The Weekly Voice

Here’s what America’s allies think about a potential Trump second term

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By Frida Ghitis

A few months ago, friends in the Netherland­s asked me who I thought would win the 2024 US presidenti­al election. They nodded placidly when I said I thought the odds favored President Joe Biden, but nearly jumped out of their seats when I said former President Donald Trump has a notnegligi­ble chance of returning to the White House.My friends, it turned out, had not been paying close attention. They thought Trump was history. Now they know better. Europe and much of the world has awakened to the real possibilit­y that the twice-impeached, twice-indicted Trump might be the Republican nominee, and they are growing alarmed.

And if Europeans —and Ukrainians and South Koreans and Taiwanese — are concerned, Americans have far more reason to worry. Trump’s chaotic presidency didn’t achieve many of its goals because of the inexperien­ce, incompeten­ce and lack of discipline of key members of his administra­tion, along with the strength of US democratic institutio­ns and the people who worked to safeguard them.

But a second term might be different. Admittedly, much can happen before the election. The GOP primaries could surprise, and Trump’s legal troubles could get in his way. For the moment, however, his primary opponents are mostly not gaining traction. Sixteen months from now, he could be on his third straight presidenti­al ticket.

I’ll predict that anyone who thought the Trump presidency was disastrous — and polling shows that includes many Americans and most citizens of America’s allies — will find Trump 2.0 even more cataclysmi­c. Trump now has a strong operation in developing meticulous plans for a possible second term. The overarchin­g goal is to make the former president more powerful than ever, enabling some of his autocratic inclinatio­ns.

In a second Trump administra­tion, according to those plans, the Department of Justice could lose its independen­ce, coming under full control of the president, who would be able to mobilize it against his foes and protect his friends. Other independen­t agencies, those regulating the media or monopolies would also lose their autonomy if the strategy succeeds.

Trump vows to dismantle educationa­l accreditin­g organizati­ons and appoint his people to oversee colleges and universiti­es, so that he can get rid of “Marxist maniacs and lunatics,” as he explained with characteri­stic nuance.The president’s power would reach every aspect of government if, as he promises, he reinstates “Schedule F,” an executive order that would make it possible for tens of thousands of federal workers to be fired at the president’s whim and replaced with his acolytes.

Trump’s backers, meanwhile, working at a new think tank, are compiling lists of loyal Trumpists to fill key positions. Anyone with misgivings about the January 6 pro-Trump assault on the Capitol would reportedly be disqualifi­ed.

Seeking to maximize his control, Trump is vowing to reserve the authority to “impound” congressio­nally approved funds for projects he opposes — an autocrat’s dream that was declared illegal by Congress half a century ago.And, as an inveterate climate denier, a more experience­d Trump — now with the Republican Party in his thrall — would likely move to weaken, if not altogether end, efforts to slow global warming. He also would end birthright citizenshi­p, stripping away the automatic right to be an American by virtue of being born in the US. Meanwhile, memories of Trump praising dictators from his earliest days in office, while insulting America’s allies, are coming back. When Trump was asked on CNN last May if he wants Ukraine or Russia to win the war, he wouldn’t answer.

Instead, he declared, “I will have the war settled in 24 hours,” confirming fears that US support of Kyiv would falter under a president who has never uttered a negative comment about Russian President Vladimir Putin — even now that Putin is being accused of war crimes — and who appeared to defend Russia’s 2014 theft of Crimea.

With his comments, Trump provided more evidence to those of us who believe Putin wants to prolong the war long enough that during a second administra­tion he would pull the rug out from under Ukraine. He might also pull it out of NATO. Europeans vividly remember Trump’s first appearance at a NATO summit, when he had trouble bringing himself to say the US would abide by its Article 5 obligation to come to an ally’s assistance. Many worry Trump would withdraw the US from NATO — a move that would hollow out the alliance and leave the US much weaker. One of America’s greatest strengths is its vast network of internatio­nal alliances. But many of America’s friends don’t trust the former president.

The very notion that Trump could become president again is reviving European concerns about Washington’s reliabilit­y even now, after the Biden administra­tion has rebuilt US alliances. NATO is now stronger and more united than it has been in decades, perhaps ever. But a US president has enormous power. US allies know that. Putin knows it too.

Before the 2020 election, I wondered if Taiwan might survive a second Trump term. China’s goal of taking the democratic island may have been delayed after Beijing saw the ferocity of Ukraine’s resistance, but the Taiwanese people are uneasy about Trump. After repeated assurances from President Joe Biden that the US stands with Taiwan, observers there now say, “Taiwan must be ready for a second Trump term unfavorabl­e to Taiwan’s security.”

They remember the then-president praising Chinese leader Xi Jinping — “We love each other” he said, just before the pandemic — even as Beijing continued to crush Hong Kong’s democracy. Trump was hard on China but only on trade, and to shift blame as the US performed dismally on the pandemic. Nothing else mattered. Trump had little concern for human rights or democracy.

South Koreans, too, are fretting about a Trump return. As president, he bullied that long-time ally while flirting with its mortal foe, North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un, saying the two leaders “fell in love” — one of many times the former president has cozied up to a dictator.

South Koreans are passionate­ly proAmerica­n, but they suffered from deep anxiety about Trump during his presidency. Some 9 in 10 had a positive view of their alliance with the US. But views of Trump have been dismal, as they have been in much of the world.

When he entered the White House, only 9% of South Koreans had a favorable view of Trump, although a Gallup poll in 2018 showed an uptick in his approval to a still

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