Pollster: Trump win a ‘big, fat middle finger’ from middle America

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Christopher Beem, managing director of the McCourtney Institute for Democracy at Penn State, was quoted in a recent San Diego Union-Tribune article about the 2016 presidential election. Here’s an excerpt:

“Trump’s win, he said, occurred through a convergence of economic and societal issues that were important to white working-class voters. Those voters, Beem said, were driven by their anger over feeling abandoned by corporate America and government and their resentment over transgender and movements such as Black Lives Matter.  Those sentiments, he said, then were lumped on top of a dislike for Hillary Clinton, and that dislike grew after FBI Director James Comey’s announcement 10 days before the election that he was renewing a probe of Clinton’s emails.

“ ‘All of those things were factors but how you would begin to parse them out and assign percentages, I have no idea,’ Beem said. ‘I think a lot of people hear  “transgender bathrooms” and that’s too much, I can’t accept that. All of those things come together to create this feeling of “This isn’t my country anymore and it makes me angry and this is my opportunity to express my anger.” ’ ”

Read more at SanDiegoTribune.com.

Leaks about Clinton, Trump signal dissension within FBI against Comey, DOJ

A tweet from Penn State Greater Allegheny history Professor Douglas Charles.

A tweet by Penn State Greater Allegheny history Professor Douglas Charles.

Douglas Charles, an associate professor of history at Penn State Greater Allegheny, was quoted in a KOMO News article about the FBI leaking investigation information shortly before Election Day. Here is an excerpt:

“Douglas Charles, author of ‘The FBI’s Obscene File: J. Edgar Hoover and the Bureau’s Crusade Against Smut,’ said Hoover’s FBI played politics and exerted influence on lawmakers when it suited his interests, but it did so quietly.

“ ‘Hoover did it all obsequiously and carefully, always certain to protect is FBI’s carefully crafted public image,’ he said.

“The very public leaking of information is ‘deeply concerning,’ said Charles, a professor of history at Penn State Greater Allegheny, and it suggests internal divisions at the bureau. The leaks leave the impression of an FBI in crisis, with warring partisan factions pressuring and contradicting the director from behind the curtain.”

Read the full article on KOMOnews.com.

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