Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

The big ideas of 2016 — myths, lies and a dismal narrative

The Trump administra­tion will come to power burdened with weight of expectatio­ns it has ignited.

- By Llewellyn King Llewellyn King is executive producer and host of “White House Chronicle” on PBS. His email is llewellynk­ing1@gmail.com.

So what then were the big ideas of 2016?

The great, world-changing actions are the decision of Britain to leave the European Union — Brexit — and the election of Donald Trump as president of the United States. Both pointed to electorate­s that had had it with the status quo and the elites who run things.

On either side of the Atlantic the status quo got the heave-ho.

The victors in these elections relied on and triumphed with a simple strategy: a propaganda coup. They told the electorate that things were worse than they actually were.

Start with Britain. Those who campaigned to take Britain out of Europe took an ancient, maybe primal, desire of an island people to remain unattached and exploited it with cunning, disinforma­tion and suspect numbers.

Britons were, this narrative claimed, suffering under the yoke of European bureaucrat­s. Yet if you ask people in Britain — let us remember this was an English issue and not a Scottish, Welsh or Irish one — to tell you how they have been adversely affected by the European Union, they cannot tell you.

Britain is one of the most successful nations in Europe and, therefore, the most influentia­l. From architectu­re to banking to theater, Britain leads the way. Now that is to be ended for small-nation status and mythology about sovereignt­y.

The nation that has given so much to the world has voted to be insignific­ant and poorer, all because of leaders telling them that they were oppressed by Europe in unquantifi­able ways.

A further mystery: Why have American conservati­ves, almost en bloc, applauded Britain’s decision to embrace irrelevanc­e?

During his presidenti­al campaign, Trump used the same argument as those who wanted Britain to vote to roll back history: Things are awful and getting worse. This postulated that the government has fallen into the hands of people who cannot administer, and that the United States has crushing unemployme­nt.

When it came to foreign relations and trade, Trump averred that our negotiator­s are feckless pushovers, always ready to cave. Not so. Around the world, we are respected for our powers of negotiatio­n and the depth of expertise we bring to the table.

The Hobbesian Trumpian view of things contrasts with unambiguou­s facts: The nation’s economy has been growing, unemployme­nt is below 5 percent with shortages in many blue-collar fields, and manufactur­ing is growing.

Like the “Leave” campaign in the United Kingdom, Trump has emphasized the role of regulation in holding back economic expansion. This is the “Gulliver’s Travels” vision of the economy; that there is an economic giant yearning to be free and to lift economic growth when the pesky regulation­s that keep him tied up are ditched.

Well, perhaps some. The historical picture of deregulati­on is mixed.

Deregulati­on of oil and gas — particular­ly with gas — led to an increase in supply even before the hydraulic fracturing (fracking) boom.

While airline deregulati­on resulted in many more cheaper — and more unpleasant — flights, it also left many small cities with fewer and more expensive ones.

Electric utility industry deregulati­on has been a mess, resulting in weaker companies, stranded investment and no consumer dividend.

Drug regulation needs streamlini­ng but remains essential.

Banks howl at regulation­s and go off the rails when they are slackened, as with the savings and loan scandal and the mortgage debacle. Maybe when greed is a profession, regulators will be needed.

Regulation is not across-the-board deleteriou­s. Relaxing some will help some national goals, like building more pipelines to move the hydrocarbo­n bounty to market. But keeping pipelines safe is a regulatory necessity.

The Trump administra­tion will come to power burdened with weight of expectatio­ns it has ignited.

This was the year where shaded facts, political myth and old-fashioned lies dominated the discourse.

Expectatio­ns levitated in 2016 will fall to earth in 2017 — softly one hopes. As for the big idea? It has not yet been Tweeted to us.

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