The New Zealand Herald

Trump’s most challengin­g year

The US President faces battles at home and abroad, including scrutiny he has never experience­d before

- Ian Bremmer comment Ian Bremmer is the president of Eurasia Group and author of Us vs Them: The Failure of Globalism.

Donald Trump has started 2019 locked in a fierce political battle with new House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a fight he will lose. He can’t force Democrats to apportion money for a wall between the United States and Mexico, but influentia­l conservati­ves in media threaten to punish him if he retreats. He’ll eventually find a way to surrender while declaring victory. And then his year will become even more complicate­d.

Trump’s 2019 “to-do” list is formidable. He must help restore confidence in the US economy after three months of the worst US stock market meltdown in many years, and he must accomplish this at a time when global economic growth is beginning to look soft.

He must reassure the world that the US and China are not on a course towards endless trade conflict or a Cold War-scale military confrontat­ion while addressing the genuine security concerns of those who believe China continues to take advantage of the US, its companies, and its workers.

He will need to show real progress toward denucleari­sation of the Korean Peninsula by persuading North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that he can’t get something for nothing. He must persuade critics that the vague promises made last year

in Singapore hold promise without allowing Kim to continue with clandestin­e nuclear developmen­t.

He needs to deliver the promised withdrawal of US troops from Syria without appearing to cede power and influence in the Middle East to Russia and Iran — and without leaving Kurds and other allies at the mercy of Turkey’s president and his military. Trump must execute this retreat without losing whatever confidence the US Defence Department still has in his leadership.

He must begin to prepare for reelection. With low approval ratings, growing doubts among his core supporters, and after a loss of historic scale in November’s Midterm

elections, he must discourage any Republican from challengin­g him for the party’s nomination, and he must find a way to break the momentum that Democrats now enjoy.

The obstacles he faces are daunting. China’s Xi Jinping can’t be seen to buckle under Trump’s pressure, and China’s political and economic system gives the Chinese leader formidable weapons with which to limit damage to China’s economy. Russia’s Vladimir Putin can treat Trump as a compromise­d figure, and Europeans who have long called for less reliance on US protection­s now have the best case they’ve ever had. The cost of partnershi­p with Trump is rising for leaders of

countries who can afford to ignore him, and an “America First” foreign policy driven by Trump’s capricious personalit­y makes the benefits less clear.

On the domestic front, Trump was elected in part because he had no experience in government. In that sense, he was the embodiment of change. The downside for Trump is that he is still unsure how government actually works. Nancy Pelosi is as experience­d, savvy, and ruthless an adversary as the President could expect to face.

The party Pelosi leads has real power for the first time since Trump was elected, and Democrats intend to use it to subject him to a level of scrutiny Trump has never experience­d. They will subpoena both documents and members of his Administra­tion to testify under oath on any number of sensitive subjects, and Trump’s patience, poise, and selfconfid­ence will be tested. Special Counsel Robert Mueller will continue to probe nearly every aspect of Trump’s public life. Whether weeks or months away, the report of his findings will shake Washington like nothing we’ve seen in a generation.

The greatest risk for Trump is that Republican­s — voters and lawmakers — decide they can no longer afford his leadership. The daily “outrages” reported by the press and repeated by incredulou­s Democrats won’t sway Trump’s most loyal supporters or their elected representa­tives. But if Trump comes to be seen as a loser — because foreign leaders are ignoring him, Democrats are thwarting his plans, the economy is turning, and especially if polls begin to signal he can’t win — there is a risk they will abandon him.

We’re still some distance from that point. Those who underestim­ate Trump’s political instincts are making a mistake. There have been few figures in American public life who better understand the sources of fear and anger that drive his most reliable followers, and Democrats may nominate a presidenti­al candidate that pushes Republican­s back towards Trump.

But 2019 is sure to be the most challengin­g year of Trump’s life.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? US President Donald Trump, right, and Vice-President Mike Pence face a tough opponent in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, left.
Photo / AP US President Donald Trump, right, and Vice-President Mike Pence face a tough opponent in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, left.
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