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Trump uses 'common sense' to make a political point. It has populist appeal

Left: President Trump gestures during a meeting at the White House on Oct. 14. Right: The title page of the 1776 R. Bell edition of "Common Sense," by American author and politician Thomas Paine.
Kevin Dietsch and Joe Griffin/Hulton Archive
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Left: President Trump gestures during a meeting at the White House on Oct. 14. Right: The title page of the 1776 R. Bell edition of "Common Sense," by American author and politician Thomas Paine.

The idea of "common sense" has been central to American politics since the founding of the United States. Politicians still use the phrase all the time — and perhaps none more so than President Trump.

Just this month at a Cabinet meeting, he used the phrase when he again recommended that pregnant women not take Tylenol.

"There's something going on, and we have to address it. And so, I'm addressing it the best I can as a nondoctor, but I'm a man of common sense," he said.

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He also used the term when he cast doubt on the monthly jobs report on CNBC in August: "It's totally rigged. Smart people know it. People with common sense know it."

The White House has also used it to explain the current government shutdown.

"Not enough Democrats voted for this common sense, clean continuing resolution to keep the government open," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt recently told NPR's Morning Edition.

This isn't exactly new. "Common sense" is such a widely used political phrase that University of Pennsylvania history professor Sophia Rosenfeld wrote an entire book on it. And yet, she says, Trump's usage of it is unique.

"He uses it more than almost anybody else in American politics," she said. "Although, of course, it has a really old origin story."

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That goes back to Thomas Paine, in his 1776 pamphlet "Common Sense," which made the case to the earliest Americans that British rule of the colonies was wrong. And in that, she says, Paine had hit upon the populist appeal of the phrase.

"It invokes some kind of primordial basic sense of ordinary people, a kind of lived experience that should transcend what the official or elite position is on something and particularly should transcend book learning and school learning," she said.

And Trump often invokes that dichotomy of common sense vs. academic smarts.

Speaking to military leaders in Quantico, Va., last month, Trump differentiated his administration from Joe Biden's, saying that Biden was surrounded by "radical left lunatics that are brilliant people but dumb as hell when it came to policy and common sense."

The phrase appeals more to several demographics that strongly align with Trump, says Frank Luntz, a longtime Republican strategist.

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"Common sense is a higher priority to those who live in rural communities than those in the urban areas. Common sense does better among older voters than it does among younger voters," he said. "And I think the reason why is that it reminds people of a more simple past."

And that understandably appeals to people who want to make America great again.

But Democrats use the phrase too. President Barack Obama tried to pass what he called "common sense gun reform."

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., used it this year on her Fighting Oligarchy Tour with Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.

"I believe that in the wealthiest nation in the history of the world, if a person gets sick, they shouldn't go bankrupt. Common sense," she told a crowd at Arizona State University in March.

One way to look at "common sense" is as an attempt to signal that a policy isn't extreme and could have broad appeal.

But as Luntz points out, it can also be a cudgel, especially in Trump's hands.

"For him, common sense has an even broader meaning," he said. "It's not just that you're right for the right reasons. It's also that the other side is wrong for being ideological, for being political or being outside the mainstream."

Rosenfeld has a similar take.

"It's also potentially rather demagogic," she says of the phrase. "Common sense also suggests not that there's another side to it. The other side in a debate with common sense is nonsense."

And in that sense and others, common sense can be considered one of the most powerful pieces of rhetoric the MAGA movement has found.

To Rosenfeld, Trump especially uses the phrase to try to excuse norm-shattering behavior — like a September social media post that Chicago was "about to find out why it's called the Department of War."

Here's how Trump explained that to a reporter: "We're going to clean up our cities. We're going to clean them up so they don't kill five people every weekend. That's not war — that's common sense."

"Common sense" gives the impression of timeworn policy ideas, even if the policy — mass deployment of the National Guard into U.S. cities — was previously unthinkable.

Copyright 2025 NPR

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Danielle Kurtzleben
Danielle Kurtzleben is a political correspondent assigned to NPR's Washington Desk. She appears on NPR shows, writes for the web, and is a regular on The NPR Politics Podcast. She is covering the 2020 presidential election, with particular focuses on on economic policy and gender politics.
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