Traitor Trump

A branding lesson for Democrats

President Trump.
(Image credit: Illustrated | Olivier Douliery - Pool/Getty Images, gonin/iStock)

As the Democratic candidates for president take the stage later this week in Miami for their first series of debates, they'll each be looking to distinguish themselves from a very crowded field. Making a case for why they are the individual who deserves their party's nomination will be each candidate's primary job. But as a group, there's another task just as urgent: branding President Trump in a way that will weaken his re-election aims and set the narrative against him for 2020.

Doing so means taking a move right out of the Trump playbook. Some may bristle at that suggestion, worried it will lower Democrats — and the 2020 race, more broadly — to the gutters where Trump dwells. But not everything Trump does is out of bounds. While the nation's chief executive has never been much of a businessman, he does have a particular knack for branding, especially when it comes to his opponents. From "Little Marco" to "Lyin' Ted" to "Crooked Hillary" and "Crazy Nancy," Trump has repeatedly grabbed the upper hand against his opponents by reducing them to a simple characterization that sticks.

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Neil J. Young

Neil J. Young is a historian and the author of We Gather Together: The Religious Right and the Problem of Interfaith Politics. He writes frequently on American politics, culture, and religion for publications including The New York Times, The Atlantic, the Los Angeles Times, HuffPost, Vox, and Politico. He co-hosts the history podcast Past Present.