Gulf News

Death of US exceptiona­lism is greatly exaggerate­d

In comparison to other nations, American institutio­ns have demonstrat­ed their value

- BY MIHIR SHARMA — Bloomberg Mihir Sharma is an opinion columnist. He’s the author of “Restart: The Last Chance for the Indian Economy.”

In much of the world, the sight of a mob storming the United States Capitol to keep their leader in office was met not just with horror but with, let’s face it, Schadenfre­ude. Finally! The US, which has for decades lectured other democracie­s about their imperfecti­ons and failures, had an anti- democratic moment of its own. Some here in India responded in keeping with the honoured traditions — i. e., WhatsApp jokes (“Owing to Covid- 19 travel restrictio­ns, this year’s US- backed coup will take place at home”). The Times of India’s banner headline was “Coup Klux Klan.”

The Turkish press release sounded like officials had gleefully cut- and- pasted past advisories fromthe US State Department, down to the advice that “Turkish citizens in the US avoid crowded areas.”

Now, a lot of this is entertaini­ng and some of it is understand­able. Certainly, nobody who lives in an emerging nation likes to hear shocked liberal Americans declaring their country’s turmoil similar to events “in the Third World.” In India, for example, we manage to conduct much larger elections than the US endures with far fewer complicati­ons.

But I think all of us busy mocking the US and declaring the end of American exceptiona­lism also need to take a deep breath. The fact is that America has survived its populist moment in far better shape than most of the rest of us.

Remember: Donald Trump was impeached once and might be again. He has been repudiated by several influentia­l leaders of his own party.

He has lost re- election and all his attempts to overturn the result have failed. His party has been rewarded for its embrace of populism with the loss of not just the White House but also of both chambers of the legislatur­e. And Trump himself has been cornered into conceding defeat. That is what youmight objectivel­y call a drubbing.

Such a drubbing is not, I hasten to assure you, the usual result of electing a populist. Generally, such leaders ensconce themselves comfortabl­y in power and their victory margins seem mysterious­ly to grow with each election.

There are far too many places where voting is always free but rarely fair, and where democratic despots seem never to be deposed. I wonder how we can even drum up the enthusiasm to mock America, which is emphatical­ly and demonstrab­ly not one of those countries.

I don’t want to minimise the damage of what happened in America. And it is an open question whether another four years of Trump in power would have done. Yet, in comparison to other nations — from Turkey to Hungary — American institutio­ns have demonstrat­ed their value and resilience. Liberal democracie­s are only as robust as their institutio­ns are independen­t and their officers are honest. And, because institutio­ns and officials in the US preserved their integrity, Trump was forced to fight a free and fair election “- and will have to leave after he convincing­ly lost it.

In America, judges — even those appointed by Trump — threw out dozens of frivolous court cases. That’s what an independen­t judiciary does and it is also why populists in places are reducing judges’ freedom to manoeuvre.

‘ Rule of law’

In America, even Republican officials such as Georgia’s governor and secretary of state stood up to their party’s leader, bluntly refusing to follow his bidding. I’m struggling to imagine an equivalent phone call anywhere else.

And in America, an adversaria­l media actually reported on Trump’s downsides in power, as well as his attempts to retain it illegally. We were told in great detail about the colossal ineptitude of his legal team and the poverty of their arguments. In other places, the media “even those so adept with puns “- would never present the case for ruling- party venality and ineptitude as clearly.

Face it, the death of American exceptiona­lism has been greatly exaggerate­d. The rest of us democracie­s still have some things to learn. For example, it is now clear which institutio­n we need to protect at all costs: the judiciary. Judicial independen­ce is the canary in the populist coal mine; everywould- be supremo must first ensure the courts will do his bidding.

The European Union is right to draw a red line about Hungary and Poland’s abandonmen­t of the “rule of law.”

Itmay be OK to have a fun fewdays laughing at America’s discomfitu­re and at the breast- beating exaggerati­ons of its pundits and politician­s. ( The US is a country so comfortabl­e it has forgotten what “sedition” actually is.) But, afterwards, let’s take a harder look at ourselves and at how to restore our own democracie­s to health.

 ?? Muhammed Nahas © Gulf News ??
Muhammed Nahas © Gulf News

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