Let us lift our heads from England’s town halls. Let us ignore
the governments of Scotland, Wales, and northern Ireland. And let us even, if
we can, pay no attention at all to the next mayor of London, one of the
greatest cities in the world.
Instead, let us contemplate the very nature of democracy,
and the warning of Socrates: ‘Tyranny is probably established out of no other
regime than democracy.’ Not because tyrants are on the march here in the UK –
when Nigel Farage and George Galloway are our biggest threats, I think we may
still sleep easy in our beds – but because we see them on the march elsewhere.
In Russia, where Vladimir Putin seeks to eliminate the last vestiges of
opposition to his rule; in Turkey, a NATO ally, where Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has
just deposed his prime minister and is gaily trampling on any signs of free
speech or political debate; and even, perhaps, in the United States, where
Donald Trump continues his seemingly unstoppable assault on the Washington
citadel.
In a brilliant, terrifying essay in the latest issue of New York magazine, the British-born American
commentator Andrew Sullivan says of Trump: ‘In terms of our liberal democracy
and constitutional order, Trump is an extinction-level event.’ He also says: ‘Neo-fascist
movements do not advance gradually by persuasion; they first transform the terms
of the debate, create a new movement based on untrammeled emotion, take over
existing institutions, and then ruthlessly exploit events.’
I tend to be wary of apocalyptic forecasts. As an optimist
by temperament, I prefer to believe that things are likely to get better than
worse. But as a democrat, I have to acknowledge that the spread of democracy through
Europe and elsewhere that followed the end of the Cold War may not always have
brought only benefits in its wake.
I still cannot bring myself to believe that Donald Trump
will be the next president of the United States. But nor can I deny Sullivan’s
thesis: ‘Late-stage
capitalism is creating a righteous, revolutionary anger that late-stage democracy has precious
little ability to moderate or constrain — and has actually helped exacerbate. For
the white working class, having had their morals roundly mocked, their religion
deemed primitive, and their economic prospects decimated, now find their very
gender and race, indeed the very way they talk about reality, described as a
kind of problem for the nation to overcome.’
This central dilemma is at the heart of the political crises
that are now affecting virtually all European democracies. Whether in
Greece, Spain, Italy, France or Germany, deeply disaffected voters are turning
their backs on the traditional political classes and switching their support to
parties that can better articulate their anger and their fear. Sullivan again: ‘It
is precisely because of the great accomplishments of our democracy that we
should be vigilant about its specific, unique vulnerability: its
susceptibility, in stressful times, to the appeal of a shameless demagogue.’
It is not difficult for an American demagogue to lambast the
record of a Washington elite, as Sullivan points out: ‘… that presided over
massive and increasing public debt, that failed to prevent 9/11, that chose a
disastrous war in the Middle East, [and] that allowed financial markets to
nearly destroy the global economy.’
Tim Montgomerie wrote in The
Times this week: ‘The post-crash period was a moment when many, on the left
and right, expected a backlash against the capitalist system. It didn’t happen.
Frightened electorates voted for calm, reassuring people. Obama-Biden over
McCain-Palin. Angela Merkel. David Cameron. Stephen Harper. Phase I of the
post-2008 period has largely been the Boringsville era. Well, friends, phase II
may have arrived and politics isn’t boring any more. Revolutions occur when the
peasants have been fed but the memory of injustice still burns and when the
middle classes are feeling the pain, too.’
All of which seems to me to be far more significant than
this week’s muddled UK Super Thursday election results. If, contrary to all the
pundits’ expectations (and they have been wrong about just about everything
else of late), Trump is elected in November, four of the world’s most
militarily-powerful nations – the US, China, Turkey and Russia – will be in the
hands of populist demagogues. That leaves just India, where prime minister
Narendra Modi is far from being a paragon of liberal democracy.
It’s not always easy being an optimist. Thank goodness the
sun is shining.
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