Christ. Like this hasn't been going on for decades upon decades. I mean give me a break. Our government and the boneheads who vote for these people haven't been free market advocates, ever. This is nothing new. But I'll still take Trump and Vance over that tyrannical lunatic running against them
Exactly!
neopopulism
lol
This is stupid. Literal full blown communism vs mercantilism? We saw the same equivalence argument during the covid nonsense but I would choose Florida over Commifornia any day. This is truly a case where the lesser evil is plain obvious.
Exactly!
Bullshit. Trump got rid of AMT, and we became freer. Period. Two choices, and there is one clear one for greater economic freedom. It has negatives, but way fewer negatives.
Get your head out of your ass. There is no Libertarian candidate yet. Trump is WAY better than Giggles, every day, in almost every way.