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The Democratic Strategist

Political Strategy for a Permanent Democratic Majority

How Apprenticeships Can Help Save the Democratic Party

From “Apprenticeships can help save the Democratic Party” by John Kenneth White, professor emeritus at the Catholic University of America and author of  “Grand Old Unraveling: The Republican Party, Donald Trump, and the Rise of Authoritarianism” at The Hill via aol..com:

Democrats are well-positioned to win control of one or both houses of Congress in this year’s midterm elections. The Republicans are in such a weakened position that a Fox News poll finds them with just a 10-point lead among white working-class voters — the party’s smallest such advantage since 2006.

Ever since President Trump entered politics a decade ago, he has won strong majorities from white working-class voters. In “Where Have All the Democrats Gone?” by John B. Judis and Ruy Teixeira, one person expressed his support for Trump this way: “To me, there are only two groups of people, the globalists and the nationalists, and unfortunately the Democrats have wound up appearing to be the friends of the globalists.”

In 2024, Trump beat Kamala Harris among this group by a whopping 34 points. Working class voters were once a mainstay of the Democratic party. In 1940, 57 percent of skilled and 68 percent of semiskilled and unskilled laborers voted to keep Franklin D. Roosevelt in the White House for a third term.

But the Republican Party’s weakened position with working-class voters should hardly give comfort to the Democrats. Rather than plan to bank votes based on their disillusionment with Trump, Democrats need to deliver results that improve their lot.

Assuming office in 2023, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro (D) signed an executive order eliminating the requirement for state employees to earn a four-year college degree. He noted that more than 62 percent of Americans over 25 do not hold bachelor’s degrees. The New York Times praised Shapiro’s action, calling it “good policy and good leadership.”

Shapiro was following the lead of Republican governors in Utah and Maryland, who had previously abolished the college requirement for employment in their state’s agencies. Issuing his executive order, Utah Gov. Spencer Cox (R) said, “Instead of focusing on demonstrated competence, the focus too often has been on a piece of paper.”

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