please note the author is no fan of Trump.
 The Democrats need better villains
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/t...184300444.html
Whose fault is everything that’s wrong?
  The Democrats don’t have convincing answers. They 
assail President Trump, of course—but 
worsening income inequality,  a stagnant middle class and unaffordable health care were problems well  before Trump came on the scene. In some ways, Trump got elected in 2016  because he addressed those issues more persuasively than other  candidates.
  The 20 Democrats who faced off recently in two inaugural debates came  up with about half a dozen repeat offenders to explain who’s  responsible for the economic strains in America. The most common  bogeymen among leading Democrats are “giant corporations” (Sen.  Elizabeth Warren), Wall Street banks (Warren and Sen. Bernie Sanders),  pharmaceutical companies (Sen. Cory Booker and others), health insurers  (Sen. Kamala Harris and others), oil companies (Warren), and  billionaires (Sen. Amy Klobuchar). A few companies earned dishonorable  mention by name, including 
Amazon, General Motors and McDonald’s.
  
These are broadside attacks on private-sector capitalism, and they’re  not likely to carry the Democratic presidential nominee to victory in  2020. If Democrats want to play the blame game, they need to find better  villains to pin America’s problems on. And a good place to look is in  Washington, D.C.
     There’s nothing new about attacks on big business by populist  politicians trying to rile up the proletariat. But here’s the problem:  Americans are sort of getting along with corporate America these days.  The big banks (aside from the bumbling Wells Fargo) haven’t wrecked  anything lately, and they’re operating more responsibly under new rules  put in place after the Wall Street meltdown in 2008 and 2009. Most  Americans can get loans for cars and 
homes. Interest rates are low.
                          
Out of step with mainstream Americans
  The strong labor market means  more workers are getting raises and surprising numbers are quitting for  better jobs. Oh by the way, about 25 million work for those “giant  corporations” Elizabeth Warren vilifies. Does she want none of their  votes? Or merely want to turn them against their nefarious employers?
   Health insurers and pharmaceutical firms are bad guys because they  make health care too expensive and confusing. Except more than  two-thirds of people with private, employer-sponsored health care 
say they like their coverage,  with only 6% saying they hate it. Oil companies are bad because they  produce the fossil fuel that’s causing global warming. Yet almost  everybody travels in vehicles that burn that fuel, making nearly every  consumer complicit with the evil oil companies.
     

      Democratic presidential candidates from left, South Bend Mayor Pete  Buttigieg, former vice president Joe Biden, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.,  and Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., gesture before the start of the  Democratic primary debate hosted by NBC News at the Adrienne Arsht  Center for the Performing Arts, Thursday, June 27, 2019, in Miami. (AP  Photo/Brynn Anderson) 
Amazon (
AMZN) is bad because of the low taxes they pay. General Motors (
GM) 
laid off some workers earlier this year because they built an outdated economy car nobody wants to buy any more. And the CEO of McDonald’s (
MCD)  makes way too much money. That’s why Americans are boycotting these  companies en masse, threatening to drive them out of business.
 
   
Oh wait—that’s not happening, because Americans love Amazon’s fast  delivery and McDonald’s bargain meals. They’ve forgiven GM for its ugly  bankruptcy and re-embraced its pickups and SUVs. The Democrats bashing  these companies are out of step with mainstream Americans who want to  get ahead but don’t feel that requires punishing anybody.
   Trump’s blame game
  There are some real problems contained in the Democrats’ grievances,  but they stem more from bad Washington policies than from abusive  corporate behavior. Amazon’s tax bill, for instance, is low because it  takes advantage of tax breaks for things like research and investment.  In 25 years, Amazon has grown from a one-person startup to a goliath  that employs 600,000 people. If those tax incentives are meant to help  companies grow, they worked. If the giveaways are too permissive,  Congress should change them.
Reining in drug and other health care costs are thorny problems, but  pharmaceutical and insurance companies also generate innovations such as  HMOs and blockbuster drugs that wouldn’t happen without the profit  motive. And while billionaires may make obscene amounts of money, that’s  often because they built breakthrough businesses such as Amazon,  Microsoft and Apple.
  Trump is a practiced vilifier who fingers immigrants, China, Mexico,  Barack Obama and other convenient targets for the economic pressure many  Americans feel. Trump’s rebukes are oversimplified and sometimes  flat-out wrong. But his blameful populism got him elected once, and  could again.
  
If Democrats want to play  Trump’s blame game, they need more believable villains. Or, they could  skip the blame and just come up with pragmatic ways to solve problems.  Not so long ago, that worked.
  Confidential tip line: rickjnewman@yahoo.com. Encrypted communication available. Click here to get Rick’s stories by email.