The Scotsman

The free world waits

● Today, the people of the United States choose their president in what could be an era-defining election. This is why their choice matters to Scotland

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There are some who take the view that the US presidenti­al election between Donald Trump and Joe Biden does not really matter all that much to people in Scotland. They are dead wrong.

For, while a Trump victor y would not cause any immediate, tangible harm, it would send an alarming message that would fundamenta­lly undermine what we have come to regard as the “Free World” – the countries where demo cracy is an important institutio­n to be fostered and defended, where politician­s are held to account if they lie, and where leaders subscribe to the idea of internatio­nal co-operation to solve problems that affect us all, like climate change and the Covid pandemic.

The current US President’s most significan­t act in relation to climate change was to renege on America’s signature of the Paris Agreement, with its withdrawal from that landmark internatio­nal treaty due to take place tomorrow.

And his foolish, arrogant and bizarre responses to Covid-19 have included his decision to withdraw the US from the World Health Organisati­on.

His apparent hostility towards Na to, the military alliance set up to protect democracy against the

tyranny of communism, has led some to fear that the US could quit that body too, although the outgoing US ambassador to Na to, Kay Bailey Hutchison, claimed last week Trump had “come to the realisatio­n that Nato is very valuable "– not a statement any of her predecesso­rs would have needed to make.

In sharp contrast, Trump has displayed a fawning attitude towards de spots like Vladimir Putin, S audi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammedb in Sal man and even North Korea’s Kim Jong Un.

After Trump met Putin in Helsinki, the late Re pub lican Senator John McCain described it as “one of the most disgracefu­l performanc­es by an American president in memory. The damage inflicted by President Trump’s naivete, egotism, false equivalenc­e and sympathy for autocrats is difficult to calculate”.

All this matters. When Trump called bin S alman a “friend of mine” after the murder of Washington Post journalist and Saudi dissident Jamal Khashoggi in a Saudi embassy, the message was clear – the American President, an office once worthy of the title ‘the Leader of the Free World’, does not care if government­s kill people they do not like.

Giving carte blanc he to ty rants will only encourage more and there are plenty of ‘populist’ world leaders willing to subvert democracy for the sake of power. If they are in need of a simple how-to guide, they should look no further than Trump and his sinister friends in the global illiberal elite.

The first step is to attack the

media. Trump is the man who made the idea of “fake news” globally famous despite the fact that he is a proven, serial liar. The news organisati­ons he has accused of spreading fake news include some of the most respected names in journalism: the New York Times, the Washington Post, NBC News, CNN, the BBC… the list is almost endless. There is a simple reason: he has no other answer to honest reporting about him. At some point, all journalist­s who tell the truth about Trump will be accused of faking it.

This tactic enables his sup - p or ters to dismiss any thing critical about Trump and also draws them further into a conspiracy theorist-style web of deceit. Trump’s mendacity was exposed for all to see when he visited the UK in 2018. After the Sun newspaper reported his criticism of then Prime Minister Theresa May, Trump claimed it was “fake news” and that a recording of the interview would prove it. However, the Sun’s own recording demonstrat­ed their account was accurate.

Similarly, Dr Anthony Fauci, a world-leading expert on infectious diseases who has served under both Republican and Democratic presidents, has found himself under public attack by Trump for daring to speak the truth and offer his profession­al opinions about the Covid pandemic. At a weekend rally, when Trump supporters began chanting “Fire Fauci”, he replied “don't tell anybody but let me wait 'til a little bit after the election”.

Trump, the self-declared “very stable genius ”, has no time for experts, for people who know what they are talking about, or for science if it contradict­s his arrogant opinions.

This is what life was like for scientists in the Soviet Union. Reporting honest, scientific findings that challenged some aspect of communist dogma or caused a problem for the dictators who enforced it would be a bad career move at best. “Fire Fauci” is a threat that is likely to be carried if Trump wins and it will make other officials more cautious about telling the truth, more eager to massage reality to fit whatever fiction Trump has decided to turn into fact.

If America falls into such a wretched condition, it will suffer the consequenc­es just as it has been suffering from Trump’ s mi is handling of the Covid pandemic. The Free Wor rld will lose its leader, possibly for good, and populist liars seeking to em mulate their hero will prolife-rate.

We hope Scotland will prove to be immune to Trumpism but, regreta-bly, there truly is no guarantee.

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 ??  ?? FOUNDED 25 JANUARY 1817
FOUNDED 25 JANUARY 1817
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