Stabroek News

The Race to Challenge Trump

- By Michael J. Boskin

STANFORD – With the first debate between Democratic candidates just four months away, the 2020 US presidenti­al campaign is off to an early start. This election will be hugely consequent­ial for the United States, its allies and adversarie­s, its trading partners, and the global economy. US policy on trade, energy, corporate taxation, debt, defense, climate change, and more is on the line.

It is far too early to predict the eventual Democratic nominee, let alone whether he or she will win the presidency in 2020. But with 12 candidates already in the race, Democrats clearly believe that President Donald Trump is extremely vulnerable (his job-approval rating currently hovers around 44%). An early take on the Democratic field is therefore in order.

Attention so far has focused on the senators: Kamala Harris (California), Cory Booker (New Jersey), Kirsten Gillibrand (New York), Elizabeth Warren (Massachuse­tts), Amy Klobuchar (Minnesota), and Bernie Sanders (Vermont). Former Vice President Joe Biden is expected to join the race; in early polling, he runs first, and Sanders second. Michael Bloomberg, the billionair­e former mayor of New York, Senator Sherrod Brown (Ohio) and media sensation Beto O’Rourke may also run.

The current Democratic candidates fall into two camps. Those on the far left (Sanders, Warren, Harris, Booker, and Gillibrand) favour a huge expansion of government along Scandinavi­an democratic socialist lines. This entails higher taxes on the wealthy and corporatio­ns,

Michael J. Boskin, Professor of Economics at Stanford University and Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institutio­n, was Chairman of George H.W. Bush’s Council of Economic Advisers from 1989 to 1993. and a government-run health-care system. They also support a radical restructur­ing of American energy under the so-called Green New Deal, which is being backed by new Democratic congresswo­man Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, among others. The initiative calls for retrofitti­ng every building in the US for green efficiency, rapidly phasing out fossil fuels, and replacing much air travel with a national high-speed rail system. Also included is the left’s “social justice” wish list of guaranteed jobs and vacations, and a basic income for those “unable or willing to work.”

By contrast, the likely centre-left candidates – Biden, Klobuchar, Bloomberg, and Brown (if they run) – favour more incrementa­l policy proposals, claiming that the country is willing to go only so far and can afford only so much. All will claim they can win the presidency with the support of undecided independen­ts and moderate Republican­s.

If history is any guide, candidates who are not incumbent presidents rarely waltz to their party’s nomination. Bill Clinton eventually won the 1992 Democratic nomination after recovering from potentiall­y fatal setbacks early in his campaign. And on the Republican side, John McCain was down and almost out before roaring back to capture the 2008 nomination.

Some of the Democratic candidates for 2020 may also overcome inevitable early stumbles. These include Warren’s controvers­ial DNA test that disproved her Native-American heritage, Booker saying that the world can’t continue eating meat because cow flatulence emits methane, and Harris planning to eliminate employer-provided health insurance, upon which most Americans now rely. One of these three may even record an upset and become president. Or they may secure the nomination, fizzle on the big stage, and fade to an historical footnote, like George McGovern, Walter Mondale, and Michael Dukakis.

There is far less uncertaint­y among Republican­s: barring a lightning strike, Trump will easily be renominate­d. Former Massachuse­tts Governor William Weld is a minor distractio­n, while former Ohio Governor John Kasich also is considerin­g a challenge. Ex-Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz may run as an independen­t, enraging Democrats who fear he would siphon off votes from their candidate.

The most important factor in the 2020 election will be

the state of the economy, which is currently very strong, thanks in part to Trump’s tax reforms and his rollback of stifling Obamaera regulation, although only a fraction of voters give him credit for this. In addition, Trump can appeal to likely Republican voters by pointing to some of his other major firstterm accomplish­ments. These include the start of military rebuilding, the appointmen­t of two conservati­ve Supreme Court justices, and new (albeit risky) approaches to North Korea and China.

The challenge for Trump in 2020 will be to persuade enough voters in the middle to give him another four years, despite their discomfort with some of his behaviour. It remains to be seen whether Trump can tone down his tweeting to offend fewer potential voters and, as in his recent State of the Union address, reach for bipartisan compromise on important issues, as he recently did on major legislatio­n to reform the criminal justice system.

Polls show that Democrats most value a candidate who can defeat Trump. Should Trump’s reelection prospects weaken, this could increase the likelihood of a far-left Democratic nominee with a radical agenda. But if Trump’s approval ratings improve, such a nominee could spell electoral disaster for the Democrats.

If the 2020 election is close, the result will hinge on a modest number of contested states, some of which are in the Midwest and are home to working-class voters who feel under assault from national Democrats. The Green New Deal will not go down well with Pennsylvan­ia’s frackers, Ohio’s coal miners, and the region’s electricit­y consumers. Nor will the left’s cultural agenda.

As of now, the best thing going for the Democratic contenders, absent an economic downturn, is Trump’s behaviour, whereas Trump’s best hope is the radical policy agenda of many Democratic candidates. If these trends continue, the 2020 presidenti­al election could be as dramatic and unpredicta­ble as the last one.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019. www.project-syndicate.org

 ?? This article was received from Project Syndicate, an internatio­nal not-for-profit associatio­n of newspapers dedicated to hosting a global debate on the key issues shaping our world. ??
This article was received from Project Syndicate, an internatio­nal not-for-profit associatio­n of newspapers dedicated to hosting a global debate on the key issues shaping our world.
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 ??  ?? Minister of Natural Resources Raphael Trotman (left) greeting South Africa’s Deputy Minister of Mineral Resources Godfrey Oliphant yesterday morning before the start of the meeting
Minister of Natural Resources Raphael Trotman (left) greeting South Africa’s Deputy Minister of Mineral Resources Godfrey Oliphant yesterday morning before the start of the meeting

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