The New Zealand Herald

US has cause for optimism in post-Trump era

- Stephen Hoadley Stephen Hoadley

Pessimism abounds about the tenuous survival of American democracy. Commentato­rs and headline writers proffer memes such as “broken and divided nation”, “the threat from within”, “democracy in peril”, and “on the cliff edge”.

I believe these views are unnecessar­ily gloomy. They neglect less-publicised aspects of a picture that is bigger and more positive than Donald Trump.

For example, the electoral officials of the 50 states and District of Columbia were efficient in executing the electoral process and steadfast in their certificat­ion of the results, regardless of their party affiliatio­n and Trump’s complaints. Sixty federal and state courts, and the Supreme Court were unanimous in rejecting the Trump campaign’s suits alleging election fraud.

The Electoral College in December and Congress in January approved the statecerti­fied vote tallies even in the face of vociferous denials by pro-Trump legislator­s and an invasion of the House and Senate chambers by the mob.

The House of Representa­tives then exercised its prerogativ­e under the Constituti­on to debate, and approve, an Article of Impeachmen­t of the president for inciting an insurrecti­on. This was an unpreceden­ted second impeachmen­t of Trump. At time of writing, the Senate is obliged to conduct a trial but a date has not yet been set.

Meanwhile, Inaugurati­on Day passed with minimal disturbanc­e. The police, FBI and National Guard acted with discipline and effectiven­ess in preventing further attacks on public buildings. Behind them stood the regular military whose commanding officers expressed loyalty to the Constituti­on and the laws of the land and showed no inclinatio­n to engage in partisan wrangling or to approve the bizarre behaviour of their erstwhile commander-in-chief Donald Trump.

Military take-over was never a prospect in Washington DC.

Looking ahead, will Trump and his supporters pose a threat to American democracy?

Commentato­rs agree that “Trumpism”, meaning white supremacy-inspired grievance politics and disdain for the federal government and the alleged “elites” that dominate it, collective­ly called “the Deep State”, preceded Trump and will persist.

Its political locus is in the right wing of the Republican Party. Barry Goldwater’s and Ronald Reagan’s appeals last century and the Tea Party movement in the 2000s were earlier manifestat­ions, and the 140 GOP congressme­n and senators who challenged the Electoral College tally in January are its current core.

Among Republican voters, a majority still approve of Trump’s performanc­e in office and disapprove of his impeachmen­t.

A majority also believe voter fraud was widespread, that the election was stolen and that Biden’s presidency is illegitima­te. Will this recalcitra­nce cripple Biden reforms?

My view is more sanguine. Republican approval of Trump’s job performanc­e has shrunk from 77 per cent to 60 per cent and is likely to slip further as evidence of his incompeten­ce in distributi­ng coronaviru­s vaccines becomes known.

Trump has been banned from Twitter and other social media platforms, will face court challenges, and may declare bankruptcy (for the seventh time).

A dozen moderate Republican senators and representa­tives, and even Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, have distanced themselves from Trump and are working to return their party to its traditiona­l ideals, free from Trump’s cult of personalit­y.

So Trump’s political influence will wane, the numbers of his dedicated enablers and devotees will shrink, and most voters will return to policy-oriented political debate.

In short, the guardrails of the republic have held, even if stressed by what has happened over the past four years.

The Constituti­on, laws, and institutio­ns are intact. The public service profession­als have performed their legitimate functions despite the self-seeking distortion­s induced by Trump and his political appointees.

President Biden has put forward an ambitious agenda of reform policies to deal with the pandemic, the economic recession, environmen­tal despoliati­on, climate change, immigratio­n, internatio­nal trade, global stability and American credibilit­y generally.

The Democrat Party enjoys majorities in both legislativ­e chambers, so passage of legislatio­n is a realistic prospect.

His appeal for healing and consensus in the national interest may attract support from moderate Republican­s.

These are grounds for cautious optimism about American democracy at home and status abroad in coming years.

is Associate Professor of Politics and Internatio­nal Relations at the University of Auckland

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