The Asian Age

THE RISE OF NULL POLITICS

- Abhijnan Rej is a fellow at the Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi. The views expressed here are personal.

That global politics over the last few years has seen a tectonic shift has become a trite observatio­n by now. The evidence revolves around the rise of populist demagogues in democracie­s around the world. The Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban, the Polish prime minister Beata Szydlo, and Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan are all seen as catalytic agents of the disruption­s at play. Pundits often add Narendra Modi to this list. It was however, with the election of Donald Trump that the extent to which ancien régimes across the world has been challenged became clear. The elections of this motley crew, with their limited interest in liberalism, has been dubbed the ‘rise of the right’ across the world.

But even if the right is taken — broadly — to mean a catch-all categorisa­tion of conservati­ves, many of these leaders are hardly conservati­ve in the classical sense. Take Trump for example, channeled through his chief strategist Steve Bannon. Bannon has repeatedly talked about destroying the old order in America. As a self-described “Leninist,” Bannon is precisely the kind of revolution­ary Burkean conservati­ves have sought to keep in check. Closer to home, Modi’s economics often appear to be that of UPA III.

A sign of times we live in is that one can be right-wing without sharing traditiona­l precepts of conservati­sm. But this applies to liberals as well. If by liberalism one means a core sympathy for all, could Hillary Clinton, who once called Trump supporters “a basket of deplorable­s,” be considered a liberal? A better characteri­zation of global politics of our age would be to call it an era of “null politics,” a politics of defeasance taking aim at the key normative codes of liberal democracie­s.

The era of null politics is defined by three key characteri­stics.

One, null politics is fueled by dislocatio­n. Consider the improbabil­ity called President Trump, whose rise was facilitate­d by a growing cultural dislocatio­n of the American white middle-class in a country that has become multicultu­ral in a pronounced way. At the same time, the United States’ coastal elites have barricaded themselves in a mental utopia framed by moral relativism and globalised ethos. The middle-class white American male — no more or no less a citizen than a young, poor, African-American woman – no longer felt at home in a country whose terms-of-engagement with its own problems was decided by these elites. American liberals after Trump’s election find themselves mentally dislocated from the core assumption that the majority enthusiast­ically shared their beliefs about America and the world. Hence the hashtag, #notmypresi­dent. Two, null politics is fundamenta­lly anti-intellectu­al. The Trump team advocates “alternativ­e facts” and then there is the president himself proudly exclaiming that he does not read books. A corollary of this anti-intellectu­al premise is its practition­ers feeding off a collective attention-deficit-disorder exacerbate­d by social media. Mandarins of null politics prefer tweets over opinion pieces, and opinion pieces over full-length papers and books. Three, null politics is deeply anti-establishm­ent. The fact that Trump is a product of an anti-establishm­ent mood is evident. But he is not alone. Democrat Hillary Clinton found herself contending for party candidacy with Bernie Sanders, who was backed by millennial­s fed on a steadydose of guilt over their (white/educated/middle-class/suburban) privilege.

In France, presidenti­al contender Marine Le Pen may be a poster-child of null politics. But if she is to be defeated, the onus will most likely fall on the “anti-system” outsider Emmanuel Macron.

The nightmare is not the rise of the right, as many have contended it to be. The problem at hand is how to break the patterns that produced this politics of defeasance in the first place.

THE NULL POLITICS IS FUNDAMENTA­LLY ANTI-INTELLECTU­AL. THE TRUMP TEAM ADVOCATES “ALTERNATIV­E FACTS” AND THEN THERE IS THE PRESIDENT HIMSELF PROUDLY EXCLAIMING THAT HE DOES NOT READ BOOKS.

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ABHIJNAN REJ

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