The Scotsman

Henry Mcleish: US is on brink of Trumpian dystopia

Trump’s strategy in the US midterm elections is a political masterstro­ke, writes former first minister Henry Mcleish

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The US is experienci­ng the most turbulent, poisonous and partisan politics since I first started visiting the country nearly 40 years ago. With a week to go before the midterm elections, the future compositio­n of the House of Representa­tives and Senate is inextricab­ly linked to the fortunes of President

Donald J Trump in a battle of two Americas.

From my vantage point in San Antonio, Texas, where there is a remarkable struggle between veteran Republican

Ted Kruz and his charismati­c, Bobby Kennedy-like Democratic opponent Beto O’rourke, the US has never looked so divided, so devoured by intoleranc­e and so lacking in political respect for competing ideas and values. It is like Brexit – but much worse!

Trump’s successful exploitati­on of identity politics and “cultural wars” are hollowing out any lingering notion of a unified American dream or any sense of bipartisan­ship, which now seems a relic of a bygone age.

The US remains a country of bewilderin­g complexity, a remarkable melting pot of diversity, and there are burning issues to be addressed. But the midterms will focus on little of that. Instead this will be a referendum on Trump’s first two years.

The battlegrou­nd of the final week will be the relentless pursuit of Trump’s immigratio­n obsession, fuelled by the so-called organised caravan of thousands of migrants heading towards the US border from Latin America and described by the president as transporti­ng “Middle Easterners”, gangs and criminals. This is for his base, which is being asked to nurture a resurgent racism, religious intoleranc­e and the often-unstated idea of the superiorit­y of white America. Addressing the lack of respect some people feel, linking this to an assault on their patriotism, blaming immigrants and wrapping it all up in the supposed superiorit­y of “real” Americans is a political master stroke.

The president uses traditiona­l and modern forms of public engagement. Tweets and old-style rallies for the faithful, White House events promoting politicall­y useful groups and organisati­ons designed to stir the base, and finally some relaxation on the golf course, actually quite a lot of that. All of this is with an eye to the 2020 presidenti­al election.

For the Democrats, the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, has emerged as a vital issue with growing fears the Republican Party will scrap important provisions. And removing pre-existing conditions from the act is also worrying many of the Republican base.

With the electorate hopelessly split, the Democrats are finding it difficult to put together a plausible narrative to promote what a progressiv­e America might look like, freed from the tyranny of the Trump White House and a Republican-controlled Congress. Trump is manipulati­ng raw emotions, building on the anger and resentment of people who have lost out and, with tax cuts, judicial appointmen­ts and deregulati­on, courting crucial influentia­l business figures, evangelica­l and special interest groups – for example, on abortion and guns.

The president is loyal to himself and his base, and appears to lead a movement, not a country. So much so that the recent terrorist campaign against prominent

liberals, in which the suspect is a selfdeclar­ed Trump fanatic, is now raising awkward questions about Trump’s mocking of opponents and the incendiary language used to fire up his base.

For those outside the US, who are concerned about the wrecking-ball mentality of much of the Trump team, there is an anticipati­on that the Democratic Party will make progress and be able to blunt Trump’s attacks on the rules-based world order.

All 435 members of the House of Representa­tives and a third of the 100 Senate seats are up for election. There is growing confidence that the Democratic Party will win the 24 seats necessary to regain control of the House. Top political pollster Nate Silver has given the Democrats an 84 per cent chance of doing that. This would provide protection for the Mueller inquiry into possible collusion between the Trump election campaign and the Russians, which Trump has threatened to close down. The start of any potential impeachmen­t process would also be under the control of the Democrats.

Taking the Senate is more problemati­c for the Democrats as there are 26 seats held by the Democrats and only nine held by the Republican­s up for election. The Senate changing hands would be a politicall­y seismic event, although in this febrile atmosphere nothing should be ruled out.

The Republican­s are in a poor political shape, but it is important to remember this election is about Trump, not their silent acquiescen­ce to his excesses: important to note that in recent polling, both his base and Republican voters overall are sticking by their man and Trump’s approval ratings are climbing! There are, however, signs of mounting anxiety among the Republican leadership in Congress.

The Democrats have also experience­d internal problems as its left wing has sought to oust those on the right, while the national leadership looks tired and uninspirin­g.

Much of the outcome of the midterm elections will depend on demographi­cs, the size of the turnout, which is notoriousl­y low, and the extent to which each party can energise their supporters. The Democrats are hoping that Latinos, African Americans, young people and women will respond enthusiast­ically to the call to vote.

This will be a battle of bases, a dialogue of extremes, a disrespect­ful exchange of views, a rejection of solidarity and civility, and the disintegra­tion of that layer of agreement and understand­ing that once supported a healthier and more purposeful level of political discourse in the US.

If this was a more settled era in US politics, there would be a raft of big issues to be debated: inequality, the economy, the threatened destructio­n of precious environmen­ts in Alaska, climate change, poverty, health care, data protection, voter suppressio­n, opioid drug-taking and borders and migration policy.

Not to mention a raft of foreign policy issues which are seriously worrying the European Union and other US allies.

Instead, the US is fast approachin­g a near-dystopian reality. Trump is allconsumi­ng. The White House is the stage. Capitol Hill has become an increasing­ly irrelevant side-bar to the needs of the president. A confusing foreign policy, the rejection of consensus and co-operation, and a new authoritar­ian nationalis­m go hand-in-hand as Trump attempts to shape a new global order and emboldens others in Europe to follow: a Europe where history has seen this all before.

November 6 will be a day of reckoning. Donald Trump will either encounter his first setback at the hands of the people or obtain some form of an endorsemen­t of his brand of divisive and exclusive politics. It’s an American election certainly, but the world is anxiously looking on.

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 ??  ?? 0 Donald Trump’s approval ratings have been going up ahead of the US midterm elections
0 Donald Trump’s approval ratings have been going up ahead of the US midterm elections
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