Dec. 13, 2016, Jan. 2017 issue of Prospect Magazine
Donald Trump’s evolution from a buffoonish fringe candidate
taken seriously by no one to the President-Elect of the United States is one of
the most unexpected and traumatic events in recent US history. The effects are
uncertain, but—in the worst case—they could lead to the US giving up entirely
on global leadership, and the unravelling of the liberal world order it has
done much to build since the 1950s.
The triumph of the Trump brand of nationalism is arguably of
a piece with authoritarian advances in disparate countries, from Recep Tayyip
Erdo˘gan’s Turkey to Viktor Orbán’s Hungary. Together these developments
constitute an even more fundamental problem to cherished western ideas, by
making populist democracy an active threat to individual liberty. A great deal
remains up in the air, but with indignant nationalists riding the tide in so
many places, we cannot preclude the possibility that we are living through a
political disruption that will in time bear comparison with the collapse of
Communism a generation ago.
There will be endless post-mortems in the US on how Trump’s
win could possibly have come about; much of the media attention will continue
to focus on short-term issues like the intervention by FBI Director James Comey
11 days before the election, or on the stream of reportedly Russian-sourced
leaks from Hillary Clinton’s campaign. Such considerations are valid and may
have had a bearing on the outcome. But it is important to recognise that the
result had roots which run deep into American society. As both the Republican
and Democratic parties reassess their positions, they would do well to think
about how the political map has changed in the four short years since 2012, and
how this reflects not only campaign dramas, but changes within America
itself—concerns over the state of the economy and a profound sense of unease
over its role in world affairs.
Right around the developed world, the banking crisis of 2008
called into question the authority of elites who had created this highly risky
system—there was, in Alan Greenspan’s famous testimony, a “flaw in the model,”
undermining the expertise on which the standing of the elites had rested. More
serious even than the failure of the western economy was the sense of burning
injustice that grew in its wake. The public saw all those moneyed institutions
and individuals who had been running the system being bailed out, and then poor
and middling sorts being handed the bill in the form of austerity policies and
unemployment. In the US, the disruptive effects of these aggravating
observations were compounded by an anxiety born of decline in the nation’s
relative power. After the George W Bush era had painfully exposed the limits of
America’s military might in Iraq, the Barack Obama years saw China knock
America off the top spot as the world’s largest economy on one measure, and it
looks all set to overtake it entirely within a few years. Nationalism can take
many forms, but nationalism tinged with nostalgia can be especially effective.
Trump promised not merely to make America great, but to “make America great
again.” British readers may hear an echo in the Brexit campaign slogan which
was not simply an exhortation to take control, but to “take back control.”
The greatness which Trump promises to regain will not be
that which America used to imagine for itself. Instead of the sometimes
overclaimed commitment to the spread of openness and democracy, he proposes an
assertive and yet more insular politics, potentially creating the space for
other powers—and who knows which—to fill. The world as a whole, then, could
soon have to grapple with the consequences of America’s retreat. The first
task, however, is to understand why the nation came to take this solipsistic
turn. And to find the answer to that one must look first to the US political
system.
Elite capture and vetocracy
The dysfunction of the US political system weighed heavily
on the outcome of the 2016 election. The charge that big money and powerful
special interests were corrupting Congress and lining the pockets of “elites”
at the expense of ordinary citizens was one that united the two outsider
candidates from right and left, Trump and Bernie Sanders. Both of them vilified
Clinton as the personification of this kind of corruption, since the Clintons
had enriched themselves by taking money from powerful interest groups. Both
targeted Wall Street banks like Goldman Sachs as particular villains and, as the
year ground on, the right took the charge to new heights, with Trump damning a
range of American institutions as corrupt, including the FBI (though only when
it exonerated Clinton), the Federal Reserve, and electoral administrations
across the country. The conservative provocateur, Matt Drudge, even suggested
that the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration was hyping the
threat from Hurricane Matthew for political purposes.
The American political system has indeed become
dysfunctional; the trouble is that critics like Trump and Sanders don’t
correctly identify the source of the problem, and could not offer anything by
way of real solutions.
The real problem has its roots partly in the nature of
American society, and partly in the country’s institutions. The American people
are highly diverse along every conceivable axis—racially, ethnically,
religiously, geographically, and culturally—and, over the past 20 years, they
have become highly polarised too. This polarisation is reflected in the places
in which Americans choose to live, where ideological affinity is often more
important than race or religion, and it is reflected in a Congress in which the
most liberal Republican is considerably more conservative than the most
conservative Democrat. This is quite different from the old 20th century
situation, when overlap between the parties allowed for bipartisan agreement on
major policies from the New Deal to the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan’s
administration.
Beyond ideological polarisation, America has seen the rise
of a huge number of wealthy and well-organised interest groups—not just
corporate lobbyists, but also environmental groups, advocates for spending on
virtually every disease known to man, and individual wealthy donors like the
casino magnate Sheldon Adelson or the infamous Koch brothers, Charles and
David, who can on their own raise nearly as much money as either one of the two
parties. The amount of money in American politics has increased by more than an
order of magnitude since the late-1990s; fund-raising now constitutes the major
preoccupation of all office-holders, particularly members of the House of
Representatives who have to stand for re-election every two years.
The constitutional structure bequeathed by the Founding
Fathers intensifies the effects of polarisation and interest group capture.
Compared to the parliamentary democracies of Western Europe, the American
system spreads power out widely, among many competing branches of government.
In the presidential system, the executive and legislature are effectively
supposed to check one another; in a powerful upper house of the legislature,
supermajorities (60 out of 100 votes) are required to pass ordinary
legislation; a Supreme Court can invalidate acts of Congress, and in recent decades
has taken it upon itself to make social policy; and, truly substantial powers
remain with the states and localities. Each one of these power centres can
potentially veto action by the system as a whole.
Add polarisation and the rise of powerful interest groups
into this system, and the result is what I have labelled vetocracy: that is, a
situation in which special interests can veto measures harmful to themselves,
while collective action for the common good becomes exceedingly difficult to
achieve. Vetocracy isn’t fatal to American democracy, but it does produce poor
governance. This is evident in one of the government’s most basic tasks,
producing an annual budget. The federal budget has not been passed under what
is labelled “regular order” for more than a decade now. Each year there has
been a showdown between Democrats and Tea Party Republicans, who threaten
either not to pass a budget at all or not to raise the debt ceiling (an absurd
refusal, which would involve reneging on US sovereign debt). In 2013, just as
in 1996, the brinkmanship led to a complete government shutdown, during which
federal workers were under criminal sanctions if they simply showed up at work.
Vetocracy has many other malign effects. The 10,000 page US
tax code is a disgrace, an incomprehensible catalogue of exemptions or
subsidies, special privileges slowly built up in past compromises, layer by
sedimentary layer. The US, with one of the highest headline rates of corporate
taxation, would do well to cut this rate in exchange for eliminating all these
breaks. Budget experts in both parties agree in principle that it should be
done, not least to encourage US multinationals to bring home the $2 trillion in
cash they have stashed abroad. But in practice, a veto-clogged Congress is not
even able to get rid of the hated “carried interest” provision, which grants
private equity investors and hedge fund managers a lower tax rate than everyone
else.
I define “political decay” as the capture of political power
by well-organised interest groups that bend the system to their own interests,
at the expense of broader public interests. A decayed system is also one that
cannot fix itself, because those entrenched interests and ways of thinking
prevent reform. The American political system has undergone decay over recent
decades as well-organised elites have made use of vetocracy to protect their
interests. This does not mean that the country is no longer democratic; it
means that there is a crisis in representation as some Americans have much more
weight in the political process than others. This perception of unfairness
gives rise to the second important social condition which affected the outcome
of the election, which is inequality.
Inequality and class resentment
Inequality has risen over the past generation. The broad
figures about the concentration of wealth and income in the top 10 per cent of
the top 1 per cent are well known. What was less recognised until the current
campaign was what was going on in the lives of the other 99 per cent.
When people on the American left have considered inequality,
they have traditionally thought first about African-Americans in inner cities,
undocumented immigrants, or other marginalised minorities. Poverty among these
groups continues to be a major problem, but the burden of growing inequality
has fallen on a different stratum: the old white working class, which has now
suffered three generations of deindustrialisation. As both Charles Murray and
Robert Putnam, social observers from opposite ends of the political spectrum,
have documented, America’s most important social fracture is no longer race or
ethnicity, but class, defined by level of education.
||Trump may well
accelerate the established trend for a significantly reduced American role in
the world||
The diverging fortunes of university graduates and school
dropouts is startling, and shows up not just in income statistics, where
workers with only a basic education often make less than their fathers or
grandfathers, but also in social dysfunctions like family breakdown, and drug
addiction: during the primary season, the number one issue in largely white and
rural New Hampshire turned out to be heroin abuse. Methamphetamine use has
spread across rural America and children of single parents are being left to
fend for themselves. There is a huge alienation on the part of rural and less
educated people, and resentment that their urban fellow-citizens ignore their
plight.
The white working class has not been well represented by
either party. Republican elites come from corporate America, and advocate free
trade and open immigration—what could be called the Wall Street Journal
worldview. Working-class whites may have often voted for Republican candidates
on the basis of cultural issues like guns and abortion, but the hierarchy has
not shown concern for their economic interests. Trump proved masterful in
stoking the rage that resulted—and today his supporters are often more enraged
with orthodox Republicans like Paul Ryan, the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, than they are with the Democrats.
But the Democrats have also lost touch with the white
working class. They have won national elections by cobbling together coalitions
of different identity groups: African-Americans, Hispanics, Asians,
environmentalists, and the LGBT community. Women have been important too, but
perhaps more particularly relatively educated women of feminist leanings: the
outrage over the tape of Trump bragging about how he had groped women was felt
more keenly among educated women than their working-class sisters, the majority
of whom voted for Trump. The white working class was, until recently, an
identity group that was not even perceived as particularly disadvantaged; as a
result, the Democrats largely ignored them.
This transformation has been years in the making. Back in
the 1930s, huge majorities of rural whites voted for Franklin Roosevelt’s New
Deal coalition; they were often the chief beneficiaries of initiatives, such as
the Tennessee Valley Authority that brought electrification to the rural south.
After the Democrats passed the civil rights legislation of the 1960s, they
began to drift to the Republicans, defecting in large numbers to Ronald Reagan
in particular. Bill Clinton won many of them back in the 1990s, and Obama was
able to hold on to enough to get elected twice. But their alienation from the
Democrats exploded in a year when their candidate made the right noises about
helping them, but seemed a cultural world away.
The success of populism in 2016 should thus not be shocking.
The financial crisis of 2008 was the responsibility of an economic elite, but
it was ordinary working class citizens who lost their jobs as a result. With
neither party offering the white working class a home, economic marginalisation
coincided with marginalisation in a political system that favoured those with
money and status. The real surprise ought to be that the populist uprising did
not come sooner.
Fixing the facts
One of the more troubling aspects of this year’s campaign
was the debilitating effect of social media. Back in the 1990s, the avatars of
the internet revolution believed that the new technology would be liberating;
since information was power, its easy availability would have a democratising
effect. This view appeared to be validated by democratic protest movements from
Kiev to Yangon to Tahrir Square.
But whereas the internet has democratised access to
information, it has not necessarily improved the quality of information—and it
has exacerbated the effect of selective truths or even outright mis-information
on politics. One has only to look at Russia to see how this works within an authoritarian
state. Vladimir Putin has been perhaps the world’s largest purveyor of bad
information. He has created new narratives out of whole cloth, such as the idea
the Ukrainian nationalists were crucifying small children, or that the
Malaysian airliner MH-17 was shot down by Ukrainian forces. Such propaganda has
been startlingly effective within Russia: whereas many citizens were dismissive
of official news sources back in the days of the former Soviet Union, they have
responded far more positively to the nationalist line promoted by today’s
Kremlin. When it comes to international relations, the ambition is not
necessarily to promote a positive view of Russia, but simply to scramble the
politics and upset the governance of his rivals. Hence the Russians gave
support to the “Leave” forces in the Brexit referendum and the secessionists in
the Scottish referendum before it, and in an even more daring assault on
democracy Putin intervened in the US election campaign, where—according to the
US intelligence community—Russian hackers stole information from the Democratic
National Committee, hacked the email account of the Clinton campaign chair John
Podesta, and dribbled what they found out through Wikileaks to try and damage
Clinton. Some well-informed commentators have even been highlighting the
vulnerability of electronic voting machines, raising the spectre of even more
direct distortion of democracy.
Trump has, remarkably, worked hand-in-glove with Russian
sources. He has steadfastly refused to criticise Putin, and in fact has
compared him favourably to his own president, Obama. He has cast doubt on the
intelligence briefings he himself received, saying that it is uncertain what
the source of the leaks was, and has parroted Russian positions on the
legitimacy of the Crimea takeover. Many Republicans have now followed his lead,
seamlessly shifting from blaming Obama for being too soft on Putin, to saying
that the US needs to get along with him better. The effects of this could be
profound, but America had no need to import most of the internet-enabled
distortions of the recent campaign: it was producing plenty at home.
The wider Trumpian war on truth has done even more damage,
by demonstrating that there is no electoral penalty to be paid for unremitting,
blatant lying. Trump has lied or, more often, put bad information out on his
Twitter feed, casting doubt on big issues—like whether President Obama was born
in the US, or whether crime is at an all-time high—and also distorting the
record on more personal questions, as when he claimed he hadn’t supported the
Iraq War before the fact (even though old television footage caught him saying
that he did). Trump refuses to distinguish between facts emanating from
statistical agencies like the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and anecdotes he
reads in gossip magazines such as the National Enquirer. He has cast doubt on
the impartiality of US agencies from the Federal Reserve to the FBI when it
suited his purposes, charging them without evidence of being corrupted by the
Clinton campaign. Most recently he tweeted that he had actually won the popular
vote due to three million illegal voters, an assertion with no empirical basis.
With every “fact” read on the internet seeming to weigh
equally with every other “fact,” the compartmentalisation of worldviews of the
electorate has been re-enforced. Mark Zuckerberg can protest to the contrary,
but the self-selecting nature of so much political conversation is impossible
to dispute, and so—increasingly—are the adverse consequences of that reality
for America’s political discourse.
||Rewriting trade
deals could lead to a downward global spiral reminiscent of the 30s||
For there are a significant number of Americans who will
simply not believe anything they hear from a mainstream media source like the
New York Times or CNN, and who will engage in wild conspiracy theories to
explain away inconvenient information, believing, for example, that Trump did
so poorly in the debates only because Clinton had an earpiece through which she
was being fed her answers. Normally, conspiratorial thinking is the product of
powerlessness, and indeed many of Trump’s supporters have felt ignored and
despised. But he has stoked these tendencies for his own benefit in ways that
bode ill for the future of democratic deliberation in America.
Democracy’s revenge
A month on from the election, there are still major
uncertainties about how Trump will actually govern. The first concerns his true
character. He is both a transactional businessman who wants to get deals done
and an extremist conspiracy-monger, who has suggested that he will pursue
staunchly nationalistic policies. When he confronts the reality of having to
run a big, unwieldly government and deal with intractable foreign leaders, will
the transactional or the extremist side take over?
Will he follow through with punitive tariffs against China
and risk a trade war? Will he carpet-bomb Syria? Will he follow through on the
logic of where such dangerous moves would lead, and turn his back on the
referees of the liberal world order, such as the World Trade Organisation or
even the United Nations? Will he go even further, as some of his wilder remarks
have implied, and cease to feel bound by concordats that have long restricted
how wars are conducted, such as the Geneva Convention? Will he authorise
strikes against the families of terrorists? No one at this stage knows.
If Trump was elected because of discontent both with a
dysfunctional political system and the plight of the working class, could the
new president offer any hope of addressing either problem?
With regard to the US’s decayed political institutions, I am
not at all optimistic. Trump has not put forward any institutional solution to
the state’s capture by powerful interest groups, other than some proposals to ban
revolving-door lobbying by government officials. The problem here is the sheer
volume of money in politics, and a system that gives lobbyists far greater
access to legislators than is permitted in parliamentary democracies. The money
issue cannot be addressed in light of Supreme Court decisions like Buckley vs
Valeo and Citizens United vs FEC, which argued that political donations and
spending on lobbying are a form of free speech and therefore constitutionally
protected. Trump’s only avowed solution is that he is rich enough not to be
bribed, and that he is someone, indeed, who is rich enough to regard it as
cheap advertising for his brand to turn down the presidential salary of
$400,000. Quite apart from the fact that he seems eager to continue to maximise
his business interests as president, he offers no long-term route to, as he
puts it, “draining the swamp.”
On the issue of inequality and the plight of the working
class, his major proposals—renegotiating trade deals and cracking down on
illegal immigration—are unlikely to yield the positive effects he promises, and
indeed may spark retaliation by other countries that will lead to a downward
global spiral reminiscent of the 1930s. This is where the matter of character
will kick in: if Trump finds he can’t get serious concessions from trade
partners, does he walk away, as per his extremist persona, or does he simply
settle for the best deal he can get?
There are however other areas where Trump might be more
successful. The deadlock that has prevailed for six of Obama’s eight years is
due to the two polarised parties holding different branches of government.
Obama was able to pass the Affordable Care Act and the Dodd-Frank bill
regulating banks because he had Democratic majorities in both houses of Congress.
Now the shoe is on the other foot, with the Republicans in control of both
branches. Log jams like the 2013 sequester that put a cap on spending across
the whole government will be lifted. Congress will have an easier time passing
budgets and enacting legislation. This does not mean the legislation will be
good, but at least things will start happening in Washington again. That
damaging sense of a frustration, no minor ingredient in the alienation, with a
government that simply “can’t get anything done” could begin to ease—even,
paradoxically, at a time when the Congressional majority is of an ideologically
anti-government bent.
Away from trade, there is one area where Trump could do some
good for his working-class supporters: infrastructure. The American Society of
Civil Engineers estimates that there is a $2 trillion deficit in infrastructure
spending; both Trump and Clinton made big promises to invest. Such spending
will create many working-class jobs and may provide a welcome stimulus. Trump
may have a better chance of pulling this off than his Democratic rival, not
just because he is a developer, but because much opposition to infrastructure
spending in the past has come from the Tea Party wing of his own Republican
Party. Had Hillary won the Electoral College, she would have been hobbled from
the off by an angry Republican Congress eager to block all her initiatives;
Trump by contrast will have more of a mandate to move ahead.
The broad Republican victory should not mask the fact that
there are huge contradictions within the party between the orthodox Ryan-style
conservatives who want globalisation and reduced social spending, and the
working-class Trump supporters who want the opposite. This battle will soon be
joined as the new administration formulates its first budget. We could get the
worst of both worlds: large tax cuts for the wealthy (which look like a
priority, after Trump appointed the long-time Goldman Sachs banker Steven
Mnuchin as Treasury Secretary) and cuts in social programmes like Obamacare,
all combined with economic protectionism and inflamed ethnic intolerance. The
appointment of Breitbart executive Steve Bannon as White House strategist and
Republican National Committee Chair Reince Priebus as Chief of Staff are
suggestive of exactly that sort of compromise. On the other hand, Trump seemed
to back off his promise to eliminate Obamacare entirely, and he may find
himself stuck with his predecessor’s signature achievement as he realises that
he cannot easily replace it with something “wonderful.”
The implications of the Trump victory for US foreign policy
are much more disturbing. Trump has expressed admiration for a run of
dictators, from Putin to Xi Jinping. He is the first major party candidate for
whom promotion of a democratic world order—for so long at least notionally the
calling of the US—has absolutely no resonance. Not only is he unwilling to
criticise Putin, but he seems eager to cut a deal with him early on in his
administration; the sanctions imposed by the US and Europe in response to
Russia’s meddling in Ukraine and annexation of Crimea would be the first
casualties of such an encounter.
Unlike Reagan, who restored a strong US leadership position
in the world after Jimmy Carter’s post-Vietnam retreat, Trump may well
accelerate the trends already begun under Obama for a significantly reduced
American role in the world. This is why a character like Julian Assange, the
founder of Wikileaks, was so eager to help him and hurt Clinton. In sum, even
if his election was in part a response to America’s sense of decline in the
world, the consequences could be to redouble it.
The book on Trump is still not written. We must to await the
coming months to see which man, the deal-maker or the extremist, comes to the
fore. But Trump’s victory also represents the latest stage in a global shift
toward populist nationalism, a pattern whose meaning is starting to become
frighteningly clear.
That trend encompasses Brexit and the rise of right-wing
anti-EU, anti-immigrant parties across Europe. In some sense, these
developments—like Trump—are a delayed popular reaction to globalisation, and
the economic and cultural dislocations that it has wrought in the name of a
freedom that doesn’t stop at the border. The “democratic” part of liberal
democracy is, in other words, now rising up and taking revenge on the “liberal”
part. If this trend continues elsewhere in the world we will be in for a very
rough time of competing and angry nationalisms.