Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

What the US election is really about

- By Eric Posner, exclusivel­y for the Sunday Times in Sri Lanka Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2020. www.project- syndicate.org

CHICAGO – Next month’s United States election is not about policy, nor is it even about President Donald Trump. It is about America’s constituti­onal system. This is not to suggest that the election could end that system. While Trump has an authoritar­ian temperamen­t and admires dictators like Russian President Vladimir Putin, he is unlikely to become an autocrat even if he is re-elected. The real question that America faces concerns the role of the national government in the life of the country.

Trumpism is just the latest in a series of populist waves born of anger toward what people see as unaccounta­ble, self-interested political elites in Washington, DC. Indeed, the story begins before that city was founded. The American Revolution targeted remote, self-interested elites in London, and it was soon followed by a major dispute over the power of the national government.

Critics argued that the proposed new Constituti­on would create a national governing elite, thus underminin­g the hard-won sovereignt­y of the colonies-turned- states. Though the Constituti­on’s proponents prevailed, the critics proved prescient. Almost immediatel­y, populist movements emerged to challenge what was seen as elite rule. Jeffersoni­an democracy overthrew the Federalist elites in 1800, and then

Jacksonian democracy overthrew the Jeffersoni­an elites in 1829.

This wave of populism was temporaril­y overtaken by the debate over slavery and the Civil War, but it roared back in the late nineteenth century. This time, it was led by southern and mid-western farmers who believed that they were being ignored by the two main political parties, and exploited by the banks and railroads those parties served. The Populists invoked Jackson as their hero, attacked the entire political system as corrupt, and formed their own People’s Party to advance their interests.

The next great wave of populism came during the Great Depression of the 1930s. Politician­s like Huey Long, Louisiana’s governor and then a US senator, came to power by promising to redistribu­te wealth from the rich to the poor. Long accused establishe­d politician­s of plutocracy, and attempted to undermine all competing power centers, from the state legislatur­e to the university system. By the time he died, in 1935, he had attracted a significan­t national following.

The last flare-up of populism before now was in the 1960s, when Barry Goldwater, the Republican nominee for president in 1964, expanded his appeal nationally by claiming that the federal bureaucrac­y (“big government”) was responsibl­e for all of America’s problems. Such anti-elitism was also common on the left, which blamed a racist, imperialis­t establishm­ent for the Cold War and interventi­on in Vietnam.

The logic of populism is simple and powerful: If things go badly, the blame lies with the government and the elites who run it. While American populists have attacked state government­s, the federal government has always been their primary target because of its remoteness. People may trust local politician­s and their own representa­tive or senator. But other than the president and congressio­nal leaders, federal officials are largely faceless.

All populist movements burn out when their internal contradict­ions overtake popular enthusiasm. Populists loathe the elites, but cannot rule without putting their own elites in power. Jeffersoni­an democracy yielded a one-party state run by Virginia planters; Jacksonian democracy produced a corrupt party system controlled by bosses and profession­al politician­s; the Populist movement lost momentum when, to make political progress, it threw in its lot with the Democratic Party. And sometimes populists are outmaneuve­red by establishm­ent politician­s or lose power as conditions improve. Roosevelt moved left to counter the Longian populism of the 1930s, and the populism of the 1960s collapsed with the end of Jim Crow and the Vietnam War.

Trumpian populism should be divorced from Trump, who has ridden a political wave that he neither initiated nor controls. Its main source is anger at the advance of cultural liberalism, economic stagnation, and inequality – all of which have been blamed, with more or less justice, on national elites and the institutio­ns they dominate. This same wave helped the relative outsider Barack Obama defeat the establishm­ent candidates Hillary Clinton and John McCain in 2008, though Obama was a technocrat by temperamen­t and governed accordingl­y.Trump’s attacks on institutio­ns and norms, culminatin­g in his refusal to guarantee a peaceful transition of power, are veering toward nihilism.

And that brings us to the election next month. We do not yet know whether the twenty-first-century populist wave that brought Trump to power has exhausted itself. It is possible that the pandemic has reminded people of the virtues of expertise and profession­alism in government. But so many Americans have invested themselves fully in opposing the unelected bureaucrat­s of the “deep state” that Trumpism could live on without its namesake, perhaps led by a new tribune – threatenin­g more years of chaos and division. Only a truly decisive defeat for both Trump and the Republican­s can prevent that from happening.

Eric Posner, professor at the University of Chicago, is the author, most recently, of The Demagogue’s Playbook: The Battle for American Democracy from the Founders to Trump (All Points Books, 2020).

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