The Trump era: America’s new president
His victory threatens old certainties about America and its role in the world. What will take their place?
THE fall of the Berlin Wall, on November
9th 1989, was when history was said to have ended. The fight between communism
and capitalism was over. After a titanic ideological struggle encompassing the
decades after the second world war, open markets and Western liberal democracy
reigned supreme. In the early morning of November 9th 2016, when Donald Trump
crossed the threshold of 270 electoral-college votes to become America’s
president-elect, that illusion was shattered. History is back—with a vengeance.
The fact of Mr Trump’s victory and the
way it came about are hammer blows both to the norms that underpin politics in
the United States and also to America’s role as the world’s pre-eminent power.
At home, an apparently amateurish and chaotic campaign has humiliated an
industry of consultants, pundits and pollsters. If, as he has threatened,
President Trump goes on to test the institutions that regulate political life,
nobody can be sure how they will bear up. Abroad, he has taken aim at the
belief, embraced by every post-war president, that America gains from the often
thankless task of being the global hegemon. If Mr Trump now disengages from the
world, who knows what will storm through the breach?
The sense that old certainties are
crumbling has rocked America’s allies. The fear that globalisation has fallen
flat has whipsawed markets. Although post-Brexit Britons know what that feels
like, the referendum in Britain will be eclipsed by consequences of this
election. Mr Trump’s victory has demolished a consensus. The question now is
what takes its place.
Trump towers
Start
with the observation that America has voted not for a change of party so much
as a change of regime. Mr Trump was carried to office on a tide of popular rage
(see article). This is powered partly by the fact
that ordinary Americans have not shared in their country’s prosperity. In real
terms median male earnings are still lower than they were in the 1970s. In the
past 50 years, barring the expansion of the 1990s, middle-ranking households
have taken longer to claw back lost income with each recession. Social mobility
is too low to hold out the promise of something better. The resulting loss of
self-respect is not neutralised by a few quarters of rising wages.
Anger
has sown hatred in America. Feeling themselves victims of an unfair economic
system, ordinary Americans blame the elites in Washington for being too
spineless and too stupid to stand up to foreigners and big business; or, worse,
they believe that the elites themselves are part of the conspiracy. They
repudiate the media—including this newspaper—for being patronising, partisan
and as out of touch and elitist as the politicians. Many working-class white
voters feel threatened by economic and demographic decline. Some of them think
racial minorities are bought off by the Democratic machine. Rural Americans
detest the socially liberal values that urban compatriots foist upon them by
supposedly manipulating the machinery in Washington (see article). Republicans have behaved as if
working with Democrats is treachery.
Mr
Trump harnessed this popular anger brilliantly. Those who could not bring
themselves to vote for him may wonder how half of their compatriots were
willing to overlook his treatment of women, his pandering to xenophobes and his
rank disregard for the facts. There is no reason to conclude that all Trump
voters approve of his behaviour. For some of them, his flaws are insignificant
next to the One Big Truth: that America needs fixing. For others the
willingness to break taboos was proof that he is an outsider. As commentators
have put it, his voters took Mr Trump seriously but not literally, even as his
critics took him literally but not seriously. The hapless Hillary Clinton might
have won the popular vote, but she stood for everything angry voters despise.
The
hope is that this election will prove cathartic. Perhaps, in office, Mr Trump
will be pragmatic and magnanimous—as he was in his acceptance speech. Perhaps
he will be King Donald, a figurehead and tweeter-in-chief who presides over an
executive vice-president and a cabinet of competent, reasonable people. When he
decides against building a wall against Mexico after all or concludes that a
trade war with China is not a wise idea, his voters may not mind too
much—because they only expected him to make them feel proud and to put
conservative justices in the Supreme Court. Indeed, you can just about imagine
a future in which extra infrastructure spending, combined with deregulation,
tax cuts, a stronger dollar and the repatriation of corporate profits, boosts
the American economy for long enough to pacify the anger. This more emollient
Trump might even model himself on Ronald Reagan, a conservative hero who was
mocked and underestimated, too.
Nothing
would make us happier than to see Mr Trump succeed in this way. But whereas
Reagan was an optimist, Mr Trump rails against the loss of an imagined past. We
are deeply sceptical that he will make a good president—because of his
policies, his temperament and the demands of political office.
Gravity wins in the end
Take
his policies first. After the sugar rush, populist policies eventually collapse
under their own contradictions. Mr Trump has pledged to scrap the hated
Obamacare. But that threatens to deprive over 20m hard-up Americans of health
insurance. His tax cuts would chiefly benefit the rich and they would be
financed by deficits that would increase debt-to-GDP by 25 percentage points by
2026. Even if he does not actually deport illegal immigrants, he will foment
the divisive politics of race. Mr Trump has demanded trade concessions from
China, Mexico and Canada on threat of tariffs and the scrapping of the North
American Free Trade Agreement. His protectionism would further impoverish poor
Americans, who gain more as consumers from cheap imports than they would as
producers from suppressed competition. If he caused a trade war, the fragile
global economy could tip into a recession. With interest rates near zero,
policymakers would struggle to respond.
Abroad
Mr Trump says he hates the deal freezing Iran’s nuclear programme. If it fails,
he would have to choose between attacking Iran’s nuclear sites and seeing
nuclear proliferation in the Middle East (see article). He wants to reverse the Paris
agreement on climate change; apart from harming the planet, that would
undermine America as a negotiating partner. Above all, he would erode America’s
alliances—its greatest strength. Mr Trump has demanded that other countries pay
more towards their security or he will walk away. His bargaining would weaken
NATO, leaving front-line eastern European states vulnerable to Russia. It would
encourage Chinese expansion in the South China Sea. Japan and South Korea may
be tempted to arm themselves with nuclear weapons.
The
second reason to be wary is temperament. During the campaign Mr Trump was
narcissistic, thin-skinned and ill-disciplined. Yet the job of the most
powerful man in the world constantly entails daily humiliations at home and
abroad. When congressmen mock him, insult him and twist his words, his
effectiveness will depend on his willingness to turn the other cheek and work
for a deal. When a judge hears a case for fraud against Trump University in the
coming weeks, or rules against his administration’s policies when he is in
office, he must stand back (self-restraint that proved beyond him when he was a
candidate). When journalists ridiculed him in the campaign he threatened to
open up libel laws. In office he must ignore them or try to talk them round.
When sovereign governments snub him he must calculate his response according to
America’s interests, not his own wounded pride. If Mr Trump fails to master his
resentments, his presidency will soon become bogged down in a morass of petty
conflicts.
The
third reason to be wary is the demands of office. No problem comes to the
president unless it is fiendishly complicated. Yet Mr Trump has shown no
evidence that he has the mastery of detail or sustained concentration that the
Oval Office demands. He could delegate (as Reagan famously did), but his
campaign team depended to an unusual degree on his family and on political
misfits. He has thrived on the idea that his experience in business will make
him a master negotiator in politics. Yet if a deal falls apart there is always
another skyscraper to buy or another golf course to build; by contrast, a
failure to agree with Vladimir Putin about Russia’s actions leaves nobody to
turn to. Nowhere will judgment and experience be more exposed than over the
control of America’s nuclear arsenal—which, in a crisis, falls to him and him
alone.
The pendulum swings out
The
genius of America’s constitution is to limit the harm one president can do. We
hope Mr Trump proves our doubts groundless or that, if he fails, a better
president will be along in four years. The danger with popular anger, though,
is that disillusion with Mr Trump will only add to the discontent that put him
there in the first place. If so, his failure would pave the way for someone
even more bent on breaking the system.
The
election of Mr Trump is a rebuff to all liberals, including this newspaper. The
open markets and classically liberal democracy that we defend, and which had
seemed to be affirmed in 1989, have been rejected by the electorate first in
Britain and now in America. France, Italy and other European countries may well
follow. It is clear that popular support for the Western order depended more on
rapid growth and the galvanising effect of the Soviet threat than on
intellectual conviction. Recently Western democracies have done too little to
spread the benefits of prosperity. Politicians and pundits took the
acquiescence of the disillusioned for granted. As Mr Trump prepares to enter
the White House, the long, hard job of winning the argument for liberal internationalism
begins anew.
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