In my last post on the US election, I forecast victory for Donald Trump. That was just before Joe Biden stood down – which happened within hours. In a postscript I suggested that the economy and immigration would still swing the election for Mr Trump. So it proved, though as I watched Mr Trump melt down in the first months of Kamala Harris’s candidacy, I thought she might do it – even comfortably. But then Mr Trump’s campaign stabilised, and returned to consistently hammering the points that would swing voters, and he won comfortably. I thought Ms Harris fought a good campaign in the circumstances, but she had no answer on those two critical themes.
And so an earthquake has hit US politics. Mr Trump is much better organised than he was in 2016, and his personnel changes in the American state will be more sweeping. Meanwhile the complacency of the Democrats after beating him in 2020 has been badly exposed: there will surely be something of a clearout on their side. I don’t go along with the idea that this is the most consequential election of our times (which could be applied to 2016, 2020 or 2028 with equal merit) – but the changes will be drastic. To me it evokes nothing more than that what we experienced in Britain after the Brexit referendum in 2016.
Of course 2016 was when Mr Trump was first elected, and we thought that was a Brexit moment too. But his first administration descended into muddle and was reversed in 2020. The equivalent of the first phase of Brexit happened – the chaos after the referendum result as the country turned rudderless, but not the second – which started with Boris Johnson’s landslide election victory in December 2019. It is the equivalent of that second phase that is starting now in America. At first Mr Johnson’s election victory overawed everybody. His supporters projected their favoured outcomes onto the result, and there was much hubris, as his opponents retreated to lick their wounds.
The similarities between Mr Johnson and Mr Trump are striking. Both won by making a series of impossible promises and relying on humour and bluster to persuade voters to give them the benefit of the doubt. Both are personally quite transparent – what you see is what you get – giving a feeling of authenticity compared to other politicians. Both favour loyalty among their choices for political office over competence. They even both have brought in highly intelligent mavericks to spice up their administrations (Dominic Cummings in Britain, Elon Musk in America). It did not go well for Mr Johnson: his chaotic regime collapsed in not much over two years, getting himself replaced by an ideologue who destroyed what was left of his party’s reputation (Liz Truss) – a mess that his eventual successor, the lightweight Rishi Sunak could do nothing to reverse. It was the most spectacular reversal of political fortunes in British history. Will this history repeat? A chaotic regime which results in Mr Trump bowing out prematurely, followed by an even more disastrous lightweight ideologue (JD Vance)?
Maybe. But we need to think about the differences between the two situations. Firstly the two men. Mr Johnson is by far Mr Trump’s intellectual superior, but he had little organisational experience. He couldn’t run a whelk stall, in the British expression. Mr Trump is an experienced businessman, who certainly could run a whelk stall (“the best whelk stall in all the world”), even if his track record is nothing like as good as he says it is. He may not be particularly intelligent in the normally accepted (left-brained) sense, but he has drive, stamina, confidence and intuition that make him very effective in his own way. His management style is chaotic, but there is more method to his chaos than with Mr Johnson, and he is more adept at blaming others if anything goes wrong (Mr Johnson did this too, but without the same chutzpah). And America’s president is far more entrenched constitutionally than Britain’s prime minister, who is at the mercy of parliament. Mr Trump thrives on attention and status, which the job of US president delivers more than any other – it is hard to see him voluntarily letting go. This would take some sort of physical health issue – though this is a clear risk at his age.
But there are going to be problems. His administration will be peopled by chancers and mavericks, who will under-deliver. That happened last time, though in a different way to what is likely to happen this. In the short term I see this as doing little political damage to him though. There will be ethical issues galore – but (unlike for Mr Johnson) these have little capacity to damage him. Failure to deliver on practically anything doomed Mr Johnson and his successors (even Brexit had a big flaw in Northern Ireland); Mr Trump’s downfall is likely to be over-delivery. Mr Trump has made three major policy promises: the mass deportation of irregular immigrants; the raising of tariffs; and reducing taxes. Even partial delivery on these promises will make America worse off. They might have longer term economic benefits (though I’m a sceptic) but these will not come through in time.
It is very hard to see how Mr Trump’s deportation strategy will unfold – it is so unprecedented. But he has laid huge store on it. At a minimum it will create huge uncertainty in the country’s labour markets, and surely many labour shortages. He may try to releive the shortages by relaxing legal immigration, though this looks politically suicidal, but that won’t happen without massive disruption. This disruption will lead to inflation – with the highly sensitive area of food prices looking especially vulnerable. Inflation was the economic event that did most damage to Mr Biden’s reputation, and it will upset many of those that voted for him on the basis of his supposed economic competence.
Something similar will happen on tariffs. These are so obviously harmful that many of Mr Trump’s business backers assume that his policy is simply a negotiating tactic. Nothing, it seems, will dampen their wild optimism, reflected in a stock market rally. But tariffs are central to Mr Trump’s economic outlook. He appears to think that they will be costless to consumers, and raise revenue with which he can cut income taxes. Besides, it is surely hard to negotiate the kind of change to the terms in trade that he so wants. High tariffs will raise the prices of imported products and so inflation. This may not be as disastrous for America as it would be for some others, like Britain, who depend more on trade. But if prices are already going up because his migrant policy has disrupted labour markets, it doesn’t look good.
And then there are tax cuts. Many of Mr Trump’s business supporters set huge store on these, but there is a real problem with the country’s already-huge budget deficit. Adding to this deficit will be inflationary – one of the things that undid Mr Biden. His regime may want to balance this through drastic cuts to public spending (though not to defence), but there is not enough beureaucratics waste, wokery and foreign aid to deliver anything like enough – which would find him cutting into entitlements such as pensions (social security) and medical schemes. That won’t be an easy sell.
All three of Mr Trump’s main economic policy ideas point to inflation and administrative chaos. This will create stormy seas quite unlike his first administration. This is another difference from Brexit, which has proved to be a slow bleed rather than the big dislocation that some predicted. With his regime’s reputation for economic competence shattered there is liable to be a big backlash.
That should be an opportunity for the Democrats – just as Mr Johnson’s collapse was an opportunity for Labour in Britain. It is also possible that a different strand of populist radicalism emerges from the Republican side to take over. Meanwhile in the wider world, the retreat of America from its leadership position will force others to step up. There will be too much collateral damage for this to be a nice thing to watch – but it will be fascinating if you can see beyond that.
What’s the connection between the election of a ultra right wing politician in the USA and the UK’s decision to leave the EU?
It’s not as if the USA hasn’t had full control of its own legislative procedures. No-one has been writing directives on how the USA should run its railways, or what it’s budget deficit shouldn’t exceed.
There may well be popular discontent in the USA but no-one can say that the political and economic situation isn’t entirely of the USA’s own making.
Well the obvious link is that both moves are seen as a vote against a liberal “elite” establishment. Also while Americans feel their country is sovereign, they don’t think their leaders have put “America First” – so it was a vote to use that sovereignty more aggressively, rejecting international treaties and organisations such as the UN. I also think that many voters will soon start to feel that they overreacted and regret their vote.
Of course there are big differences – mainly arising from the fact that America is a superpower and we are a medium-sized power in relative decline.
If voting for an ultra right party or person is “a Brexit moment”, is the progress of the ultra right in the EU also a series of “Brexit moments” or “near Brexit moments”?
I know it’s not an easy concept for those of a centrist/liberal disposition but many of us on the left voted against the EU for good socialist reasons. We may not have been in a majority but there were enough of us to make a significant difference.
What you really mean is that there is a disconnect between what might be termed the professional and managerial classes and the working classes. The same people who supported the worker and student uprisings in France in 1968 and the miners strikes in Britain in the 70’s and 80s don’t support the working classes any longer. In turn, the working classes are less inclined to support them.
At one time we’d expect working class areas to vote for parties of the left and more prosperous areas to vote for parties more to the right. Issues like the EU used at one time to cut across party lines. This no longer applies. Keir Starmer has seen to it that there is now no MP in the party who previously presented a pro-Leave argument. If there is I’m struggling to name one. We don’t have anyone like Tony Benn or Denis Skinner in Parliament any longer. There is still plenty of, perhaps formerly, Labour voters who take the same line though.
There’s far more to it than Brexit. It’s just one of the symptoms of a significant political dislocation.
There is a book, “Virtue Hoarders: The Case against the Professional Managerial Class”, by Catherine Liu, which tackles this very issue and which I should try to read over the Christmas break.
“For as long as most of us can remember, the professional managerial class (PMC) has been fighting a class war, not
against capitalists or capitalism, but against the working classes. Members of the PMC have memories of a time when they were more progressive—during the Progressive Era, specifically. They once supported working-class militancy in its epic struggles against robber barons and capitalists…..”
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/23/oa_monograph/book/82543/pdf
“If voting for an ultra right party or person is “a Brexit moment”, is the progress of the ultra right in the EU also a series of “Brexit moments” or “near Brexit moments”?” – that could be the case if they get into government in my framing – though I don’t think Georgia Meloni taking power in Italy was a real “Brexit moment” as the process was too gradual for that.
I don’t actually disagree with your analysis – there is a clear tension between the professionals who dominate politics across the board (and especially on the left) and the working classes (to say nothing of a lot of what used to be called the “lower middle class”). Of course the PMC will take over those allegedly pro-working class movements too (look at the US). Modern politics is mainly a factional battle between elements of the PMC with working class concerns constantly demoted when it comes to the crunch. And that does worry me, although that may not be so apparent from my writing.