Gulf News

Spectre of ethnic nationalis­m is real

The Left now needs to decide on how to respond to the growing challenge, but it hasn’t been effective enough so far

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virulent nationalis­m, tinged with bigotry, is on the rise across much of the world. It helped elect Narendra Modi in India and sustains Vladimir Putin in Russia. It has vaulted Marine Le Pen to the final round of the French election. She is the underdog in the runoff, but it’s chilling to see that last week, she seemed to have won voters under the age of 34. In the United States, Donald Trump won the White House despite — and partly because of — his disdain for Mexicans, Muslims and AfricanAme­ricans and his flirtation with anti-Semitic tropes.

In the face of this ethnic nationalis­m, citizens often face difficult choices. They have to decide how much of a priority to place on combating it. Should voters eschew their favourite candidate and vote for one with the best chance to defeat the nationalis­t? Should policy experts be willing to work in an administra­tion that plays footsie with intoleranc­e? Should a museum dedicated to fighting hate, like the US Holocaust Memorial Museum, host a hateful president?

These choices often end up being more complicate­d than they first seem, and I don’t want to suggest otherwise. But a disturbing pattern is still emerging. Too many people — well-meaning people on both Left and Right — have grown complacent about nationalis­t bigotry. They are erring on the side of putting other priorities first, and ethnic nationalis­m is benefiting.

Let’s start on the political Left. And, no, I’m not about to lapse into false equivalenc­e. Ethnic nationalis­m is largely a force of the Right. But the Left needs to decide how to respond, and it hasn’t been effective enough so far. It has underestim­ated the threat and put smaller matters ahead of larger ones.

After France’s first round of voting, leftist candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon refused to endorse the last person who can prevent Le Pen from becoming president, Emmanuel Macron. A Le Pen presidency, to be clear, would likely tear Europe asunder, marginalis­e French citizens who hail from Africa and the Middle East and lead to a big expansion of security forces. It would be the biggest victory for Europe’s far-right since the Second World War, by far.

Yet, Melenchon still won’t back Macron — a centrist former banker who was until recently a member of the Socialist Party. It’s a classic case of political purism that may feel good, but can do grave damage. Just look at the US. Updated presidenti­al vote totals show that Trump’s margins in Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin — which together would have swung the result — were smaller than the tally of Jill Stein, the Green Party candidate. It’s impossible to know whether Stein’s campaign cost Hillary Clinton the election, yet it clearly hurt.

In a tricky spot

I understand that this point enrages backers of Stein and Melenchon. They have real difference­s of opinion with centre-left candidates, and they want to win those debates. But the final round of an election that includes a viable white nationalis­t isn’t a time to hash out the future of progressiv­e politics. It’s a time to defeat racism.

The Holocaust Museum has put itself in a tricky spot. It invited Trump to give a major speech on Tuesday morning, much as previous presidents have done. Of course, previous presidents didn’t retweet neo-Nazi sympathise­rs, vilify Muslims or try to airbrush Jews out of the Holocaust. By conferring the museum’s prestige on Trump, the museum’s leaders have a new responsibi­lity to call out future dog whistles from the administra­tion.

Finally, there is the political Right. Most Republican­s despise the notion that their ideology makes room for bigotry. Theirs is the party of Abraham Lincoln and of individual freedom, they say. Fair enough. But that history brings responsibi­lities. Today’s Republican Party has plainly made room for white nationalis­m, via Steve King, Steve Bannon, Jeff Sessions and Fox News, not to mention the president.

If the Holocaust Museum is now invested in Trump, Republican­s are really invested in him and his fellow nationalis­ts. You don’t get to call yourself the party of Lincoln and stay silent when voting rights are abridged, hate crimes are met with silence and dark-skinned citizens are cast as un-American.

I never expected to live through a time when bigotry would again be as ascendant. But we are living in that time, and it brings a new set of choices.

David Leonhardt is the managing editor of a new New York Times website covering politics and policy. He was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for Commentary in 2011.

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