Disgraced FBI Official Let Chinese Energy Firm Know That They Were Under Federal...
Trump's Executive Order Returns Department of Defense to Its Original Name, But It's...
As Puerto Ricans Call for Independence Their Dreams Are Blocked By Their Chief...
President Trump Closes the Overton Window
After Backlash Over 'Deceptive Edits' to Noem Interview, CBS Announces New ‘Face the...
The Fake Stream Media’s Pervasive Assault on Black America
ICE to Deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Eswatini After Claims of Fear in...
Mamdani: More Continuation Than Aberration for New York
President Trump Is Bringing the Spirit of Sports Back to America
Money, Power and Transgender Ideology
Cleaning Up the Swamp Is a Full-Time Job for Trump
Iran's Mullahs Staring Into the Abyss
The Party of Losers Is Not Funny
The Enduring Lie of Socialism
DOJ: Minnesota Duo Orchestrated Kidnappings, Bombings in Africa
Tipsheet

Andrew Yang: 'Donald Trump is Not the Cause of All of Our Problems'

AP Photo/Elise Amendola

Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang participated in the eighth Democratic presidential debate in New Hampshire on Friday evening. The entrepreneur has managed to stay in the race even as seasoned politicians have failed to qualify for previous debates and several of the candidates have since ended their campaigns. On Friday, Yang had a message for the six Democratic opponents sharing the debate stage with him at St. Anselm's College in Goffstown, New Hampshire. 

Advertisement

"Donald Trump," Yang bravely declared, "is not the cause of all of our problems, and we are making a mistake when we act like he is." 

The audience erupted in applause. 

To be sure, Yang then went on to call the president a "symptom of a disease" that Yang claims has been "building up in our communities for years and decades." But this was a Democratic debate after all. 

Yang lamented the outsourcing of manufacturing jobs and the deleterious effects that outsourcing has had on American communities. 

"These are the changes that Americans are seeing and feeling around us everyday, and if we get to the hard work of curing those problems we will not just defeat Donald Trump in the fall we will actually be able to move our communities forward," Yang concluded. 

Trump added 479,000 manufacturing jobs to the economy in his first 34 months of office and recently signed the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Trade Agreement into law that will further boost manufacturing jobs in the United States. 

Advertisement

At this point, Trump seems to be more of a cure than a symptom. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos