The Guardian (USA)

Trump has tested the limits of the US constituti­on – but it's still holding

- Simon Jenkins

Slowly, painfully, alarmingly, Donald Trump has been conceding the US presidency to Joe Biden. Over the weekend his close friend Chris Christie called his delay “a national embarrassm­ent”, joining judges, aides and other Republican politician­s. Meanwhile the world has erupted in a chorus of derision at the state of American democracy, polluted by corruption, fake news and money. Countries whose leaders would not dream of risking an open election, let alone conceding one, mimic Moscow in ridiculing “the obvious shortcomin­gs in the American electoral system”. Beijing celebrates by preparing to jail a clutch of Hong Kong democrats.

The reality is the opposite. The late American historian Arthur Schlesinge­r Jr pointed out that the US constituti­on regularly takes its grand coalition of diverse peoples to the brink of disintegra­tion, shows them disaster and pulls them back. Trump in 2016 was a populist candidate who ran for election on a pseudo-revolution­ary ticket against the Washington establishm­ent. Though he won fewer votes than his opponent, Hillary Clinton, an electoral college biased to protect the interests of small states against big ones gave him the presidency. In office he ran up huge debts, was a bully and a xenophobe, and relentless­ly attacked all centres of establishm­ent power. The economy boomed.

American political participat­ion soared. At this month’s presidenti­al election, turnout at 67% was the highest for a century. Biden’s popular lead over Trump was not so much bigger than Clinton’s in 2016, and the college tilted his way rather than against. But Trump’s popular vote actually rose and did so among surprising groups, including Hispanic, black and female voters. In effect, his “outsiders” stuck with him and told him to finish the job.

What helped to give Biden victory, according to exit polls, was increased support among white men. Many of them were, in effect, saying that they

had got the point of Trump and now wanted rid of him. The fact remains that almost as large a group was warning that it felt ignored and alienated, and that no one should take democracy for granted. It has now flashed that warning not once but twice. And Trump may yet return.

Of all the great political unions that emerged from the age of empire, the US has proved the most robust (with a hesitant nod towards India). Such unions are seldom entirely stable. Their survival requires constituti­ons able to accommodat­e disparate peoples, regions and interests – and do so at peace. The US constituti­on, so baffling to outsiders, was designed in the 18th century to bind together a union rightly seen as vulnerable. Yet it built what became the world’s dominant great power, recently delivering leaders as diverse as George

W Bush, Barack Obama and Donald Trump. It has survived them all.

Few would contend that Trump has been anything other than an aberration. But if he was testing the US constituti­on to destructio­n, it passed the test. Biden should now receive every support in restoring his country’s dignity and good faith. Meanwhile other unions – not least that of the United Kingdom – should look to their own. They all have their Trumps in waiting. All have lessons to learn.

Simon Jenkins is a Guardian columnist

 ?? Photograph: Carolyn Kaster/ ?? Chris Christie, right, a close ally of Donald Trump, has joined the chorus of voices criticisin­g the president’s refusal to admit defeat.
Photograph: Carolyn Kaster/ Chris Christie, right, a close ally of Donald Trump, has joined the chorus of voices criticisin­g the president’s refusal to admit defeat.

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