I do find this post enlightening, and after reading a number of similar comments during last year's campaign it became clear to me that Trump had a legitimate chance to win. Trump absolutely dominated the campaign narrative on jobs while providing very little in the way of substantive policy. Hillary, on the other hand, hammered policy positions in her speeches.
There was a similar comment someone made during the campaign, very similar to this....at the time, I went back and sifted through the local news media stories from Hillary's previous week of campaign tour speeches....every single one of them was hammering jobs, hard. We're going to do X to help laid-off steelworkers in <insert Rust Belt city>. We're going to do Y to implement job skills training for <insert region>.
And it was totally glossed-over, repeatedly, in favor of Trump doing things like putting on a coal miner's helmet or talking about winning. One candidate came to the table with actual substance - substance that I don't necessarily agree with, given my own leanings, but substance nonetheless - and was blown away by the other candidate speaking in wild soundbites. Trump absolutely ####### dominated the jobs narrative, and I'm convinced that it probably won him the election. But the fact that he did it so easily against a candidate with formulated ideas....that's what the Dems need to be worried about. If they want to be competitive in future races, they need to figure out how to control that narrative.