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Commentary
Wall Street Journal

America’s Jacksonian Turn

The assassination attempt gives new power to an old political tendency.

walter_russell_mead
walter_russell_mead
Ravenel B. Curry III Distinguished Fellow in Strategy and Statesmanship
Engraving of President Andrew Jackson, based on drawing done on September 23, 1829. (Library of Congress)
Caption
Engraving of President Andrew Jackson, based on drawing done on September 23, 1829. (Library of Congress)

Donald Trump was only glancingly wounded on Saturday, but the effects of the attack and of his courageous response will be profound. His chance of victory substantially increased, and the movement he represents will continue to be a powerful force in American policy regardless of November’s result.

Mr. Trump is part of a strain of American politics that Andrew Jackson brought to power in 1828. In domestic politics, Jacksonians are skeptical of big business, hate the political and social establishment, and demand “common sense” solutions to complex problems. They support the military but not an officer class seen as distant from the values and folkways of the nation—West Point stuffed shirts in the 19th century, “woke generals” today. They assume the political class is deeply and irreformably corrupt.