Event JSON
{
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"https://jacobin.com/2024/11/harris-trump-election-democrats-workers/"
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"How Harris Lost the Working Class"
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"1731147749"
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"The article argues that the Democratic Party's rejection of working-class politics and its focus on identity politics and corporate donors led to a loss of support among working-class voters. The article also criticizes the party's lack of a clear economic agenda and its failure to address the concerns of ordinary Americans."
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"content": "nostr:nprofile1qyd8wumn8ghj7ctjw35kxmr9wvhxcctev4erxtnwv4mhxqpqcxwturs6tupm30z8m5rtdgtm7srx3yxq0cgyqvyc7vzwhrtehq8qntej22\nhttps://images.jacobinmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/08172456/GettyImages-2182394192-900x600.jpg\nFor liberals, Donald Trump’s victory this week prompts adjectives like “scary,” “terrifying,” “depressing,” and “demoralizing.” But one word it should not evoke is this: “surprising.” In a downwardly mobile country, Democrats’ rejection of working-class politics — and the party’s open hostility to populist politicians in its midst — was always going to end up creating prime political conditions for [\u0026hellip;]\nhttps://jacobin.com/2024/11/harris-trump-election-democrats-workers/",
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