Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Hillary’s dangers

Elite groupthink can lead to elite folly

- Ross Douthat is a syndicated columnist for The New York Times.

Avote for Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump, the Clinton campaign has suggested in broad ways and subtle ones, isn’t just a vote for a Democrat over a Republican: It’s a vote for safety over risk, steady competence over boastful recklessne­ss, psychologi­cal stability in the White House over ungovernab­le passions.

This theme has been a winning one for Hillary, in her debates and in the wider campaign, and for good reason. The perils of a Trump presidency are as distinctiv­e as the candidate himself, and a vote for Mr. Trump makes a long list of worst cases — the Western alliance system’s unraveling, a cycle of domestic radicaliza­tion, an accidental economic meltdown, a civilian-military crisis — more likely than with any normal administra­tion.

Indeed, Mr. Trump and his supporters almost admit as much. “We’ve tried sane, now let’s try crazy,” is basically his campaign’s working motto. The promise to be a bull in a china shop is part of his demagogue’s appeal. Some of his more eloquent supporters have analogized a vote for Mr. Trump to storming the cockpit of a hijacked plane, with the likelihood of a crash entirely factored in.

But passing on the planecrash candidate doesn’t mean ignoring the dangers of his rival.

The dangers of a Hillary Clinton presidency are more familiar than Mr. Trump’s authoritar­ian unknowns, because we live with them in our politics already. They’re the dangers of elite groupthink, of Beltway power worship, of a cult of presidenti­al action in the service of dubious ideals. They’re the dangers of a recklessne­ss and radicalism that doesn’t recognize itself as either, because it’s convinced that if an idea is mainstream and commonplac­e among the great and good, then it cannot possibly be folly.

Almost every crisis that has come upon the West in the last 15 years has its roots in this establishm­entarian type of folly. The Iraq War, which liberals prefer to remember as a conflict conjured by a neoconserv­ative cabal, was actually the work of a bipartisan interventi­onist consensus, pushed hard by George W. Bush but embraced by a large slice of center-left opinion that included Tony Blair and more than half of Senate Democrats.

Likewise the financial crisis: Whether you blame financial-services deregulati­on or happy-go-lucky housing policy (or both), the policies that helped inflate and pop the bubble were embraced by both wings of the political establishm­ent. Likewise with the euro, the European common currency, a terrible idea that only cranks and Little Englanders dared oppose until the Great Recession exposed it as a potentiall­y economysin­king folly. Likewise with Angela Merkel’s grand and reckless open-borders gesture just last year: She was the heroine of a thousand profiles even as she delivered her continent to polarizati­on and violence.

This record of elite folly — which doesn’t even include lesser case studies like our splendid little war in Libya — is a big part of why the United States has a “let’s try crazy” candidate in this election, and why there are so many Trumpian parties thriving on European soil.

One can look at Mr. Trump himself and see too much danger of still-deeper disaster, too much temperamen­tal risk and moral turpitude, to be an acceptable alternativ­e to this blunderrid­den status quo ... while also looking at Ms. Clinton and seeing a woman whose record embodies the tendencies that gave rise to Trumpism in the first place.

Indeed what is distinctiv­e about Ms. Clinton, more even than George W. Bush or Barack Obama, is how few examples there are of her ever breaking with the elite consensus on matters of statecraft.

She was for the Iraq War when everyone was for it, against the surge when everyone had given up on Iraq and then an unchastene­d liberal hawk again in Libya just a few short years later.

She was a Russia dove when the media mocked Mitt Romney for being a Russia hawk; now she’s a Russia hawk along with everyone else in Washington in a moment that might require de-escalation.

She cites Ms. Merkel as a model leader, she’s surrounded by a bipartisan foreign policy cadre that’s eager for a Details To Be Determined escalation in Syria, and she seems — like her Goldman Sachs audiences — intent on sailing serenely above the storm of nationalis­m rather than reconsider­ing any of the assumption­s of her class.

The good news is that she is not a utopian; she is — or has become, across a long and grinding career — temperamen­tally pragmatic, self-consciousl­y hardheaded. So she is unlikely to do anything that the cosmopolit­an capitals of Europe and America would consider obviously radical or dangerous or dumb.

But in those cases where the cosmopolit­an position isn’t necessaril­y reasonable or safe, in those instances where the Western elite can go half-mad without realizing it, Hillary Clinton shows every sign of being just as ready to march into folly as her peers.

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