The Commercial Appeal

Comparison between Brexit and Trump movement is weak

- COLUMNIST MICHAEL GERSON

LONDON — Donald Trump — his fickle god of polling having generally turned against him — now looks for inspiratio­n across the pond. “I think we’re gonna have a Brexit situation,” he has said, claiming Britain’s unexpected vote in June to leave the European Union as an example of polldefyin­g right-wing populist intensity.

Presented with this comparison, Michael Gove, a member of Parliament and one of the architects of Brexit, emphasized the dissimilar­ities. Gove told me that the Brexit majority did include “nationalis­ts concerned with sovereignt­y” and working-class voters who blame stagnant wages on unskilled migration. But there were also “freemarket liberals” focused primarily on the “regulation­s and tariffs” imposed by the EU.

Euroskepti­cism, Gove argued, is broader than working-class populism. “The most ardent free traders are the most opposed to the EU,” he noted. “A closer analogy,” he said, “is 1776,” in which the colonists resented “paying for a distant, inaccessib­le empire that bossed them around.” This spirit of revolt against an unresponsi­ve bureaucrac­y is different from Trump’s authoritar­ian populism. For its breadth, Gove also compared Euroskepti­cism to “the Cold War coalition, which included everyone from Ayn Rand to John Paul II.” Because of this diversity, Brexit may “mean free trade, or much less trade; it is an open question.”

The political comparison between the Trump movement and the Brexit coalition is weak. (And the idea that polls in Britain did not register the strength of Brexit support is a myth.) But center-right parties in both countries are facing similar ideologica­l pressures. Many Western nations are experienci­ng an intense reaction against economic globalizat­ion and multicultu­ralism by voters who feel forgotten. In Britain, according to Gove, this involves a sense that “those who take (economic) decisions are insulated from the outcomes.” That certainly has a trans-Atlantic resonance.

But Britain’s Conservati­ve Party has two great advantages over the Republican Party. While the success of Brexit brought down Prime Minister David Cameron (who staked his reputation on the fight against it), his party did not turn to an unelectabl­e demagogue. The new prime minister, Theresa May, was notable for spending much of her career unnoticed. She rose by laying low. She speaks rarely, with the authority that accumulate­s in the silences. And she has turned out to be a subtle politician, putting the most vocal advocates of Brexit in charge of the Brexit negotiatio­n process. If the result is a disaster (as it may well be), the public will know who deserves the blame.

The Conservati­ve Party’s other advantage over the GOP is the fact that its ideologica­l opposition has essentiall­y collapsed. The British Labour Party was so intent on rejecting Tony Blair and all his works that it chose as its leader a socialist ideologue with an expiration date of 1945. The field is essentiall­y clear. Members of Parliament joke that May’s biggest opposition is the value of the pound.

So how does May intend on reposition­ing her party in the aftermath of Brexit? In her first statement as prime minister, she spoke directly to people who are “just managing.” “I know you’re working around the clock,” she said. “I know you’re doing your best, and I know that sometimes life can be a struggle. The government I lead will be driven not by the interests of the privileged few, but by yours.”

May has gotten the values part right — a conservati­sm that speaks to wage workers facing profound economic rupture — but the appropriat­e policies are yet to be determined. People involved in her policy developmen­t process variously talk of “Mayism” as the promotion of social mobility, as the developmen­t of an “industrial policy” that includes a “massive skills stepup,” and as the pursuit of social reform on issues such as human traffickin­g and mental health.

In Britain, the center-right party has been sobered into self-reflection. In America, it is on the verge of being destroyed. Instead of doing something essential and difficult — finding creative ways to help the “just managing” working class without alienating rising minorities — Republican­s are working out internal grudges and dealing with the demons of a narcissist­ic misogynist. And there is little hope that Election Day will end the bitterness. A recent poll found that Republican­s, by a majority of 51 percent to 33 percent, believe Trump to be a better representa­tive of GOP views than House Speaker Paul Ryan.

Only a leader larger than both is likely to turn the GOP toward necessary tasks. And he or she may be quieter than we imagine.

Michael Gerson’s email address is michaelger­son@washpost.com.

 ??  ?? SCOTT STANTIS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE
SCOTT STANTIS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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