The Palm Beach Post

Trump’s phony populism just bait for an epic scam

- He writes for the New York Times.

Paul Krugman

Authoritar­ians with an animus against ethnic minorities are on the march across the Western world. They control government­s in Hungary and Poland, and will soon take power in America. And they’re organizing across borders: Austria’s Freedom Party, founded by former Nazis, has signed an agreement with Russia’s ruling party — and met with Donald Trump’s choice for national security adviser.

But what should we call these groups? Many reporters are using the term “populist,” which seems both inadequate and misleading. I guess racism can be considered populist in the sense that it represents the views of some non-elite people. But are the other shared features of this movement — addiction to conspiracy theories, indifferen­ce to the rule of law, a penchant for punishing critics — really captured by the “populist” label?

Still, the European members of this emerging alliance — an axis of evil? — have offered some real benefits to workers. Hungary’s Fidesz party has provided mortgage relief and pushed down utility prices. Poland’s Law and Justice party has increased child benefits, raised the minimum wage and reduced the retirement age. France’s National Front is running as a defender of that nation’s extensive welfare state — but only for the right people.

Trumpism is, however, different. The campaign rhetoric may have included promises to keep Medicare and Social Security intact and replace Obamacare with something “terrific.” But the emerging policy agenda is anything but populist.

All indication­s are that we’re looking at huge windfalls for billionair­es combined with savage cuts in programs that serve not just the poor but also the middle class. And the white working class, which provided much of the 46 percent Trump vote share, is shaping up as the biggest loser.

True, we don’t yet have detailed policy proposals. But Trump’s Cabinet choices show which way the wind is blowing.

In other words, the movement that’s about to take power here isn’t the same as Europe’s far-right movements. It may share their racism and contempt for democracy, but European populism is at least partly real, while Trumpist populism is turning out to be entirely fake, a scam sold to working-class voters who are in for a rude awakening. Will the new regime pay a political price?

Well, don’t count on it. This epic bait-and-switch, this betrayal of supporters, certainly offers Democrats a political opportunit­y. But you know that there will be huge efforts to shift the blame. These will include claims that the collapse of health care is really Obama’s fault; claims that the failure of alternativ­es is somehow the fault of recalcitra­nt Democrats; and an endless series of attempts to distract the public.

Expect more Carrier-style stunts that don’t actually help workers but dominate a news cycle. Expect lots of fulminatio­n against minorities. And it’s worth rememberin­g what authoritar­ian regimes traditiona­lly do to shift attention from failing policies, namely, find some foreigners to confront. Maybe it will be a trade war with China, maybe something worse.

Opponents need to do all they can to defeat such strategies of distractio­n. Above all, they shouldn’t let themselves be sucked into cooperatio­n that leaves them sharing part of the blame. The perpetrato­rs of this scam should be forced to own it.

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