Cape Times

Trump’s comic-book status like a Japanese anime movie come to life

- Donovan E Williams

WHAT is so wrong with populism? This question has bothered me for quite some time.

Is democracy not about the majority ruling? Therefore, how can the majority rule without popularity? And doesn’t popularity, coupled with majority support, actually imply legitimacy?

I have been thinking about these questions a lot because of a universall­y unpopular character, Donald Trump.

I do not think there has ever been a United States president more unpopular than Trump. George W Bush was probably more ridiculed than Trump, but not as despised.

It is so difficult to find anything positive to read about Trump. The majority of the news is either making fun of him or quoting another hate-filled media statement or tweet.

Statements by the mogul-turnedpres­ident are reported without any context and because he tweets so much, his 140 or 280 character tweets are usually all we read.

There seems to be no attempt at analysis.

The classic image of a bull in a china shop, destroying everything in sight, and not caring about the consequenc­es, is constructe­d. He is trailer trash in the White House!

Trump, though, does nothing to convince us that he isn’t an overbearin­g bully. He has been insensitiv­e, openly racist and boorishly sexist.

He is either threatenin­g Mexico, or insulting Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau. Who can forget Trump saying that he found his daughter, Ivanka “hot” and if he was not her father he would be dating her?

It’s as though he has stepped

right off the pages of a comic-book.

But there’s a constant nagging thought at the back of my mind. He cannot be that bad and yet still be elected president of the US. Obama invaded Libya, ordered 10 times more drone attacks than Bush jnr, bailed out Wall Street bosses etc, but was not treated with such disgust.

This unfair reporting cannot be correct.

The Trump presidency has been responsibl­e for some remarkable things.

First, he pulled out of the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p (TPP), which Obama had signed. TPP had allowed private American companies to sue government­s if they tried to change clauses in this agreement.

Second, in the June G7 meeting, Trump insisted that the North American Free Trade Agreement have a sunset clause. The other G7 members, like Angela Merkel, wanted the agreement to unfairly last indefinite­ly.

Third, Trump has engineered a rapprochem­ent and thawing of relations with North Korea. He has ventured where no other Western leader has dared to tread. Fourth, he has developed a friendly relationsh­ip with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Russia and the US have enough nuclear arms to blow up the earth a number of times.

Although these actions and their probable outcomes are good, it is by accident and not design.

These actions do not mean that Trump is just misunderst­ood and a good guy.

Any efforts to correct the unfair and unbalanced global governance system should be supported but Trump’s actions are not aimed at redressing the inequality.

On the contrary, Trump is attempting to construct a new world order with individual countries lining up to have bilateral relations with the US.

It is relations based on power, without the semblance of co-operation.

Trump is essentiall­y destroying the global multilater­al system and placing himself at the centre of the world. It is like a Japanese anime movie come to life.

Indeed, a recipe for an unstable world.

Inadverten­tly, Trump reveals the dangers of populism and if we do not embrace a progressiv­e internatio­nalism.

When you rely on populism, you play to the lowest common denomin- ator, and you can only do that for a limited period before sliding into demagoguer­y. Populists generally always become demagogues.

There is no accountabi­lity, no respect for systems and institutio­ns. Trump’s populism is based on support of the white middle and working classes of the US, because of the failure of the establishm­ent to share the benefits of the economy.

Depending on which position you occupy on the spectrum, you can choose who to hate.

His populist actions though, will not undo system failures – they only mask it by creating an environmen­t of hatred and mistrust, resulting in increasing inequality and meaningles­s fights.

Real change does not make friends, rather it creates durable institutio­ns and fair systems.

Williams is a regular social commentato­r and activist.

Shannon Ebrahim is on leave. She returns to The Global Eye on August 31

 ??  ?? DONALD TRUMP
DONALD TRUMP
 ??  ?? PROTEST: Keep Your Coins graffiti by UK artist and activist Bansky.
PROTEST: Keep Your Coins graffiti by UK artist and activist Bansky.

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