Nelson Mail

The tribalisat­ion of global politics

- Gwynne Dyer

Homo economicus is dead. Long live homo tribuarius! That’s not really something to celebrate, but it’s certainly true that in most democratic countries, economic self-interest is no longer the most important factor in voters’ choices. Tribalism of various sorts is taking its place – and that is not an improvemen­t.

Take three quite different countries stalled in the middle of political transition­s that would have been done and dusted in no time 20 years ago: Spain, Israel, and the United Kingdom.

Spain has just had its fourth election in four years, and the stalemate is worse than ever. Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez went back to the polls in the hope of increasing his centre-left PSOE party’s presence in parliament enough to make the arithmetic work. He had no chance of winning an overall majority, of course, but maybe with a few more seats and a more willing coalition partner . . .

Not a chance. He went back to parliament with fewer seats, and so did his skittish intended coalition partner, Unidas Podemos. They have now swallowed their pride and agreed on a coalition, but they still need 21 seats from elsewhere for a majority, and it’s hard to see where that will come from.

This is not how things used to be. A couple of decades ago, the PSOE and its centre-right rival, the People’s Party, used to sweep up 80 per cent of the vote, leaving just scraps for the minor parties. In last April’s election, the two historic major parties only got 48 per cent of the votes between them.

Or consider Israel, where two elections this year failed to produce any set of political parties – out of a total of nine – with enough common ground to build a coalition government that works. The two major parties together got only 51 per cent of the votes.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netayahu’s Likud party tried and failed to form a coalition government. Benny Ganz’s Blue and White Party is still trying, and there is talk of a power-sharing ‘‘grand coalition’’ between the two biggest parties – but otherwise, Israel is probably heading for a third election within months.

Even if there is a deal between Likud and the Blue and White Party, the resulting government would be prone to fall apart at the first bump in the road. As that perspicaci­ous political observer Donald Trump said: ‘‘They keep having elections and nobody gets elected.’’

And then there’s the UK, stuck in the Brexit swamp for over three years and still looking for the exit.

The two big traditiona­l parties, Labour and the Conservati­ves, managed to win 80 per cent of the vote in the last election, but subsequent defections from both made a decision on what kind of Brexit it should be (if any) impossible.

Why is this happening?

In Britain, the Labour-Conservati­ve disagreeme­nt used to be basically economic. Labour sought to redistribu­te wealth, the Conservati­ves tried to defend the existing order, and most people made their choices according to their position in the economic pyramid.

That was never entirely true, of course. Some intellectu­als in posh houses voted for Labour, and the Conservati­ves always managed to attract some working-class votes by stressing racial, sectarian and ‘‘values’’ issues. But most people voted for their economic interests.

Not now. The Conservati­ves are the pro-Brexit party, but 42 per cent of their traditiona­l voters supported Remain in the 2016 referendum on leaving the European Union. Similarly, onethird of traditiona­l Labour voters backed Leave. Never mind the economy – the referendum was driven by English nationalis­m. Or tribalism, if you prefer.

You can find similarly indecisive outcomes all over the place. The two traditiona­l ‘major’ parties in Germany got only 54 per cent of the vote in the last election. In 2017, the Netherland­s went 208 days without a government. In 2018 Sweden spent four months ungoverned before a coalition was finally formed.

You can’t blame these outcomes on the internet, although that certainly makes it easier to spread disinforma­tion. You can’t blame it on proportion­al representa­tion voting systems, either – the UK has a simple winner-takes-all system. You probably can blame it on a rising level of anger everywhere, but then you have to explain the anger.

The one common denominato­r that might explain it is the growing disparity of wealth – the gulf between the rich and the rest – in practicall­y every democratic country.

Since the 1970s, income growth for households on the middle and lower rungs of the ladder has slowed sharply in almost every country, while incomes at the top have continued to grow strongly. The concentrat­ion of income at the very top is now at a level last seen 90 years ago – just before the Great Depression.

We could fix this by politics, if we can get past the tribalisat­ion. Or we could ‘‘fix’’ it by wars, the way we did last time.

You have to explain the anger. The one common denominato­r that might explain it is the growing disparity of wealth . . . in practicall­y every democratic country.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Israel is one of several countries stalled in the middle of a political transition that would have been done and dusted in no time 20 years ago.
GETTY IMAGES Israel is one of several countries stalled in the middle of a political transition that would have been done and dusted in no time 20 years ago.
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