Rocky Mount, North Carolina is a place long known for defying expectations. Only hearing the name, a visitor from out of state might assume it is a destination in the Blue Ridge mountains. But the rocky mound that is memorialized in the name of this Eastern North Carolina town isn’t a geological formation, but rather a pile of rocks someone made by the river in days gone by, when a passing boat on the Tar River might miss the place altogether if there wasn’t some sort of landmark.
Folks who stop by Rocky Mount don’t always find what they’re looking for.
On his way to Mar-A-Lago for the holidays, Donald Trump made a stop in Rocky Mount last night, looking for a crowd to cheer his lies about the economy. Despite the networks cutting from their regularly scheduled programing on Wednesday night to give him 20 minutes for a campaign speech from the White House, Trump didn’t get the boost he wanted. Maybe a rally with his base, someone thought, would be a way to end the year on a high note.
But whoever picked Rocky Mount, North Carolina is worried. The word “Indiana” wasn’t uttered in the press or from the stage, but Republican state senators there refused to do what Trump’s lackeys in the North Carolina General Assembly were more than happy to do just weeks ago - namely, to move tens of thousands of Republican voters from what they thought was a “safe” seat to a district currently represented by a Democrat.
Which means the gerrymander he ordered in Eastern North Carolina could lose Republicans a seat in Congress rather than gaining them one.
Seeing that the general mood of the country has turned against Trump in plummeting poll numbers, the working theory was that Republicans could use power where they have it to steal seats that might make up for ones they are likely to lose next year in the midterms. But the Republicans in Indiana looked at the numbers and told Trump that even the so-called “safe” seats aren’t safe anymore. Which means the gerrymander he ordered in Eastern North Carolina could lose Republicans a seat in Congress rather than gaining them one.
Team Trump wanted Rocky Mount to look like a victory lap when it was, in fact, a desperate attempt to rally the base in order to prove Indiana’s Republicans wrong.
According to Natalie Allison, reporting for the Washington Post, Guy Harper - a man who’s made his living for the past decade selling merchandise at Trump rallies - was already packing up his wares when she talked to him on her way into the event. “Look at this,” Harper said, pointing to empty streets and no lines outside the venue. “Usually, Trump rallies are like a football tailgate. This is strange.”
Nothing drives down the price of snake oil like people having time to try it out. Donald Trump returned to the White House selling a fake populism that promised hurting people he could bring down prices and bring back good jobs. One year in, the defining photo of his second term as president is the scene inside the Capitol rotunda, where the politicians huddled with America’s billionaires while everyone else was locked out in the cold.
11 months later, utility bill are up, prices at the grocery store remain high, millions of Americans are about to lose their healthcare, and working people are being assaulted because they speak Spanish or have brown skin. Meanwhile, the billionaires who dine at the White House received their windfall in a budget bill that was the single largest transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich in US history. And the Trump family, as the Wall Street Journal reported this week, has raked in $4 billion for themselves.
No wonder Trump was eager to get back to Mar-A-Lago.







