US Anti-Trump Burnout: The Resistance Says It’s Exhausted - Bracing for yet another election against Donald Trump, America’s liberals are feeling the fatigue. “We’re kind of, like, crises-ed out,” one Democrat said.

Anti-Trump Burnout: The Resistance Says It’s Exhausted
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Katie Glueck
2024-02-19 10:02:08GMT

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Shannon Caseber, a Democrat who would back President Biden over Donald Trump, said, “Any sense of urgency that we had with the 2020 election — I think it’s still there in the sense that no one wants Trump to be president, at least for Democrats, but it’s exhausting.”Credit...Jeff Swensen for The New York Times

In 2017 they donned pink hats to march on Washington, registering their fury with Donald J. Trump by the hundreds of thousands.

Then they flipped the House from Republican control, won the presidency and secured a surprisingly strong showing in the 2022 midterm elections, galvanized by their conviction that Mr. Trump and his allies constituted a national emergency.

This year, anti-Trump voters are grappling with another powerful sentiment: exhaustion.

“Some folks are burned out on outrage,” said Rebecca Lee Funk, the Washington-based founder of the Outrage, a progressive activism group and a purveyor of resistance-era apparel. “People are tired. I think last election we were desperate to get Trump out of office, and folks were willing to rally around that singular call to action. And this election feels different.”

But for Democrats, the mission is similar: Now defending the White House, President Biden is trying to reassemble that sprawling anti-Trump coalition, casting the 2024 contest as another battle to save American democracy as Mr. Trump moves toward the Republican nomination.

Mr. Biden, however, has a lot of work to do. Interviews with nearly two dozen Democratic voters, activists and officials make clear his challenge in energizing Americans who are unenthusiastic about a likely 2020 rematch, are worried about his age, and, in some cases, are struggling to sustain the searing anger toward Mr. Trump that Democrats have relied on for nearly a decade.

“We’re kind of, like, crises-ed out,” said Shannon Caseber, 36, a security guard in Pittsburgh who called the prospect of a Trump-Biden rematch a “dumpster fire.” She added, “It’s crisis fatigue, for sure.”

Ms. Caseber, a Democrat who would back Mr. Biden over Mr. Trump, added, “Any sense of urgency that we had with the 2020 election — I think it’s still there in the sense that no one wants Trump to be president, at least for Democrats, but it’s exhausting.”

Democrats are hardly alone in their political fatigue: A Pew Research Center survey last year found that 65 percent of Americans said they always or often felt exhausted when they thought about politics.

“Exhaustion is underlying the entire attitude toward our presidential election,” said Whit Ayres, a veteran Republican pollster. “When you’ve got two people that are opposed by 70 percent of Americans who want a different choice, it creates frustration, anxiety and discouragement.”

Democratic pollsters and strategists say that no one is more motivating or terrifying to their voters than Mr. Trump.

Buoyed by strong showings in special elections last week, and other recent contests including a successful write-in campaign for Mr. Biden in New Hampshire’s primary, many believe their voters will grow increasingly engaged as the general election nears and Mr. Trump’s legal problems unfold.

He confronts 91 felony charges across four cases, is poised to be the first former president to face a criminal trial and now has staggering financial problems. He has also privately expressed support for a 16-week national abortion ban, with some exceptions, The New York Times reported on Friday, and Democrats see abortion rights as a powerful motivator for their base and for some swing voters.

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Mr. Trump at a campaign rally in Conway, S.C. He faces questions about whether he can expand his political support, but his base remains highly enthusiastic. Credit...Sean Rayford for The New York Times

But there are pronounced warning signs on the left, as well.

A CNN poll recently asked how motivated Americans were to vote in the election. Republicans, out of power and eager to regain it, were more likely to say “extremely motivated.” A Yahoo News/YouGov poll asked voters last fall about their attitudes toward the 2024 election. Thirty-nine percent of Democrats picked “exhaustion” from the list of sentiments offered (a close second to “dread”). Just 26 percent of Republicans chose “exhaustion.”

Broadly, surveys have shown erosion in the party’s standing with traditional Democratic constituencies. On the left, some groups have warned of funding challenges and voter apathy, and the most visible source of in-the-streets energy is progressive frustration with Mr. Biden over his support for Israel.

Lauren Hitt, a spokeswoman for Mr. Biden, said there was tangible evidence of enthusiasm in recent weeks, including on the fund-raising front.

She also signaled that the campaign’s messaging would go beyond simply opposing Mr. Trump, drawing contrasts with Republicans on abortion rights and gun safety as she described the stakes of the election, and nodding to Mr. Biden’s policy accomplishments on issues like combating climate change and child poverty.

“This election determines whether we build on that progress or we lose so many of our fundamental freedoms,” she said in a statement.

Many Democrats have argued that the party must do more to press an affirmative case for Mr. Biden’s re-election, beyond just stopping Mr. Trump again. They also worry that some voters could vote third-party or sit out altogether this year.

“They hear it every cycle: This is the most important election ever,” said Leah D. Daughtry, a Democratic strategist.

While she considers Mr. Trump an “existential threat,” she said, “people want to vote for something and not necessarily against something.”

Max Dower, the founder of the clothing line Unfortunate Portrait, recently designed a $78 shirt that reflected his sense of feeling “uninspired” about the election. It featured an image of Mr. Biden, 81, using a walker to fend off a cane-wielding Mr. Trump, 77, with the message, “Vote 2024.” He said it had drawn more engagement on social media than any design he had posted in roughly eight years (it also inevitably set off political battles in his Instagram comments).

After years of feeling that the country was veering from one crisis to the next, Mr. Dower, who said he voted for Mr. Biden in 2020, suggested that he was burned out.

“We’ve dealt with so many emergencies these past few years: national emergencies, perceived emergencies, real emergencies — it’s just kind of like, that is not really a strong motivator for me anymore,” said Mr. Dower, who is based in Los Angeles. He declined to say how he would vote this year, but said he was unlikely to cast a ballot for Mr. Trump.

“A lot of us would like a more positive thing to motivate us,” he said. “Not just purely, Do this or else this bad thing is going to happen.”

Certainly, Mr. Trump is hardly a morning-in-America candidate. And while some have tuned him out since he left office, he will be unavoidable in an election year — reminding voters, Democrats hope, of everything they have long disliked about him.

The former president, whose supporters attacked the Capitol to try to overturn the 2020 election, has encouraged political violence, spread conspiracy theories and preached a darkly nativist vision. He has sought to undermine American institutions and threatened to upend the international order, recently suggesting that he would encourage Russian aggression against American allies.

“People are going to be more alert because Trump has become even more outrageous in his post-presidency,” Gov. Roy Cooper of North Carolina, a Democrat, said in an interview last month. “It will be a challenge to make sure that people are aware of what he is doing, because I think that sometimes he is so outrageous, so consistently, that there’s a danger that it can be normalized. But I do believe that the stakes will be so high in this election that people will, at the end of the day, understand that our democracy truly is at stake.”

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Gov. Roy Cooper of North Carolina, a Democrat, said it would be a challenge to make sure that voters are aware of what Mr. Trump is doing “because I think that sometimes he is so outrageous, so consistently, that there’s a danger that it can be normalized.” Credit...Anna Rose Layden for The New York Times

Democrats are also trying to put abortion rights on the ballot, literally and figuratively. The Biden campaign has already started advertising on the issue.

Leah Greenberg, the co-executive director of the Indivisible Project, a progressive grass-roots group, said her organization was supporting ballot measure efforts that would protect abortion rights in key states. She also argued that full Democratic control of Washington could lead to meaningful abortion protections nationally.

“Burnout tends to be a function of a sense of powerlessness,” she said. “People are activated around getting our rights back.”

That kind of message resonated with Dorothy Stevenson, 64, of Milwaukee. She did not vote for president in 2020, she said, alluding to Mr. Biden’s tough-on-crime record as a senator and worried that he was not “really for Black people.” Now, she said, she is unexcited by her choices, but intends to support Mr. Biden because she believes the stakes of the election are higher.

“It’s really, really, really, really because of the abortion issue — I think that they need to stay away from women’s bodies,” she said. The potential return of Mr. Trump, she said, is “a crisis.”

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Dorothy Stevenson digging out a protest sign this month in Milwaukee.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times

Many Americans have been in denial about the prospect of a Trump-Biden rematch. But as Mr. Trump moves closer to being renominated, some Democrats say their voters are beginning to grasp the significance of his return.

Representative Veronica Escobar, Democrat of Texas and a Biden campaign co-chair, said she “heard some fatigue and some concern” in the recent past.

But after Mr. Trump won the New Hampshire primary, she said, “there has been a palpable shift. And it’s what I had hoped for. I hope we can sustain it and grow it.”

In Washington, Ms. Funk of the Outrage suggested that to do so, some voters now “want to be reminded of what’s good about this country.”

“It’s been a long slog,” she added, “for those of us in the movement.”
 
Hatred can't be sustained forever. Passion doesn't change the world: conviction does.
Resentment can be sustained for quite a long long long time. The left has created legitimate resentment amongst the right wing. They have emasculated the young male so much that they're legitimately in danger.
The left isn't operating of resenting the right but hatred of Trump. The right meanwhile has grown highly resentful especially as they've been robbed and cucked for so long. This ends In blood mark my words.
 
Well, there is also the fact that we are starting to feel the consequences of years of liberalism. We feel it in the economy, culture, society and etc. It takes a special kind of insane to pretend things werent better around 20 years ago when the republicans were still "running" the show.

These pricks may never admit it but they were better off when they were playing resistance instead of establishment and I wont ignore the possibility they will literally let us win so they can come back to playing that role again.

You had the intelligence community, every major corporation, the fucking stock market, damn near all the unions... all of that backing you and you're exhausted?

They are failures even when they have the entire western world backing them up. I guess like most conflicts that the west gets involved by proxy, they somehow dont get that raining money at the problem doesnt make them win automatically or something.
 
Some of my friends legitimately aged themselves by stressing over politics in the Trump years. I'm worried at least one is going to have a stroke if he wins again, regardless of what he actually does. I stay out of the (thankfully rare) discussions when they happen, mostly because these people just complain about whatever they saw on Stephen Colbert, but I'm starting to feel neglectful by not speaking up. "You know, maybe this stuff is just being presented to you as a constant crisis to keep you engaged?"
 
You can't run every "next product" as a 5 alarm emergency that DEMANDS action now noW nOW NOW! and expect the non-laptop caste to go forever. It's been 8 years since a guy not chosen by shlomi scheckelberg, larry fink, a slew of rothschilds ,and the cryogenically frozen head of john rockerfeller in a shadowy backroom successfully ran for president. They panicked and glued the needle to 11 and haven't moved it since. Now the constant tension and attention has taken it's toll and the normies just want to go back to sleep and may punish their stressor while at it.
 
Reminds me of work a bit. Everything’s an emergency, and high priority and you must drop everything to deal with it. People will do that occasionally and feel ok about it (probably even good if you’re thankful to them enough after) but if every single thing is treated like that, they burn out.
You can’t make people run on outrage forever. They become used to it, it’s effectively exposure therapy. That’s why there’s usually a drawing back/dialling it down a bit period during torture, before the pressure starts again.

I think we may see a short interval of pulling back on some of their more extreme wokeness. Before the pressure goes back on. Especially if they’re planning on Doing A War that needs warm, white bodies
 
“People are going to be more alert because Trump has become even more outrageous in his post-presidency,” Gov. Roy Cooper of North Carolina, a Democrat, said in an interview last month. “It will be a challenge to make sure that people are aware of what he is doing, because I think that sometimes he is so outrageous, so consistently, that there’s a danger that it can be normalized. But I do believe that the stakes will be so high in this election that people will, at the end of the day, understand that our democracy truly is at stake.”
It seems to me this lame duck governor may be starting his campaign for the US Senate.
 
Some of my friends legitimately aged themselves by stressing over politics in the Trump years. I'm worried at least one is going to have a stroke if he wins again, regardless of what he actually does. I stay out of the (thankfully rare) discussions when they happen, mostly because these people just complain about whatever they saw on Stephen Colbert, but I'm starting to feel neglectful by not speaking up. "You know, maybe this stuff is just being presented to you as a constant crisis to keep you engaged?"


"LIAR! You are with him! You voted in to kill me!"
 
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