President Joe Biden received a rousing endorsement from the United Auto Workers union on Wednesday. Politically, it’s a big deal (or what Biden might call a “BFD”).
Speaking at a UAW conference in Washington, union President Shawn Fain touted Biden’s pro-union bona fides. And he reminded his members that last year, one day after Biden made history by joining autoworkers on the picket line, Donald Trump spoke at a nonunion auto parts plant and asked union leaders to back him.
I think the past week has highlighted the contrast Fain spoke of — and shown where Trump’s and Biden’s loyalties lie.
In Trump’s case, that appears to be the business class — C-suite types who may have benefited from the rich-friendly tax cuts under Trump in 2017 and might see similar cuts should he return to the White House. My MSNBC colleague James Downie, for example, wrote a piece highlighting remarks from some of the attendees at the ritzy World Economic Forum convention in Davos, Switzerland. Despite Trump’s open embrace of a dictatorial vision, many of these billionaires seemed eager, open or — at minimum — apathetic to the idea of another Trump term.
And, as if to drive the point home that he’s allied with the billionaire class, Trump name-checked Steve Wynn and John Paulson, two controversial megadonors to his campaign, in his victory speech after winning the New Hampshire primary.








