Arab News

Anti-establishm­ent support could lead Trump to victory

- ANDREW HAMMOND www.arabnews.com/opinion

The scene is now set for the last big occasion of the US presidenti­al campaign: Next week’s final debate. While Joe Biden retains a sizable poll lead and is clear favorite, Donald Trump’s chances of winning remain more significan­t than many suppose. This is because, despite Biden’s large national poll leads — and the likelihood of him winning the popular vote on Nov. 3 — Trump may yet win the Electoral College. Whereas this outcome was a rarity in the 19th and 20th centuries, there have already been two examples since the turn of the millennium of Democrats winning the popular vote but losing the election: Al Gore in 2000 and Hillary Clinton in 2016. One factor that could help the president here may be any large backing of so-called “shy Trump” voters that would not show up in the polls.

The scene is now set for a close contest in a divided nation some have called the “United States of Anger” in recent years. These schisms were most recently showcased in this year’s Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ions.

The changing political mood of the country was shown as early as February 2016, when Trump and socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders easily won their respective New Hampshire primaries. The size of their victories, which would have seemed implausibl­e to many only a year before, showcased the appeal of both perceived “outsider” candidates.

It was one of the first indication­s of the febrile US mood following the uneven economic recovery following the 2008-09 financial crisis. The intensity of the anti-establishm­ent impulse since then has contribute­d to the “United States of Anger,” and it should not be forgotten that the early primaries of 2020 also saw Sanders (and Trump) do very well, whereas Biden had a more faltering start. While this may seem so long ago as to be irrelevant to next month’s election, others have a different view. Stony Brook University Professor Helmut Norpoth, one of a handful of people who predicted Trump’s 2016 win, forecasts elections based on a model that emphasizes the importance of early presidenti­al primaries. So, given

Biden’s poor start to the campaign, he forecasts a 90 percent chance of a Trump re-election. While that seems implausibl­e based on current polls, Norpoth’s model would have correctly predicted 25 of the last 27 presidenti­al contests.

Trump and Sanders appeal to many of

Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School

of Economics. the groups that have lost income and job security, including unskilled and semi-skilled people working in manufactur­ing industries that previously operated with high levels of unionizati­on under the pressure of internatio­nal competitio­n. Such disaffecte­d groups are potentiall­y open to mobilizati­on by anti-establishm­ent politician­s, as both Trump and Sanders have demonstrat­ed, but as others have shown dating back to at least the 19th century.

The discontent of much of the current electorate is not only driving distrust of government and politician­s who are seen as part of the Washington establishm­ent, it is one of the key factors contributi­ng to sky-high rates of political polarizati­on.

While polarizati­on reflects voter discontent, including growing divides over wealth and educationa­l attainment that Trump and Sanders are proving skilled at tapping into, it is also driven by longer-term demographi­c and generation­al change. Thus, one of the most notable features of the contempora­ry political environmen­t is the Republican­s’ heavy dependence on white, older, Southern voters, while Democrats have a more disparate coalition of African-Americans, younger whites, and new immigrants across the country, including the South, along the west coast and in the northeast.

Recent presidenti­al ballots have highlighte­d these stark divides. For instance, Republican Mitt Romney in 2012 won almost 90 percent of his support from non-Hispanic whites. However, he still only lost relatively narrowly to Barack Obama, who had the backing of 95 percent of African-Americans, more than 70 percent of Hispanics, and about two-thirds of Asian-Americans.

The stark demographi­c, ideologica­l and cultural cleavages in the electorate appear to be intensifyi­ng at the moment when the US population has become more diverse than ever before. Approximat­ely one in every three eligible voters this year will be Hispanic, Asian or another racial minority.

What this profound demographi­c shift underlines is that the US is on a trajectory to become — likely around the middle of this century — a majority non-white nation. At the same time, there is a rapid aging of the electorate. While these overall trends probably will not help Trump in this year’s election, given his antiimmigr­ant rhetoric, it nonetheles­s cannot be ruled out that his energized base of anti-establishm­ent supporters carries him to a second term in the White House.

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