Far too radical with his free market ideology. On domestic fiscal policy he would be considered a radical Republican were he running as a Republican.
No, I don't want to give social security to the states (where it will promptly be privatized in Republican states).
No, I don't want to eliminate the Department of Education, the Department of Energy, Department of Commerce, Housing and Urban Development, etc., which oversee a plethora of programs that necessarily help and protect real people.
No, I don't think the GREAT INVISIBLE HAND of capitalism will solve climate change through the free market. Yes, I do believe regulation can and should play a role in this environmental issue and others.
No, I don't want to get rid income taxes in favor of consumption taxes that initially favor the wealthy and would shift the tax burden to the poor and middle class (Rich people don't spend all their money, poor people do. Therefore a higher percentage of the poor's money would be subject to a consumption tax. He claims his tax would be structured not to include family necessities, although no matter how it's structured it's still a shift downward in the burden, and there are zero details about what goods and services would be exempted and without those details I stand by my objections).
I don't approve of an education policy that is focused entirely on political buzzwords like "choice and flexibility," which is code for attempting to damage, drain and kill public schools in favor of private and semi-private schooling. Just because throwing money at public schooling isn't the answer, that doesn't mean we abandon our responsibility to improve public schooling, and competition from the private sector through vouchers is not the answer to EVERYTHING.
While I approve of caution and congressional debate before the use of force (I would approve of an amendment to ban the offensive use of force), even I find his rhetoric on foreign policy a little pollyannish. The US is the leader of the global economy, we can't simply swear off "meddling" because everything we do with regard to our interests, which are global, has serious consequences including the absence of doing anything.
My preference is for Clinton.
If I were an ideological Republican however, I would definitely vote for him over the bigoted, narcissistic sociopath running on that ticket. Even as someone ideologically far left of center, I wouldn't fear Johnson's election, I merely oppose it.
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