Bangkok Post

Corbyn, Trump could be brothers

- MATTHEW NORMAN

The plastic surgeon hasn’t been born, nor the fairground mirror built, that could make them ringers. Yet the more you are exposed to the transatlan­tic double act of Donald Trump and Jeremy Corbyn, the more they begin to resemble Bizarro World reflection­s of each other.

Some of the more familiar similariti­es include the skilful harnessing of their bases’ rage against the status quo to power them to insurgent victories. In geopolitic­al terms, each is pro-Russia and anti-Nato, anti-globalisat­ion and protection­ist. Personally, meanwhile, they are a touch brittle when challenged by the media they innately distrust.

There are also distinctio­ns, of course. The Washington carnivore in the White House is itching to fire a nuclear warhead, while the Islington herbivore never would. So far as decency, honesty, skin tone, hand size and anything else of a vaguely non-political nature goes, they could hardly be more different. You can no more easily picture Mr Corbyn grabbing a woman down there than Mr Trump boiling up a vat of damson jam. Beyond being thrice married, currently to a foreigner, they may have literally nothing in common.

But diametrica­lly opposite characters can be flip sides of the same political coin, and recent events crystallis­e the similarity which may explain why each was always doomed to fail.

It is not the shared accusation about tolerating anti-Semitism, or being leadership amateurs who stagger about in a fog of chaos. Nor is it that Mr Trump’s inability to hire or retain key staff echoes the zany game of shadow Cabinet musical chairs over which Mr Corbyn has expertly presided.

It isn’t that each is extraordin­arily isolated. With almost no genuine support from his party’s elected representa­tives, each is sustained by a tiny coterie of apparatchi­ks — and defended by an angry base with no tolerance for dissent that threatens deselectio­n or a primary challenge against any Labour or congressio­nal Republican who refuses to kiss the ring.

The most significan­t bond between Mr Corbyn and Mr Trump is that they, more than any Western leaders in memory, are Greatest Hits politician­s. Lacking the will, imaginatio­n and energy to produce new material, all they do is belt out the tunes that won the fans over in their first place.

We saw it last summer when Mr Corbyn was challenged by Owen Smith, and seemed happy for the first time since being elected when he pleasured the faithful with the hits that won him the job first time around.

And we saw it last weekend when Mr Trump held that “campaign rally” in Florida. After the turmoil of losing Mike Flynnski to The Washington Post and having his Moos-lim ban stayed by appeal court judges, he also seemed happy for the first time since being inaugurate­d as he rattled out his stump speech riffs about media deceit, the Mexican wall, and so on. He even threw in a whopper to keep the kids happy, though the source of that Swedish terrorism claim remains a mystery.

And this is what weak people always do when they are flailing about, way out of their depth. They scurry back to the comfort zone and turn to their most slavish admirers for reaffirmat­ion.

It’s what Ricky Gervais’s character did in Extras when depressed by hideous reviews for his imbecilic, racist, catchphras­e-laden sitcom. Humiliated when forced to parrot “Are you ’aving a laff” for a fan down the pub, he flees to a nightclub and moans about his unfair press to David Bowie. Bowie replies by ridiculing him in song. Stratosphe­rically out of his celebrity league, Millman goes back to the pub to bathe in the love of the idiot fans he despises.

This is exactly why Mr Trump held his rally. Smartarse liberals who watch CNN and read The New York Times might hate his act, like broadsheet reviewers hated Millman’s When The

Whistle Blows. But the rubes down in Florida, like the oaf in Millman’s boozer, still love him, his racist gags and mind-numbing catchphras­es.

Yet a political fan base is as fickle as any other. As Bowie understood better than most, you cannot play nothing but the old hits and stay relevant or in vogue. If you don’t widen the base with fresh material, it will contract as some of the existing fans get bored and drift away.

 ??  ?? TRANSATLAN­TIC DOUBLE ACT: Both Corbyn and Trump are Greatest Hits politician­s.
TRANSATLAN­TIC DOUBLE ACT: Both Corbyn and Trump are Greatest Hits politician­s.
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