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'He'd still win if the election were today' - 100 days in, Dublin, California, adjusts to Trump's 'new normal'

TheJournal.ie revisited our capital’s namesake, population 50,000, in mid-west California.

Campaign 2016 Trump Evan Vucci Evan Vucci

LAST OCTOBER, LESS than two weeks prior to America’s presidential election, TheJournal.ie spoke with residents of Dublin, California, a small town with a population of 50,000, as to what the election, one of the most divisive in history, meant for them.

It would be hard to argue that California itself was divided on the issue of Trump versus Clinton. The most liberal state of them all, the Golden State had been a shoo-in for the Democratic candidate from the get-go, to the extent that neither candidate even bothered campaigning there to any extent.

Dublin itself, considering the overall left-leaning nature of its parent state, has a reasonable representation of Republicans – the third highest of any region in its county (Alameda).

That didn’t stop Alameda County plumping for Clinton with a whopping 79.3% of the vote – versus just 14.9% for Trump.

But now the Trump administration has been in place for 100 days. The world feels like a different place to what it had been prior to 20 January. Russia, the travel ban, Sean Spicer – words, names, and phrases that have become part of the popular lexicon in just over three months. And there are many more.

dublin

From this side of the Atlantic, Trump’s first 100 appears to have been the most relentlessly loud, divisive, and downright angry century of days imaginable. But how have they been for the people of Dublin?

Shy voters

“The Republicans in Dublin have gone awfully quiet,” says Brian Petoletti, a 53-year-old independent who voted for Clinton. The result of the election proved a shock for him – he had expected his candidate to win, and win heavily.

Brian may be more right than he knows about Dublin’s Republicans. In October, we struggled to find anyone who would speak to us in the town who was voting for Trump, or at least who would acknowledge doing so. Six months later, that task proved even more difficult again.

“The single biggest thing was everyone behind him had been going on about how great things were going to be,” he says. “Now you could hear a pin drop. No one’s on social media, no one has a comment. And he’s flip-flopped on so many things. He hasn’t been effective in any way. I feel like throwing out a fish hook, you know? ‘Hey, we can’t hear a word from you guys now, where are you?’”

Petoletti sees the country as “kind of being on hold now for four years”.

That’s not something that Dublin council member Abe Gupta would agree with.

“It’s a bit more complicated than saying let’s wait for four years. A lot of people were waiting for the world to end, and well, that didn’t happen did it?” he says.

Prior to the election, Gupta (another registered independent) told us that the polls (which at that time were predicting a clear Clinton victory) should be taken “with a pinch of salt”.

brian Brian Petoletti

“The reason I said that is people are often scared to tell you how they feel, they give the answer they think people want to hear.”

“The sense I had was that there are things going on in the world that people don’t like. It’s not even an American thing, you can see it with Brexit, the French election. Folks are saying, ‘we’re not sure what we want, but this isn’t it’.”

For this reason, Gupta reckons that Trump would still win if the election were held today.

If it were held today he’d still win, I feel. Those were big forces that got him where he is. They haven’t gone away.
It was a ‘none of the above’ kind of vote. What we’re seeing now is disruptive politics, people saying ‘let’s try something different’.

Entertaining?

“You know, he hasn’t been as bad as I thought he would be,” says 28-year-old Steven*, a wine worker in nearby Livermore who also spoke to us in October. “That doesn’t mean he has been great by any means but rather all the awful things he said he wanted to do during the campaign are turning out to be harder to implement than he thought.”

Perhaps Trump’s way of doing things is the ‘new normal’ we suggest?

“I believe that Donald Trump has been the norm for quite a while now it just took his election for a lot of people to realise it,” he says.

If Bob Dylan was the 60s in America, Trump is the politics-as-entertainment culture of this decade.

Campaign 2016 Trump Evan Vucci Evan Vucci

So is the president entertaining? Certainly, a huge amount of coverage of him has been of the ‘distractions’ that emanate daily from the White House – twitter spats, comical gaffes. Sean Spicer’s daily press briefings are now streamed live, something unthinkable in previous administrations. And it isn’t because of Spicer’s eloquence. People expect something off-the-wall to happen. And it frequently does.

“I find moments of his behaviour entertaining but I really shouldn’t,” is Steven’s take.

It’s kind of like driving by a car crash or something, you shouldn’t look but you do and then you hate yourself after. I did enjoy all the pictures of him aping about in that truck at the White House. Mostly because the Obamacare repeal failure was happening as he did that.

“At the end of the day, the hardest thing is communicating with your constituents,” says Gupta. “With this Trump has tapped into something powerful. He will rewrite the rules for how politicians communicate.”

We televise our Congress. I would rather get my wisdom teeth out than watch it, it’s excruciatingly boring. Like him or not, Donald Trump is entertaining.
It may bring out the worst emotions, but it is entertaining.

“Other presidents have been Harvard law graduates, very eloquent, they use big words. But that’s not America. And Trump knows that.”

Travel Ban

A recurring theme of the 100 days has been Trump’s struggles with legislation. His Obamacare repeal failed. He’s struggling to bring about his signature promise of a Mexico border wall. And he’s had not one, but two, travel bans stalled by the courts.

The ban in particular upset Brian Petoletti.  He takes a deep breath when the subject is raised.

Abe Abe Gupta Arounddublinblog.com Arounddublinblog.com

“I was just lost for words by it, as to how he thought it would be effective policy in any way,” he says. “If he listened to the pulse of the American people, people are more concerned with terrorists that are already here, of people being radicalised here.

The premise is just wrong, it’s Constitutionally wrong.

“It was particularly disheartening,” agrees Steven. “As cliché as it sounds, it’s just not who we are as a people.”

It was embarrassing and shameful, and the only glimmer of hope was the fact that people showed up in their thousands to protest at airports.

One thing Steven says has “sickened” him however, is Trump’s aggressive foreign policy manoeuvres, including the dropping of the largest non-nuclear bomb in world history on Afghanistan.

“The general celebration happening around the use of these bombs, and the missiles launched at Syria, and the associated loss of life has really sickened me. Even if these weapons did land on some real assholes it’s still a tragedy that it had to happen.”

However, he sees those moves as a) more to do with “Trump giving more leeway to the military and the military taking the opportunity to play with its toys”, and b) “to be frank, I could see Clinton making many of the same moves”.

What about a subject dear to many Californians’ hearts – climate change. Trump’s moves to curb the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), as well as his championing the likes of coal and oil, are well-documented.

Gupta doesn’t see it as a cause for concern. “How much could he, or really any president, actually do?” he asks.

I think people need to stop thinking that the world is going to end. As long as what drives California is strong, as long as he doesn’t come in and muck things up, I don’t see his approach to climate change being a pro or a con.

Trump campaigns in Raleigh Trump supporters at a rally in north Carolina, the day before he was elected president last November SIPA USA / PA Images SIPA USA / PA Images / PA Images

The economy, stupid

Petoletti agrees. “I wouldn’t say his approach is dangerous, I’d say it’s ineffective.”

“At the end of the day, he’s like a salmon swimming upstream. We’re not going to turn around here and start burning coal. You gotta wonder how informed he is.”

He could’ve been a hero if he’d recognised the science. I think there’s a lot more jobs in green than in coal.

Given the high-profile failures of the first 100 days, the average Irish person might consider that Trump is doing badly. But there are two other factors. Trump has far from lost his base – it still very much believes in him, for now at any rate. The second is that the American economy remains resurgent. And that matters. Our interviewees can see some grounds for optimism.

“(Neil) Gorsuch being nominated to the Supreme Court was ok,” says Brian. “He’s highly qualified and we need a full Supreme Court. And regulation is something he (Trump) could get consensus on. But the way things began just alienated everyone. Winning is not everything, you need to win well, be mannerly.”

“Look, the presidency is a huge ship, but a small rudder,” says Abe Gupta. “This isn’t a king we’re dealing with. In reality there is a very strong limit to how much you actually can do.”

Trump’s tweeting, the way he does it, that’s not great for sure. But it’s hard to judge an unconventional leader by conventional metrics.
The tech industry here in California was strongly opposed to Trump. But the reality is tech has done extremely well under him. A lot of how people feel is tied to the stock market. And it’s doing well.
And he has achieved one other thing: the notion that you need to pick one party, one way of thinking, that’s disappearing. It’s happening in France too. People are saying ‘well I like that, but I don’t like that’. It’s the case with Trump. Because anyone who says he is a Republican, well I would very much question how they think that is the case. He has feet in both camps, and both ways of thinking.

Wine-worker Steven is less sure about the American economic renaissance.

“I think a good amount of the stock market growth is based on the assumption that he will be able to rewrite the tax code,” he says. “Personally, I see the economy deflating if he goes through with withdrawing from Nafta (the North American Free Trade Agreement, Trump’s current bugbear of choice).”

The wine industry in California’s largest export destination is Canada. A withdrawal from Nafta would significantly affect sales, and, from that, profits. That’s just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to how interconnected trade is between us, Canada, and Mexico.

So, after 100 days it seems Trump’s report card is a long way from being stamped. And that his international reputation doesn’t necessarily reflect the feelings of middle America.

Given the man’s inherent unpredictability, nothing is certain. But if the next hundred days are anything like the first, who knows what conversation the world will be having in three months’ time.

* Steven, a pseudonym, has asked not to be made identifiable

Read: What words does President Donald Trump most like to tweet?

Read: Trouble for Le Pen as her replacement steps aside amid allegations of Holocaust denial

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41 Comments
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    Mute Patrick Mulkerrin
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:24 PM

    There should be a debate on immigration. It is being swept under the rug by mainstream media..

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    Mute Johnny Wilson
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:40 PM

    @Patrick Mulkerrin: and all the candidates who ran in June on the alleged immigration issue got less than 1% support.

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    Mute Mr “JonnieBoy” Johnson
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:45 PM

    @Johnny Wilson: that was local not national, different ballgame. Immigration issue is a massive issue and needs managing. Only fair to see what each party would do to improve on current dire situation before we vote.

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    Mute Sean Hayes
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    Nov 21st 2024, 7:13 PM

    @Mr “JonnieBoy” Johnson: obviously not if no one is bringing it up- except some Journal commentator- hardly representative of anyone

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    Mute Brian I
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    Nov 21st 2024, 8:00 PM

    @Sean Hayes: do you not actually believe it’s an issue ?

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    Mute Cole Palmer
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    Nov 21st 2024, 9:49 PM

    @Sean Hayes: bad rage bait

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    Mute SV3tN8M4
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    Nov 21st 2024, 9:54 PM

    @Patrick Mulkerrin: All have their heads buried in the sand, thousands still arriving weekly, it’s unsustainable as we don’t have the Housing or Public Services, it’s not going to end well, massive social division & anger on the ground. People understand Immigration & the need for a structured system, but what we have at present is a mess.

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    Mute Paul M Doe
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    Nov 21st 2024, 11:22 PM

    Yes we need to stop SF moving pedos to this country

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    Mute Shane O Mac
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    Nov 22nd 2024, 10:55 AM

    @Patrick Mulkerrin: it’s pretty simple ” we are full”

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    Mute James Carolan
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:13 PM

    I really don’t think the voting people of Ireland want to hear about sport in fairness

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    Mute Alan
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:19 PM

    @James Carolan: what about casement park. I work hard and my taxes go to pay for a stadium up north. Really pisses me off.

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    Mute Eoin .h
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:30 PM

    @Alan: it’s not though. Btw, it’s a drop in the ocean compared to the amount of funding Ireland already provides to the north, which you’re clearly unaware of.

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    Mute Brian D'Arcy
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:40 PM

    @James Carolan: Go to Oriel Park and tell me that

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    Mute Alan
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:51 PM

    @Eoin .h: I’m talking about what might happen. Would rather see the money going into school sports facilities. Let commercial enterprises take care of themselves. As for GAA, dont get me started

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    Mute Ger Whelan
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    Nov 21st 2024, 8:38 PM

    @James Carolan: I do. For starters any politician who wants to spend our tax money to build a stadium in Northern Ireland wouldn’t get my vote

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    Mute Kevin Kerr
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    Nov 21st 2024, 9:01 PM

    @Ger Whelan: wow, it’s that much of a red line issue for you? I doubt that’s been registered on the doors for the last two weeks

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    Mute Social Guy
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    Nov 21st 2024, 9:52 PM

    @James Carolan: Agreed. Sport is important to the lives of many people but realistically is not a national election issue.

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    Mute Social Guy
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    Nov 21st 2024, 9:55 PM

    @Social Guy: as an aside: can we have the old comment functionality back please? Getting bounced out of the comments when commenting is VERY annoying. The new format is very poor. There doesn’t seem to be any benefit to it.

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    Mute Paul M Doe
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    Nov 21st 2024, 11:23 PM

    Why waste a cent on nordies

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    Mute Paul M Doe
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    Nov 21st 2024, 11:25 PM

    @Social Guy: sport is more important than housing dole parasites

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    Mute Daniel Roche
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    Nov 22nd 2024, 5:19 PM

    @Alan: That the GAA is a brilliant organisation that makes and saves millions for the irish exchequer.

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    Mute Dean Russell
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:35 PM

    I would like to ask them a couple of questions
    Kilmore Celtic fc from Coolock founded in 1990 still have no facilities toilets etc we have 14 teams underage girls boys 18 boys 17 girls senior men’s team we really need all weather facilities badly which would be used seven days a week keeping kids out of trouble FAI have a lot to answer for they do nothing shocking
    How come bohemian fc can come into Coolock and take over Oscar Traynor road development centre when lease clearly states local needs non profit all councillors and TD were well aware of this and done nothing for local clubs kids need sports so bad

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    Mute thanks for the beautiful music christy rest in pea
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:17 PM

    Seriously like we don’t have enough problems to be worried about who is going to maintain the football pitches

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    Mute Brian D'Arcy
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:41 PM

    @thanks for the beautiful music christy rest in pea: Go to Oriel Park park anx come back to me

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    Mute Frank O'Hara
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    Nov 21st 2024, 8:05 PM

    They’ll debate about sports but not on the issues that actually matter, like immigrations, taxes and the national debt. Maybe because none of the parties have any sort of answer to those issues in question.

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    Mute Lee Casey
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:19 PM

    Jesus wept

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    Mute Dere
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:32 PM

    Bread and circuses

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    Mute Brian D'Arcy
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:45 PM

    Fantastic idea, put it on a channel that isn’t free to air

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    Mute Nodon
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    Nov 21st 2024, 8:17 PM

    Wouldn’t it be more useful for the electorate to know the identity of the alleged Russian spy referred to as Cobalt if he/she is running for the Dail.
    Wouldn’t it also be more useful to the electorate to know the identity of the person allegedly standing for election, but not for any party, who allegedly is/was under investigation by the Gardai for allegedly assaulting her/his/their sister, an assault that allegedly involved hair pulling.

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    Mute SV3tN8M4
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    Nov 21st 2024, 9:51 PM

    A debate to deflect from the real issues, Matt Cooper wont have a debate on issues like Immigration, Housing, Law & Order or Cost of Living, too close to the Political classes. No clear lines of separation between Mainstream Media & Govt & the voice of the people is not being heard. Radical change needed, vote radically so we get rid of Govt & their media buddies.

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    Mute Trump24
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    Nov 21st 2024, 6:21 PM

    Could be an interesting watch

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    Mute Thomas Hanlon
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    Nov 21st 2024, 9:09 PM

    Ireland holds its breath with anticipation

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    Mute Paul Doran
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    Nov 21st 2024, 11:41 PM
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