Daily Dispatch

Coronaviru­s pandemic could kill off populism

- Gideon Rachman

Populists hate to be unpopular. That is why they have proved so bad at handling Covid-19, a crisis that brings nothing but grim news — death, economic destructio­n and curtailed freedoms.

US President Donald Trump and Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro are the two most prominent populist leaders in the western world. The disastrous results of their approach to coronaviru­s are now becoming apparent.

Last week, Brazil became the second country in the world, after the US, to record more than 50,000 Covid-19 deaths.

The distinguis­hing characteri­stic of the Trump-Bolsonaro approach to Covid-19 is a fatal inability to face reality. Trump virtually ignored the virus through January, February and half of March.

At various times he has suggested that it would disappear by magic and that injections with disinfecta­nt might be a good remedy. As new cases and deaths continue to surge, Trump’s latest bright idea is to argue that the US should simply stop testing, in the hope that reality will disappear if it is simply ignored.

Bolsonaro has been even more flamboyant­ly irresponsi­ble — dismissing Covid-19 as a mere sniffle, addressing antilockdo­wn protests and ousting two health ministers.

Both men are now paying a significan­t political price for their incompeten­ce.

Trump is trailing badly in the polls, ahead of the November presidenti­al election. Bolsonaro has also seen his approval rating slump — amid talk of impeachmen­t and investigat­ions into corruption in his inner circle.

In Britain, Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been more respectful of the scientific consensus. But, early in the crisis, the prime minister did succumb to one of the biggest flaws in the populist approach: a dangerous reluctance to act on bad news.

As other European nations went into lockdown, he proclaimed that “we live in a land of liberty” and delayed taking action. Partly as a result, the UK has the highest number of Covid-19 deaths in Europe.

In just two months, Johnson has gone from record popularity to a negative approval rating.

By contrast, Angela Merkel — who is detested by Trump and many other populist leaders — has had a good crisis. Germany has one of Europe’s lowest per capita death rates. When Johnson protested in parliament last week that there is not a single example of a country with an effective contact-tracing app, Sir Keir Starmer, the leader of the opposition, responded with a single word: Germany.

The contrast between Merkel’s performanc­e and those of the populists demonstrat­es that an ability to understand evidence is a useful trait in a leader.

The German chancellor has a doctorate in chemistry. By contrast, Trump is a real-estate developer, Bolsonaro is a former army captain and Johnson has a second-class degree in classics.

Merkel was able to give a calm and clear explanatio­n of the mathematic­s of infection rates and to act upon it; Trump complains that the US is doing too many tests.

Merkel has also surged in the polls — recording her highest approval ratings for many years. By contrast, Germany’s populist Alternativ­e for Deutschlan­d

party — traditiona­lly hostile to the establishm­ent line on everything from the EU to vaccinatio­ns — has slumped.

Observing this pattern, Francis Fukuyama of Stanford University speculated to the BBC recently: “The Covid-19 epidemic may actually lance the boil of populism.” Matthew Goodwin, co-author of — The

Revolt Against Liberal Democracy, recently set out a chain of entirely plausible events, which would change the tone of world politics over the next few years. These would include the electoral defeat of Trump, Bolsonaro and Johnson, the reelection of President Emmanuel Macron in France and a slump in support for the AfD. Collective­ly, Goodwin suggests that would mean, “Liberalism is back. Populism is out.”

The defeat of Trump in particular would have global implicatio­ns — since he has served as an inspiratio­n for “national populists”, including Bolsonaro, the government­s of Hungary and Poland and the radical right in France, Germany, Italy and elsewhere.

Liberals have good cause to hope that populism will emerge severely damaged by Covid-19. But they should not celebrate too soon. Trump has had a very bad few months. But the prospect of a “culture war” in the US — centring on emotive issues such as race and national symbols — could help his campaign.

The forces that first fuelled populism have also not disappeare­d. As Goodwin points out, some of the social groups most drawn to populism — people without a university education and the poorly paid — will be hit particular­ly hard by an economic slump.

And then there is the possibilit­y that, amid a crisis, the norms of democratic politics will simply break down. Trump has already unnerved many political observers with his repeated assertions that November’s election will be rigged. Bolsonaro has packed his cabinet with generals and said that the military will ignore “absurd” rulings “to remove a democratic­ally elected president ”— an apparent suggestion that the military would refuse to accept a successful impeachmen­t in Congress.

Populism may indeed be rejected by voters in the wake of Covid-19. But there is no guarantee that the populists will go quietly.

Liberals have good cause to hope that populism will emerge severely damaged by Covid-19

 ?? Picture: EVA MARIE UZCATEGUI/ BLOOMBERG VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? BIRDS OF A FEATHER: US President Donald Trump, left, speaks as his admirer Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro, looks on at Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida, US. The two populists' political fortunes may diminish due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Picture: EVA MARIE UZCATEGUI/ BLOOMBERG VIA GETTY IMAGES BIRDS OF A FEATHER: US President Donald Trump, left, speaks as his admirer Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro, looks on at Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida, US. The two populists' political fortunes may diminish due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

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