Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D) said Thursday that voters who wanted to “disrupt the status quo” in November are now suffering under President Donald Trump.
“I think for many people that voted for the president, they voted because they wanted to disrupt the status quo, which I understand,” Moore told ABC News’s The View. “I want to disrupt the status quo.”
“My life has been littered with the consequences of bad policies, right? So, I get it.”
“People are just truly hurt by what they’re seeing right now,” Maryland Gov. Wes Moore says to ‘The View’ on Pres. Trump’s first 100 days in office.
“It’s not like you’re going to the federal government to support you, the pain is coming from the federal government.” pic.twitter.com/gYyhLBN2jY
— The View (@TheView) May 1, 2025
Americans who voted for Trump are suffering because of bad policies implemented under Trump, and a person doesn’t need to read polling numbers to see that, according to Moore.
“I spend every day, I go out and I talk to the farmers out in the eastern shore,” he said. “Agriculture is the largest industry in the state of Maryland, and I talk to these farmers, who have had family businesses for over 100 years who are now wondering if they can survive the next six months because of these tariff policies.”
Similarly, workers at the Port of Baltimore are losing work and federal workers are losing their jobs daily, the governor said.
“I think that there’s a chaos that is existing right now,” he said. “They’re not just setting a level of frustration, but it’s an anger, and people are just truly hurt by what they’re seeing right now.”
That hurt is coming from the federal government, which gives governors and state lawmakers a powerful opportunity to step up, according to Moore.
THE DEMOCRATS IN PRIME POSITION TO BE FACE OF THE PARTY IN 2028
“Maryland, right now, our unemployment rate is still 3%, almost a full point lower than the national average because we’ve found ways to support our federal workers and streamline them into available jobs, private sector and state jobs,” Moore said.
“If they are available, if they are qualified, get them trained. Get them in classrooms. Get them in hospitals. Get them in places where we need them.”
This article was originally published at www.washingtonexaminer.com