... MSH, that's the thing. There isn't a platform to establish when it comes to that, for these areas. The only substantial economic relief they're going to see is by welfare and government investment,* either directly, or indirectly via subsidies and tax breaks to offset of the costs of doing business in these areas. Long term economic success -- retraining (education funding, good luck), moving out of particularly impoverished areas into ones that can support you (welfare, tax breaks for travel et al, scholarships, etc., see previous paren, add in a dash of non-economic concerns like family history and environmental comfort and crap) -- is pretty much it. There's not a single other bloody option, particularly not one that's not going to dry up again within a generation or two at most.
Like. Businesses will not come to these areas. They're out of the way (transport costs), they're varying degrees of run down (infrastructure costs), the population is generally having one sort of problem or another (human resource costs, as well as shortage of qualified workers which adds even more because you have to bring folks in), and if there's no resources in the area (extractive, temporary, sometimes a net loss for the community due to working hazards et al t'boot), then there's no reason to be there because there is nothing there. Anything that will be able to profit in those conditions, will not be large enough to support more than maybe one or two communities, out of significantly more than that.
*And to a fair extent, the culture/general attitude in these areas, again particularly for the ones that have been there as things slid to shit, will refuse those as an option. You cannot get their votes with that message, because they will be significantly more likely to listen to someone saying there's another way -- even if said option is a complete impossibility -- over someone that is acknowledging the raw economic reality that has been shitting on their dignity and future for years.
There's absolutely a platform to establish. We've run the Washington Consensus so threadbare that alternatives are barely even considered before being dismissed out of hand. What we need is strong support for localism and in preparation for reinvesting automation output into the communities that automation exists in. Trying to solve this from the initial perspective of getting Ford and McDonalds on board is indeed doomed to failure, but we don't need to do so and companies who stick to what they're used to are themselves probably doomed.
If the WPA could do it with groups that were way closer to dirt farmers than almost any society still around, then we have it easy. And don't tell me it's politically untenable. We haven't even given it a fucking shot yet. Just last year Sanders vaguely hinted at the Bud Lite version of trying to pay any attention to the rural and poor, and look at the list of states it got him: West Virginia, Nebraska, Minnesota, Michigan (man, that foreshadowing), Wyoming, Idaho. People are clearly desperate to cling to a way out of the downward spiral, and so it's no surprise so much of the country bought into Trump's bullshit on the side bet that it
might end up revitalizing if we toss out all the Mexicans and institute hostile tariffs.
There is an alternative to protectionism just as protectionism is an alternative to "fuck the poor". We merely need make the effort.
I don't really know if the Democrats can recover. They disavowed their most energetic supporters by rejecting Bernie, and it's clear that choosing Hillary over him wasn't some kind of tactical masterstroke. They have no young heirs, and they were outplayed by Trump of all people. Add to that the shameful performance in the lower races, the state levels, the congress.
And this coming out of the Obama years! There are no words for the level of systemic failure that has swept through the DNC!
The years of compromises that voters have had to endure because the democrats are "better than the other guy" is just annother embarrasment. Obama's continuing wars, his failure to shut down Guantanimo, the Democratic cowardice in the face of Republican threats to filibuster, Democrats utter failure to drive aggressive policy goals like banning coal, driving space exploration, developing a society ready to handle automation, or simply improving education... It's over.
Why support Democrats when they have demanded so much in exchange for the simple promise of "not being the Republicans," and then failed to deliver even on that?
Seriously, and it's not that goddamn hard. Stick to the values of seeking liberty and prosperity for everyone, stop throwing people under the bus, and great things will come. The factors that the Democrats tautologically can't claim: extreme religiosity, jingoism, some racial tension; are all ones that can be cornered and marginalized by economic policy and upstanding character.
The play is all wrong, it's like the weakest possible form of what's open to the Dems. Thank fuck that Trump isn't experienced enough to operate in national politics, because I think that sticking to your strengths is one thing that he basically does correctly, and is responsible for his hardcore supporters' enthusiasm in spite of their numbers
Every motherfucker with a D or an R tries to claim they're "fiscally conservative". Does anybody even know what the hell that means anymore? The Republicans who say it seem to have half an idea in the form of "tear it all down and laugh amongst the ashes we shall all be equal in death's embrace", and the Dems are just obviously trying to steal voters from the aforementioned. Our economic politics are dead in the fucking water trying to regain that heroin high of 1996. I definitely know nobody has a genuine conception of whatever "fiscally liberal" is supposed to be outside of an attack ad tearing down your opponent for assigning $5 to preschools that ended up stolen by administrators and used to fund gay Muslim sex parties.