MAGA Base Cries Foul After Trump Delivers the Cuts They Cheered For

鬼百合

One day we will wake to his obituary :-)

It’s been just over eight months since Donald Trump returned to the White House, and the aftershocks of his second term are starting to hit — especially in the very communities that helped send him back.

Now, with approval ratings stuck in the low 40s — 38% from Leger, 40% from both YouGov and Pew, 41% from Marist — it’s clear that the MAGA base is feeling some serious buyer’s remorse.

Trump campaigned on sweeping cuts, a government “reckoning,” and restoring “order.” And that’s exactly what voters got — cuts to Medicaid, rollbacks on food assistance, slashes to housing support. Only now, many of the people feeling the pain are the ones who were cheering the loudest just months ago.


In a striking New York Times roundtable, conservative David French and liberal columnists Michelle Goldberg and Jamelle Bouie unpacked what’s happening — and why so many Trump voters seem shocked at what they’re getting.

Bouie didn’t hold back. “If you don’t want this consequence, don’t vote for Republicans,” he said. He pointed out a hard truth: the connection between how people vote and how they’re affected often gets lost in the noise.

“The choices voters make don’t reliably result in feedback that helps them understand or contextualize those choices,” Bouie said. “So, for example, a Republican voter receiving Medicaid may not necessarily see it as the same Medicaid that a Black voter in New York receives. They may perceive those as two different things.”

That misperception is now colliding with reality. In red states, where many working-class Trump voters rely on Medicaid or food subsidies, the administration’s cuts are starting to land. And suddenly, what looked like a “win” for small government is a punch to the gut.

“The Republican Party Is Becoming Much More Working Class…”

David French, a longtime Never Trump conservative, noted the deep irony in the GOP’s strategy: the party is increasingly fueled by working-class support — and yet it’s slashing programs those voters depend on.

“Medicaid cuts now impact more Republicans than they used to,” French said. “Is there a scenario where Republicans are not really reading their own room?”

That question cuts to the core of the backlash. MAGA voters expected Trump to go after the “freeloaders” and “deep state bureaucrats” — not their own benefits. But Trump’s policies, especially around health care and safety net spending, don’t make those distinctions. The axe swings wide.

And it’s not just health care. Tax cuts for the wealthy, paid for in part by shrinking social programs, are only deepening the divide. The people feeling squeezed aren’t on Wall Street. They’re in working-class towns that lit up the electoral map for Trump.

Michelle Goldberg raised the broader alarm: while economic fallout builds, democratic norms are eroding.

“Look, we have a president who is completely lawless,” she said. “We are in a free fall toward authoritarianism.”

Her warning wasn’t just about Trump’s style — it was about substance. The administration’s attacks on independent institutions, the DOJ, the media, and political opponents aren’t just D.C. drama. They’re reshaping what government means — and who it serves.

But in many cases, the MAGA base is only just starting to connect the dots — and feel the consequences.

From Cheers to Complaints

There’s no shortage of irony here: Trump is, in many ways, delivering exactly what he promised. The problem? His voters didn’t think those promises would come for them.

They thought Medicaid cuts would hit “someone else.” They thought food assistance rollbacks were about “the cities.” They thought tax breaks would “trickle down.”

Now, eight months in, they’re finding out that Trump’s policies don’t care who you voted for. And the backlash is growing — not from the left, but from the very people who sent him back to power.
 
The Democratic vision of America is to elect Mamdani, a Socialist/Communist and bring back Venezuelan style socialism and Cuban style Communism to America.

No food or medicine and people walking away and leaving on rafts .

The far left Democratic/socialist/ communists do not believe in Capitalism and our Constitutional Republic.
 
Omar Fateh, a Democratic Socialist and the first Somali American and Muslim to serve in the Minnesota Senate, is running for mayor of Minneapolis in 2025
 
Maybe if a far left Democratic/Socialist/Communist loon understood English grammar, there would be punctuation between an dependent clause and an independent clause.

“Maybe if maga could read they could come up with an intelligent response to the thread instead of random shit..”

Maybe, if a far left Democratic/SocialistCommunist loon was not raised in a barn, they would not use scatological barnyard grammar.
 
Maybe if a far left Democratic/Socialist/Communist loon understood English grammar, there would be punctuation between an dependent clause and an independent clause.

“Maybe if maga could read they could come up with an intelligent response to the thread instead of random shit..”

Maybe, if a far left Democratic/SocialistCommunist loon was not raised in a barn, they would not use scatological barnyard grammar.
Again nothing on the topic. Thanks for proving the point.
 
Maybe if a far left Democratic/Socialist/Communist loon understood English grammar, there would be punctuation between an dependent clause and an independent clause.

“Maybe if maga could read they could come up with an intelligent response to the thread instead of random shit..”

Maybe, if a far left Democratic/SocialistCommunist loon was not raised in a barn, they would not use scatological barnyard grammar.
The grammar police are here again trying to derail the thread.
 

It’s been just over eight months since Donald Trump returned to the White House, and the aftershocks of his second term are starting to hit — especially in the very communities that helped send him back.

Now, with approval ratings stuck in the low 40s — 38% from Leger, 40% from both YouGov and Pew, 41% from Marist — it’s clear that the MAGA base is feeling some serious buyer’s remorse.

Trump campaigned on sweeping cuts, a government “reckoning,” and restoring “order.” And that’s exactly what voters got — cuts to Medicaid, rollbacks on food assistance, slashes to housing support. Only now, many of the people feeling the pain are the ones who were cheering the loudest just months ago.


In a striking New York Times roundtable, conservative David French and liberal columnists Michelle Goldberg and Jamelle Bouie unpacked what’s happening — and why so many Trump voters seem shocked at what they’re getting.

Bouie didn’t hold back. “If you don’t want this consequence, don’t vote for Republicans,” he said. He pointed out a hard truth: the connection between how people vote and how they’re affected often gets lost in the noise.

“The choices voters make don’t reliably result in feedback that helps them understand or contextualize those choices,” Bouie said. “So, for example, a Republican voter receiving Medicaid may not necessarily see it as the same Medicaid that a Black voter in New York receives. They may perceive those as two different things.”

That misperception is now colliding with reality. In red states, where many working-class Trump voters rely on Medicaid or food subsidies, the administration’s cuts are starting to land. And suddenly, what looked like a “win” for small government is a punch to the gut.

“The Republican Party Is Becoming Much More Working Class…”

David French, a longtime Never Trump conservative, noted the deep irony in the GOP’s strategy: the party is increasingly fueled by working-class support — and yet it’s slashing programs those voters depend on.

“Medicaid cuts now impact more Republicans than they used to,” French said. “Is there a scenario where Republicans are not really reading their own room?”

That question cuts to the core of the backlash. MAGA voters expected Trump to go after the “freeloaders” and “deep state bureaucrats” — not their own benefits. But Trump’s policies, especially around health care and safety net spending, don’t make those distinctions. The axe swings wide.

And it’s not just health care. Tax cuts for the wealthy, paid for in part by shrinking social programs, are only deepening the divide. The people feeling squeezed aren’t on Wall Street. They’re in working-class towns that lit up the electoral map for Trump.

Michelle Goldberg raised the broader alarm: while economic fallout builds, democratic norms are eroding.

“Look, we have a president who is completely lawless,” she said. “We are in a free fall toward authoritarianism.”

Her warning wasn’t just about Trump’s style — it was about substance. The administration’s attacks on independent institutions, the DOJ, the media, and political opponents aren’t just D.C. drama. They’re reshaping what government means — and who it serves.

But in many cases, the MAGA base is only just starting to connect the dots — and feel the consequences.

From Cheers to Complaints

There’s no shortage of irony here: Trump is, in many ways, delivering exactly what he promised. The problem? His voters didn’t think those promises would come for them.

They thought Medicaid cuts would hit “someone else.” They thought food assistance rollbacks were about “the cities.” They thought tax breaks would “trickle down.”

Now, eight months in, they’re finding out that Trump’s policies don’t care who you voted for. And the backlash is growing — not from the left, but from the very people who sent him back to power.
YES and now it is coming back to bite a lot of them in the ass they don't like it and are starting to cry like babies.
And NOT everything Trump has pushed through is in effect YET.
Wait till they are the MAGAS will really start crying.
Well they got what they wanted now they can suffer and like it.
 
YES and now it is coming back to bite a lot of them in the ass they don't like it and are starting to cry like babies.
And NOT everything Trump has pushed through is in effect YET.
Wait till they are the MAGAS will really start crying.
Well they got what they wanted now they can suffer and like it.
Going to be interesting when the magats in here can't get healthcare and end up dying thanks to Trump.
 

It’s been just over eight months since Donald Trump returned to the White House, and the aftershocks of his second term are starting to hit — especially in the very communities that helped send him back.

Now, with approval ratings stuck in the low 40s — 38% from Leger, 40% from both YouGov and Pew, 41% from Marist — it’s clear that the MAGA base is feeling some serious buyer’s remorse.

Trump campaigned on sweeping cuts, a government “reckoning,” and restoring “order.” And that’s exactly what voters got — cuts to Medicaid, rollbacks on food assistance, slashes to housing support. Only now, many of the people feeling the pain are the ones who were cheering the loudest just months ago.


In a striking New York Times roundtable, conservative David French and liberal columnists Michelle Goldberg and Jamelle Bouie unpacked what’s happening — and why so many Trump voters seem shocked at what they’re getting.

Bouie didn’t hold back. “If you don’t want this consequence, don’t vote for Republicans,” he said. He pointed out a hard truth: the connection between how people vote and how they’re affected often gets lost in the noise.

“The choices voters make don’t reliably result in feedback that helps them understand or contextualize those choices,” Bouie said. “So, for example, a Republican voter receiving Medicaid may not necessarily see it as the same Medicaid that a Black voter in New York receives. They may perceive those as two different things.”

That misperception is now colliding with reality. In red states, where many working-class Trump voters rely on Medicaid or food subsidies, the administration’s cuts are starting to land. And suddenly, what looked like a “win” for small government is a punch to the gut.

“The Republican Party Is Becoming Much More Working Class…”

David French, a longtime Never Trump conservative, noted the deep irony in the GOP’s strategy: the party is increasingly fueled by working-class support — and yet it’s slashing programs those voters depend on.

“Medicaid cuts now impact more Republicans than they used to,” French said. “Is there a scenario where Republicans are not really reading their own room?”

That question cuts to the core of the backlash. MAGA voters expected Trump to go after the “freeloaders” and “deep state bureaucrats” — not their own benefits. But Trump’s policies, especially around health care and safety net spending, don’t make those distinctions. The axe swings wide.

And it’s not just health care. Tax cuts for the wealthy, paid for in part by shrinking social programs, are only deepening the divide. The people feeling squeezed aren’t on Wall Street. They’re in working-class towns that lit up the electoral map for Trump.

Michelle Goldberg raised the broader alarm: while economic fallout builds, democratic norms are eroding.

“Look, we have a president who is completely lawless,” she said. “We are in a free fall toward authoritarianism.”

Her warning wasn’t just about Trump’s style — it was about substance. The administration’s attacks on independent institutions, the DOJ, the media, and political opponents aren’t just D.C. drama. They’re reshaping what government means — and who it serves.

But in many cases, the MAGA base is only just starting to connect the dots — and feel the consequences.

From Cheers to Complaints

There’s no shortage of irony here: Trump is, in many ways, delivering exactly what he promised. The problem? His voters didn’t think those promises would come for them.

They thought Medicaid cuts would hit “someone else.” They thought food assistance rollbacks were about “the cities.” They thought tax breaks would “trickle down.”

Now, eight months in, they’re finding out that Trump’s policies don’t care who you voted for. And the backlash is growing — not from the left, but from the very people who sent him back to power.
Is this what the MAGAts mean by FAFO? :rofl2: :ROFLMAO: :rofl2:
 
Going to be interesting when the magats in here can't get healthcare and end up dying thanks to Trump.
Good. The sooner we clean America's gene pool, the soon We, the People, can start moving forward again. :thup:

A civil war would hasten the transition since 1) MAGAts are stupid and ) MAGAts are evil.
 
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