Jonathan Cantor
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Oh, for sure. I wrote this column last week about this issue, and I said looming over all of this is two midterms. One, the one that took place in 2018, which was just a sort of political killing field for suburban Republicans who got swept up in the anti-Trump fervor that year.
Oh, for sure. I wrote this column last week about this issue, and I said looming over all of this is two midterms. One, the one that took place in 2018, which was just a sort of political killing field for suburban Republicans who got swept up in the anti-Trump fervor that year.
Oh, for sure. I wrote this column last week about this issue, and I said looming over all of this is two midterms. One, the one that took place in 2018, which was just a sort of political killing field for suburban Republicans who got swept up in the anti-Trump fervor that year.
And the other midterm is obviously the next one, which is next year, Trump's second midterm, in which, once again, who are the most vulnerable Republicans on the ballot? It's those from center-left suburban districts who represent places where Trump is just culturally deeply this popular. I think part of what's delicate about this is that
And the other midterm is obviously the next one, which is next year, Trump's second midterm, in which, once again, who are the most vulnerable Republicans on the ballot? It's those from center-left suburban districts who represent places where Trump is just culturally deeply this popular. I think part of what's delicate about this is that
And the other midterm is obviously the next one, which is next year, Trump's second midterm, in which, once again, who are the most vulnerable Republicans on the ballot? It's those from center-left suburban districts who represent places where Trump is just culturally deeply this popular. I think part of what's delicate about this is that
We're talking about Republicans who are in the same party, but their identity and their culture and their, frankly, education and kind of income backgrounds are profoundly different. There's a class schism, frankly. in the Republican Party and Congress.
We're talking about Republicans who are in the same party, but their identity and their culture and their, frankly, education and kind of income backgrounds are profoundly different. There's a class schism, frankly. in the Republican Party and Congress.
We're talking about Republicans who are in the same party, but their identity and their culture and their, frankly, education and kind of income backgrounds are profoundly different. There's a class schism, frankly. in the Republican Party and Congress.
And I think the Republicans, whether it's Marjorie Taylor Greene or Jason Smith, who wrote the tax bill, they just don't have a lot in common with some of the Republican colleagues from high income and sort of heavily educated parts of this country.
And I think the Republicans, whether it's Marjorie Taylor Greene or Jason Smith, who wrote the tax bill, they just don't have a lot in common with some of the Republican colleagues from high income and sort of heavily educated parts of this country.
And I think the Republicans, whether it's Marjorie Taylor Greene or Jason Smith, who wrote the tax bill, they just don't have a lot in common with some of the Republican colleagues from high income and sort of heavily educated parts of this country.
It's the proverbial two Americas thing, blue America and red America, suburbia and rural America, but you're seeing it within the Republican Party in this context and within the U.S. House.
It's the proverbial two Americas thing, blue America and red America, suburbia and rural America, but you're seeing it within the Republican Party in this context and within the U.S. House.
It's the proverbial two Americas thing, blue America and red America, suburbia and rural America, but you're seeing it within the Republican Party in this context and within the U.S. House.
This week on Profiteer Markets, we speak with Jonathan Cantor, former Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. We discuss which sectors he believes most need antitrust enforcement and how businesses actually feel about antitrust.
This week on Profiteer Markets, we speak with Jonathan Cantor, former Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. We discuss which sectors he believes most need antitrust enforcement and how businesses actually feel about antitrust.
This week on Profiteer Markets, we speak with Jonathan Cantor, former Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. We discuss which sectors he believes most need antitrust enforcement and how businesses actually feel about antitrust.
You can find that conversation exclusively on the Prof G Markets podcast.
You can find that conversation exclusively on the Prof G Markets podcast.