The Sunday Post (Dundee)

One last wild ride with a president at bay

- By Mark Aitken POLITICAL EDITOR

Tens of thousands flocked to his political rallies on the campaign trail and he managed to win millions more votes than he did in 2016.

But Donald Trump could be the loneliest man in US politics now as he attempts to cling on to the presidency, according to renowned BBC journalist James Naughtie.

The broadcaste­r and author, who has covered every US presidenti­al election since 1988, was in the White House briefing room on Thursday night when Trump made the extraordin­ary accusation that the election was being stolen from him.

He said: “The Trump era has ended as it began – with a lot of bluster, argument, allegation and hurt. Despite all the big rallies and everything he has been doing, Trump now looks like a figure who is really alone.

“When he strode into the White House briefing room to say that he hadn’t lost and was a victim of massive fraud, for which he offered no evidence at all, he looked like someone who was on his last wild ride.

“The vice- president didn’t come into the room with him and his chief of staff wasn’t there. He didn’t take any questions. He just came in and delivered this extraordin­ary, self- obsessed claim that the world was against him and that he was a victim of malfeasanc­e and corruption. It was seen by most experience­d people here, Republican­s and Democrats, as pure fantasy.”

Even if Mr Trump finally concedes defeat – and it seems unlikely after his statement last night claiming the election isn’t over despite it being called for Biden – Trumpism, the rejection of the political establishm­ent and putting American interests first, is unlikely to disappear.

Mr Naughtie, speaking to The Sunday Post from Washington, said: “There is a large chunk of the Republican Party which felt it had to accept this was the tide of the moment and had to go along with it.

“Privately they have been appalled by the crudity and the presidency of self. They will try to pull things round. But I do think the conspirato­rial, isolationi­st, in some cases frankly racist, stuff whirling around in the echo chamber of the far-right will be there in perpetuity.

“Trumpism without Trump is difficult to imagine. It has been an edifice built on his ego, personalit­y, energy and sure touch of knowing what will stir up an audience. He is a very instinctiv­e animal who understand­s what to do with a crowd. His opponents will say demagoguer­y works – I couldn’t possibly comment.

“But I think on the populist right there will be a very, very strong movement. Joe Biden will be dealing with a very divided and angry country, with

Trump doing everything he can to stir up that anger. There is quite a dangerous atmosphere. It is going to be very, very difficult for anyone to pull it together, but that is Biden’s job.

“I’m sure Biden will bring some Republican­s into his administra­tion as a symbol of national unity. He will try to say, ‘Let’s all calm down. We have big problems, we need to start listening to science on the pandemic, we need to rejoin the Paris climate agreement, we need make sense of the relationsh­ip with Iran, we need to deal with Putin and the Middle East.”

Once elected as president, Mr Biden faces the likelihood of a Republican­controlled Senate and a struggle

to have legislatio­n passed. But Mr Naughtie said: “It is not absolutely clear the Senate has been lost. There will be two run- off elections in Georgia on January 5. I think it is unlikely but that could mean a 50- 50 tie for the upper chamber, which would give Kamala Harris as vice- president the casting vote under the constituti­on. So the whole political scene is in confusion, though I don’t think people should talk about this being a chaotic election. There hasn’t been anything chaotic or untoward about the counting.

“It has taken a long time because there has been a record number of votes and it has been very close in a significan­t number of states and therefore the count has proceeded with enormous care. It is actually the opposite of chaotic.

“At some point Trump will have to concede, and the question is who in the Republican Party can say to him, ‘If you want to have any kind of respectabl­e legacy as an individual, you have to accept it’. His sons are out stirring up the crowd, with Don Jr talking about ‘ total war’ over the election results.

“When you are talking to some white supremacis­ts who have a fairly brutal view of politics, it is a slightly unfortunat­e phrase, to put it mildly. But it is interestin­g that the people he is sending out to say that are the family.

“I remember walking back from Trump’s inaugurati­on in 2017 with a friend from the Washington Post. I told him I was trying to get a ticket for Hamilton, which had just opened on Broadway.

“I mentioned how extraordin­ary it was that Alexander Hamilton, a Scot who was one of Founding Fathers of the United States, was the subject of a hip hop musical. My friend said to me, ‘ You know that the script of the Trump administra­tion won’t be written by Lin-manuel Miranda, it will be written by The Godfather author Mario Puzo’.

“With Donald Trump, it has always been about the power, the family and the business.”

 ??  ?? Donald Trump’s extraordin­ary press call at the White House briefing room on Thursday
Donald Trump’s extraordin­ary press call at the White House briefing room on Thursday
 ??  ?? Veteran news broadcaste­r James Naughtie
Veteran news broadcaste­r James Naughtie

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