The Daily Signal - Victor Davis Hanson: Where Does MAGA Come From?
Episode Date: January 16, 2025On this edition of “Victor Davis Hanson: In His Own Words,” Hanson explores the historical roots and evolution of the 'Make America Great Again' (MAGA) movement. Understand the unique strategies D...onald Trump employed to unite diverse groups and achieve political success. Please go to https://victorhanson.com/ for Victor's lastets content! “First of all, remember, it's not all that different, in its core, from doctrinaire republicanism, in this sense. It, professes to be fiscally sound. It wants low taxes, limited government, and conservative values, in the sense of culture and tradition, patriotism.” “Donald Trump added to it was: We were not going to nation build abroad. We're not taking people out of East Palestine, Ohio and sending them over to spend billions of dollars, and lose their lives in God awful places, like Fallujah ,where people don't appreciate it.” “In fact, when we have 16% of the population that's foreign born, and that's almost 55 million people, he has called for a reduction or at least a breathing spell in legal immigration. That's ignited another tension or paradox or conflict between the MAGA people, who do not want any more than, say, 200,000 legal immigrants, and the Silicon Valley converts who want these work visas for skilled coders and people in Silicon Valley.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Where did MAGA come from?
Ronald Reagan used a term in 1980, Make America Great.
Bill Clinton used it in 1992.
In 2011, Donald Trump wrote a book that his subtitle was Make America Great.
Where did this come from?
This MAGA agenda.
Hello, I'm Victor Davis Hanson for the Daily Signal.
As we approach inauguration day, there's been a lot of talk about the inconsistencies or
paradoxes of Donald Trump's MAGA agenda. We've mentioned them in the past. We do not want to
be isolationists, but we don't want to be interventionist. And those are sometimes in tension and
conflict. Donald Trump has promised a lot of tax cuts to service, some service workers, tips,
no taxes on tips, no taxes on Social Security, and yet he has promised to be a deficit
hawk and get close to a balanced budget by the end of his turn. In addition to that, he has suggested
that we have to close the border and stop illegal immigration. In fact, when we have 16% of the
population that it's foreign-born, and that's almost 55 million people, he has called for a reduction
or at least a breathing spell in legal immigration. That's ignited another tension or paradox or
conflict between the MAGA people who do not want any more than, say, 200,000 legal immigrants
and the Silicon Valley converts who want these work visas for skilled coders and people in Silicon Valley.
All of this is just a premium every.
Where did MAGA come from?
Well, Ronald Reagan used a term in 1980, Make America Great.
Bill Clinton used it in 1992.
In 2011, Donald Trump wrote a book that had...
His subtitle was Make America Great.
But what is it so we can understand when he starts his presidency?
First of all, remember, it's not all that different in its core from doctrinaire republicanism in this sense.
It professes to be fiscally sound.
It wants low taxes, limited government, and conservative values in the sense of culture and tradition and patriotism.
It looks at the past with reverence and not with disdain like the left does.
But here's the key.
What Donald Trump added to it was we were not going to nation build abroad.
We're not taking people out of East Palestine, Ohio, and sending them over to spend billions of dollars
and lose their lives in god-awful places like Fallujah where people don't appreciate it.
We're not going to do that anymore.
That was new.
Second thing was that he was a cultural warrior.
The Bush-McCain Romney wing of the party said, you know, we don't like this affirmative action.
DEI woke to the extent that it was as virulent as it is now, but let's just not press it.
We would rather have some limits on abortion, but we can't win.
Donald Trump was a diehard conservative on social.
He wanted to close the border.
He told the base of the Republican Party, I know you want cheap labor.
I used it.
We can't do it anymore.
We're going to close the border.
On judges, there was not going to be a Justice Souter or Harriet Myers nomination.
They were going to be strict constructionists.
Forget about bipartisanship.
The left never did it.
Where did this come from?
This mega agenda, three areas that I can see.
The 1992 and earlier movement by Pat Buchanan, who embraced a lot of,
of these positions. It was followed at the same time the 92 and 96 third party effort by
Ross Perot. He echoed a lot of Buchanan's issues. America first, real industrialized
the United States, don't go abroad and waste money and try to develop a vibrant middle
class that it was being eroded in the Rust Belt especially. Ross Perot got 20% of the
vote in 1992, remember that, and eight and a half, I think, in 96, but he didn't win the nomination.
The final tradition that Trump drew on, of course, was the Tea Party, that period of 2009,
10, 11, 12, that grew up spontaneous without a leader in response to the socialized medical
agenda of Barack Obama, Obamacare, and the vast definitely.
and they want the Tea Party and then it sort of petered out.
Trump brought all of those together in this MAGA new movement,
but there was differences that made it possible for him not to run as a third party
or not to be a failed candidate, but to capture the Republican nomination and win twice.
What was it?
He substituted class for race.
People had characterized Buchananism or Tea Party as white.
That was an unfair caricature.
But he made a special effort to appear to people of all different races and classes and bring them in and say, you have more in common with each other than you do with your elites of your particular tribal affiliation.
Second, what else did he do?
He was ecumenical in the political sense.
Pap Buchanan and Ross Perot did not bring in people necessarily from the rep.
Waspero brought in a few, but the idea of Robert Kennedy, Tulsi Gabbert, Elon Musk, Joe Rogan, Dana White, all union people was a new concept.
And third, of course, it was Donald Trump. He'd been on The Apprentice for 14 years. It was one of the top-rated shows. He'd written 25 books.
He had been the tabloid pages of the New York Papers for 30 years. He was a charismatic celebrity, and he had a magnetic nomenal.
magnetic presence and he fought back in a way that even Perrault and Pat Buchanan did not put all that
together and explains the foundations of the mega movement and why it succeeded were the Tea Party
Ross Perrault and Pat Buchanan did not.
Thank you so much for tuning in today. Please subscribe to the Daily Signal for our next episode.
You know,
