Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Trump Signals That He’s Serious About Mass Deportation. by David A. Graham

Trump Signals That He’s Serious About Mass Deportation. by David A. Graham 

Nov 12, 2024 at 7:54 AM


Was Donald Trump serious about his most draconian plans for a second term? That question shadowed his whole campaign, as commentators questioned whether he’d really attempt to deport millions of immigrants or impose tariffs above 60 percent.


If personnel is policy, as the Ronald Reagan–era maxim states, then the president-elect is deadly serious. Last night, he announced that Tom Homan, who was the acting head of Immigration and Customs Enforcement during the first Trump administration, will serve as a “border czar.” And CNN reports that Stephen Miller, the leading immigration hawk in Trump’s circle, will be appointed White House deputy chief of staff for policy.


These two moves, and the fact that they are among the first to emerge from the transition, are an indication of Trump’s intent to pursue a very aggressive policy and assign it a high priority. Miller, who served as a Trump speechwriter and top adviser previously, has been a hard-liner on immigration for his entire career. He has spent the past four years building America First Legal, a nonprofit devoted to fighting for conservative causes, and was a contributor to Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation blueprint for a second Trump term.



One year ago, in an interview with The New York Times, Miller laid out a set of plans for immigration. Among other things, he said, Trump would use the military to help enforce laws, using the Insurrection Act as license. Trump has also promised to use a 1798 law, the Alien Enemies Act, to facilitate deportation without due process under the law. Miller said ICE would focus on rounding up groups of people at job sites and other public places rather than seeking to arrest specific individuals. And he said the federal government would establish detention camps in Texas to hold people swept up in these raids.


“Any activists who doubt President Trump’s resolve in the slightest are making a drastic error: Trump will unleash the vast arsenal of federal powers to implement the most spectacular migration crackdown,” Miller told the Times. “The immigration legal activists won’t know what’s happening.”


If Miller is the architect of mass deportation, Homan will be the builder. “There is nobody better at policing and controlling our Borders,” Trump wrote on Truth Social last night. “Tom Homan will be in charge of all Deportation of Illegal Aliens back to their Country of Origin.” (The idiosyncratic capitalization is, perhaps needless to say, his.)



Homan was a career law-enforcement and border official, but his profile changed under Trump as he became a prominent figure, praising Trump for “taking the shackles off” ICE officers. He became the acting director of ICE at the start of Trump’s presidency and remained in that role for about a year and a half, including during the peak of Trump’s policy of family separation at the border. But Homan retired around the time Trump was forced to end that policy, frustrated that the Senate would not confirm him. As border czar, he will likely not require confirmation—though the new Republican Senate majority is expected to be more accommodating to Trump.


During the presidential campaign, Trump vowed to remove not only undocumented immigrants but also some legal ones. Only 40 percent of respondents in NBC News’s 2024 exit poll said they wanted deportation for most undocumented immigrants, but there was no reason to believe he was bluffing. During his first administration, Trump tried—persistently, though often ineffectively—to institute his priorities, especially on immigration. Trump was often stymied by courts. By the end of his first term, however, he had appointed three friendly justices to the Supreme Court—which has already granted him wide latitude with a decision on presidential immunity—and 231 judges to the lower courts, which should smooth his way now.


How Trump will proceed on tariffs is less immediately clear, in part because he never spoke about them with nearly the same specificity, but many corporations have already begun taking action to try to insulate themselves from any effects.


Nearly as telling as whom Trump has appointed is whom he has ruled out. On Saturday, he posted that neither Nikki Haley, the former United Nations ambassador, nor Mike Pompeo, the former CIA director and secretary of state, would serve in his administration. Haley criticized Trump after the January 6 riot, while Pompeo reportedly discussed removing Trump from office via the Twenty-Fifth Amendment. Both ran for the Republican presidential nomination in 2024. Pompeo’s campaign ended quickly; Haley ended up being Trump’s final rival standing. Both later endorsed him.


Neither of them, especially Pompeo, is a moderate—they are genuine conservatives. But they are also veteran policy makers who were in politics before Trump, and who hold some allegiance to institutions and government processes. Their exclusion is a sign not only of Trump’s long memory for a grudge but likely also of how he will seek to blast through the institutional structures and processes that have guided past presidents.


He wasn’t just offering idle promises.

Monday, November 11, 2024

Misunderstanding Democratic Backsliding

 

Thomas Carothers is the Harvey V. Fineberg Chair and director of

the Democracy, Conflict, and Governance Program at the Carnegie

Endowment for International Peace. His most recent book is Democracies

Divided: The Global Challenge of Political Polarization (2019,

coedited with Andrew O’Donohue). Brendan Hartnett is a James C.

Gaither Junior Fellow in Carnegie’s Democracy, Conflict, and Governance

Program.

Cases of democratic backsliding have been multiplying across the

globe in recent years, triggering a restless search among Western policymakers

and aid providers for causal explanations. One of the most common

ideas to have emerged in this policy community is that the blame

lies in democracies’ failure to deliver: When democracies do not provide

their citizens with adequate socioeconomic benefits, the thinking goes,

many of those citizens will lose faith in democracy and embrace antidemocratic

political figures who, once elected, will undercut democratic

norms and institutions. From this idea follows the policy conclusion that

to stop democratic backsliding concerned policymakers and aid providers

must help new or struggling democracies do better at delivering the

goods to their citizens, such as jobs, higher wages, food security, or access

to education. Writing in Foreign Affairs last year, Samantha Power,

administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development, argued

that “to . . . swing the pendulum of history back toward democratic rule,

we must break down the wall that separates democratic advocacy from

economic development work and demonstrate that democracies can deliver

for their people.”1

It seems almost inarguable that governments of any political character

that provide strong socioeconomic results for their citizens will, on

average, be more stable and long lasting than those that do not. Yet it is

much less clear that a failure to deliver on the part of democracies is a

major cause of the wave of democratic erosion that has washed across


multiple regions in the past twenty years. There are some cases where

it seems to be at least partly true. In Tunisia, for example, accumulated

popular frustration with the socioeconomic performance of every government

that ruled the country after its transition to elected, civilian rule

in 2011 clearly factored in President Kais Saied’s decision to carry out

a self-coup in 2021, overturning the country’s democratic experiment.

Yet there are also cases where the “democracy-not-delivering” argument

seems much less true, if at all: Poland, for example, enjoyed an enviable

economic record in the years prior to the onset of its democratic

backsliding in 2015. Clearly, an empirically well-informed picture is

needed to probe the complexities lurking within this intuitively appealing

but sweeping idea.

To develop such a picture, we examined twelve countries that experienced

democratic backsliding during the past twenty years from a

starting point of either electoral democracy or liberal democracy: Bangladesh,

Brazil, El Salvador, Hungary, India, Mexico, Nicaragua, the

Philippines, Poland, Tunisia, Turkey, and the United States. This group,

drawn from the approximately 25 to 40 countries (depending on the specific

measures used) that are usually identified as having experienced

backsliding in the time period, includes some of the most internationally

prominent cases of backsliding—Brazil, Hungary, India, Turkey,

and the United States—while also being representationally diverse

along multiple dimensions, including population size, level of wealth,

and geographic location.2 The countries in this group are also diverse in

terms of their level of democracy prior to the onset of backsliding: Some

were relatively well-consolidated democracies, such as Poland and the

United States; others were much less so, including Bangladesh, Nicaragua,

and Turkey. The backsliding trajectories of these countries also

vary: Democratic erosion has been severe in some, such as Bangladesh

and Hungary, and mild in others, including the United States; likewise,

backsliding is ongoing in some, for example, El Salvador and India, but

appears to have been reversed (at least for now) in others, including

Brazil and Poland.

For each country, we analyze a range of socioeconomic and political

developments to answer three key questions: First, was the election

of the leader who ended up engaging in backsliding clearly linked to a

failure of democracy to deliver? Second, did that leader campaign on an

antidemocratic platform? And third, when the backsliding unfolded, did

citizens embrace it? Our findings raise substantial doubt about the utility

of the democracy-not-delivering thesis as a broad causal explanation of

the recent wave of democratic backsliding. That thesis has some explanatory

power in certain cases, but little in others. Even where the thesis

does apply, it involves considerable empirical complexity and requires

nuanced interpretation. Our findings reinforce on a global basis a crucial

insight drawn from the important study by Larry Bartels of democratic

26 Journal of Democracy

trends in Europe—that democracies “erode from the top” rather than at

the behest of their citizens.3 Policymakers and aid providers seeking to

stem democratic erosion globally should direct their energies and resources

accordingly and prioritize bolstering institutions and norms that

can constrain predatory powerholders.

Performance Realities

To examine whether poor socioeconomic performance precedes the

election of leaders who engage in backsliding, we looked at three core

economic indicators—inequality, poverty, and growth—in the five years

prior to each of the pivotal elections in question.4 The idea that anger

over rising inequality drives citizens to embrace illiberal politicians is

perhaps the most common form of the democracy-not-delivering thesis.

Indeed, some prominent Western observers concerned about rising inequality

around the world point to it as a major cause of democracy’s

global travails.5 Yet, although rising levels of domestic inequality undoubtedly

pose many problems for democracies (and other types of political

systems), the link to backsliding is not apparent.

In eight of the twelve cases under study, inequality was trending

downward in the five years before the elections that brought to power

leaders who ended up moving against democracy, averaging an almost

7 percent drop in the country’s Gini coefficient. In the four countries

where that was not the case—Brazil, India, Tunisia, and the United

States—inequality was roughly stable in the relevant period. A fallback

argument for the democracy-not-delivering thesis might be that what is

crucial is not the direction of inequality but the overall level. But here,

too, the hypothesis falls short: In most cases, inequality in the backsliding

countries was not higher than average when compared with their regional

peers. With respect to poverty rates, the picture is similar: In five

years before backsliding began, poverty levels decreased in nine of the

twelve countries—substantially in some cases, such as India and Poland.

What about economic growth? Has the election of antidemocratic

leaders typically been preceded by decreasing or low growth rates? In

most of the cases, growth was relatively stable for at least five years

prior to the onset of backsliding. And in some—Bangladesh, India, the

Philippines, Poland, and Turkey—growth was not just stable but relatively

high in regional and global terms. In the years leading up to their

backsliding, these countries were widely considered developmental

stars rather than laggards. Three of the cases did see a major economic

downturn prior to the pivotal election—Brazil, Hungary, and Tunisia.

In Brazil and Hungary, the downturn began several years before the

election; in Tunisia, the covid-19 pandemic led to a sharp recession the

year before Saied’s self-coup, adding a harsh edge to the long-mounting

anger among Tunisians about the country’s poor economic performance

in the decade after the democratic revolution. The United States, meanwhile,

experienced an economic slowdown in 2016, the year of its pivotal

election, but that was after relatively strong growth (at least compared

to democratic peers in Europe) from 2010 to 2015.

Although the democracy-not-delivering thesis usually focuses on

these core elements of socioeconomic performance, what about other

elements of governance performance? Two appear to have played an

important role in shaping the outcomes of the pivotal elections in some

of the twelve cases: corruption and crime. In Brazil, the vast Operaç~ao

Lava Jato (Operation Car Wash) corruption scandal involving the Brazilian

Workers’ Party and other mainstream Brazilian political actors

in the mid-2010s was a major driver of many citizens’ alienation from

the country’s traditional political elite and their turn to Jair Bolsonaro

in the 2018 election.6 Perceptions of significant levels of corruption

also contributed to the losses by incumbent parties in India in 2014 and

Mexico in 2018.7 With respect to crime, El Salvador’s extended period

of extremely high levels of violent crime played a central role in citizens

giving up on the two mainstream political parties and embracing Nayib

Bukele in the 2019 election (although it is worth noting that the country

had actually seen a significant decrease in homicides in the three

years prior to Bukele’s election).8 In the Philippines, Rodrigo Duterte

centered his successful presidential campaign around his claim that the

country’s crime situation was out of control and that he would fix it.

Yet even with this widening of the lens, the search for what led to the

election of these various leaders requires looking beyond performance

shortcomings that fit easily into the democracy-not-delivering framework.

In Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega managed to return to power in 2006

largely because the two main parties on the other side of the political

aisle split their vote, rendering Ortega’s 38 percent vote share enough to

win in the first round.9 In Poland, a complex mix of factors—including

shrewdly targeted campaign promises about new governmental benefits

and a somewhat vague desire for change on the part of many voters—put

the populist Law and Justice party over the line in 2015.10 In Turkey,

Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s effective pushing of certain hot-button pro-Islamist

issues helped him and his Justice and Development Party (AKP)

to gain power in 2002 and remain in power in 2007.11 And in the United

States, it was not primarily economic backlash from “left behind”

working-class Americans facing financial hardship that drove Donald

Trump’s 2016 victory, but rather his skillful tapping of cultural animosities

and anxieties—about immigrants, racial minorities, and China, for

example—as well as other factors, such as the strong personal dislike of

Hillary Clinton among certain voter groups in key swing states.12

Moreover, even when governmental performance becomes a major

issue in a pivotal election, perceptions rather than the realities of performance

tend to matter most. As Christopher Achen and Larry Bartels

28 Journal of Democracy

have shown, voters’ perceptions of governmental performance may be

only loosely tied to the objective facts about governmental performance.

This sobering reality about elections and democracy weakens the assertion

that the electoral success of backsliding leaders can be traced to

specific performance shortcomings of their incumbent opponents.13 Underlining

this reality, charismatic electoral challengers in recent years

have often demonstrated notable skill in negatively shaping citizen perceptions

about the incumbent’s performance, a phenomenon perhaps fueled

by increasingly fast-moving and manipulable media environments.

In the Philippines, for example, the anticrime emphasis of Duterte’s

2016 campaign was a successful demagogic tactic to stir up public

fears: “framing the country’s minor drug problem as a major social one,

effectively manufacturing a crisis.”14 Similarly, the 2016 Trump campaign’s

emphasis on the dangers of immigration flows into the United

States amplified voters’ fears that their status in society was under threat

and resonated especially with non–college-educated whites, who overwhelmingly

backed Trump.15

In short, the outcomes of the pivotal elections in the twelve cases

under study were determined by a dense mix of social, cultural, political,

and economic factors. A sense of grievance on the part of voters

was often present, but their grievances ranged widely across different

domains and often had little to do with governments’ poor socioeconomic

performance. Moreover, contingent political factors, such as the

Nicaraguan opposition splitting the vote in 2006, and subjective voter

perceptions often counted significantly alongside more structural factors.

While democracy’s failure to deliver the socioeconomic goods is

relevant to some degree in some of the cases, according it a central explanatory

role for democratic backsliding represents an imposition of an

overly simple idea on a highly complex reality.

Embracing What?

The other main component of the democracy-not-delivering thesis

is the proposition that when citizens are disappointed with the socioeconomic

results of democratic governance, they knowingly embrace

antidemocratic alternatives—in effect voting against democracy out of

frustration with it. Here, too, the record of the twelve cases under review

does not provide strong support. Instead, it generally bolsters another

crucial finding of Larry Bartels concerning the emergence of political

illiberalism in Poland and Hungary: When Poles voted in Law and Justice

in 2015 and a majority of Hungarian voters chose Fidesz and Viktor

Orbán in 2010, they were voting for change but not consciously for illiberalism:

Only after the elections did it become clear that the winners

were bent on radically reshaping the political system, resulting in “illiberalism

by surprise.”


In the pivotal elections under review here that brought to power leaders

who ended up undercutting democracy, citizens were voting for

change, as citizens in democracies often do in elections. But for the most

part they were not voting for political

figures who were openly promising

antidemocratic action or threatening

to undo democracy. In Turkey, for

example, Erdoğan did not campaign

on a platform of political illiberalism

or antidemocracy in either 2002,

when he was first elected prime minister,

or in 2007, when he was reelected

for the first time. He and his

party instead positioned themselves

at the intersection of the center-right

and Islamic traditionalism, offering

a democratic alternative to the mainstream

parties that had long dominated

Turkish politics.17 In his first term

as prime minister, Erdoğan initiated some democratic reforms, such as

lifting restrictions on broadcasting and reporting in Kurdish, gaining

praise from Western governments for his prodemocratic actions.18

In Bangladesh in 2008, when the people voted into power the Awami

League, a political party that would go on to significantly curtail democracy

in the country, they were not making a purposely antidemocratic

choice. The Awami League’s record both in and out of power

was not unblemished—for example, the party had at times encouraged

violence among its supporters.19 Yet compared to its main rival, the Bangladesh

Nationalist Party (BNP), the Awami League was arguably the

more prodemocratic choice at the time given the BNP’s multiple prior

undemocratic actions, such as ruling by executive ordinance and rigging

some by-elections in the 1990s.20

Narendra Modi’s historic victory in India’s 2014 elections was driven

mainly by his record of economic success in his home state of Gujarat

and his reputation as a no-nonsense, business-friendly leader who

would drive through economic reforms and fight corruption.21 The many

disgruntled Tunisians who voted for Kais Saied in 2019 likewise were

not opting for an antidemocratic figure. Saied was a constitutional-law

scholar who had helped to draft the country’s post–Arab Spring constitution,

and he promised prodemocratic reforms, such as devolving power

to local governments and incorporating direct elements of democracy,

including recall elections. His opponent in the runoff, Nabil Karoui, appeared

as the greater risk to democracy, having enjoyed close ties with

the country’s former dictator, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali (1987–2011).22

Some of the leaders elected in the case-study countries who later

In many backsliding

contexts, it would be a

serious mistake to say

that large shares of voters

are going along happily

and knowingly with

democratic erosion—many

are being bludgeoned,

bribed, or manipulated via

illegitimate means into

acquiescing.

30 Journal of Democracy

drove democratic erosion had acted undemocratically in their political

pasts. Yet their campaigns were not rooted in that fact, and their

victories do not appear to have been either. Mexico’s Andrés Manuel

López Obrador, for example, refused to concede his loss in the 2012

presidential election. But when he ran again in 2018, he did not base

his campaign on attacking the institutions or norms of Mexican democracy.

It was oriented instead around his promise to make Mexico a more

fully inclusive country by achieving fundamental pro-poor economic

changes.23 In Poland, Law and Justice’s commitment to democracy was

undoubtably blemished going into the 2015 elections—party leader

Jaros³aw Kaczy´nski had, after all, praised Orbán’s model of illiberal

governance and expressed a desire to implement it in Poland. But the

party kept these antidemocratic positions out of view in the 2015 campaign,

softening its image to appeal to voters who were simply tired of

the “boring” incumbent party.24

Prior to running for president of El Salvador in 2019, Nayib Bukele

had engaged in some illiberal actions in his capacity as mayor of San

Salvador, for example, ordering cyberattacks on newspapers critical of

him. Yet in his 2019 presidential campaign, he positioned himself as

the choice to save Salvadoran democracy—as a reformer in between

the country’s two longstanding parties on the right and left, who would

return power to the people through anticrime and anticorruption measures.

25 Daniel Ortega entered Nicaragua’s 2006 election with a clear

antidemocratic past, having presided over the authoritarian Sandinista

regime from 1979 to 1990. Yet in the intervening years he had participated

in the country’s messy multipartism. For his 2006 bid, Ortega

did not position himself against the country’s political establishment

but rather as a candidate of “love, reconciliation, and forgiveness” who

would do more for the country’s poor than his two center-right rivals.26

In only three of our twelve case studies could it be said that the winner

of the pivotal election in question ran on a campaign that specifically

promised systemic antidemocratic actions—though not with the stated

intention of undermining the entire democratic system: Duterte in the

Philippines and Trump in the United States, both in 2016, and Brazil’s

Bolsonaro in 2018. Before being elected president, Duterte had ruled

Davao City with an iron fist, ordering extrajudicial killings of suspected

criminals, drug users, and communist rebels. Instead of downplaying

this on the campaign trail, Duterte “shrugged off accusations of humanrights

abuses, promising to implement his Davao model nationwide.”27

He also threatened to disband, quiet, or ignore Congress, the courts,

and human-rights activists if they got in his way, and he praised former

dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

Donald Trump, at 2016 campaign rallies, led cheers calling for his

main opponent, Hillary Clinton, to be “locked up” and said that he would

respect the results of the election only if he won. Similarly, Bolsonaro,

who dismissed accusations that he was a threat to Brazilian democracy

as “fake news” despite being a well-known apologist for the country’s

1964–85 military dictatorship, said during the 2018 campaign that he

would wipe his political opponents “off the map.”28 Even in these cases,

however, antidemocratic threats or promises were part of much larger

platforms that candidates stood for or pledged to fulfill.

In short, the idea that voters in these twelve countries were purposefully

choosing an antidemocratic path in electing leaders who ended up

working against democracy once in power does not hold up to empirical

scrutiny. In most of the cases, voters were embracing the promise of

significant, even disruptive change, whether in economic, social, or political

domains. Some of their preferred candidates represented a risky

path, democratically speaking, given past antidemocratic incidents or

records. But except in a few cases, voters were not throwing their support

behind political figures who were advocating an end to democracy

or openly questioning the value of democracy per se. Most of the voters

in these pivotal elections were not turning against democracy; in fact,

many appeared to be trying to save democracy by giving it a pointed but

reform-oriented reset.

Once Backsliding Is Underway

Can it be argued that, even if voters in these pivotal elections were

not knowingly voting for the dismantling of democracy, once those

leaders gained power and began to undercut democratic norms and institutions,

their supporters embraced these moves? In other words, if

citizens in backsliding countries are not choosing democratic erosion

before the fact, do they become contented enablers once such deterioration

is underway?

Some of the backsliding leaders in the case-study countries have enjoyed

notably high levels of popularity while in office. López Obrador,

Bukele, Duterte, and Modi stand out in this regard. López Obrador

enjoyed approval ratings above 60 percent in the final months of his

single, six-year presidential term, and his chosen successor, Claudia

Sheinbaum, easily won Mexico’s June 2024 election. Bukele’s approval

ratings among Salvadoran voters have stayed sky-high, at times topping

90 percent since he became president in 2019, and he was reelected in

2024 with almost 85 percent of the vote. Duterte’s popularity remained

high throughout his presidency as well, and his party swept the midterm

elections in 2019, giving it control of both legislative houses. Modi and

his party expanded their support during their first ten years in power.

These leaders have sustained their popularity at least in part by giving

their supporters what they want, whether it is hard-nosed anticrime policies

in El Salvador and the Philippines, pro-poor economic policies in

Mexico, or pro-Hindu social policies and vigorous nationalism in India.

32 Journal of Democracy

In line with Matthew Graham and Milan Svolik’s findings regarding the

United States—that in a highly polarized context voters are unlikely to

turn against undemocratic politicians when they generally agree with

their policies—many people in these four countries appear to be willing

to overlook or tolerate a backsliding leader’s antidemocratic moves.29

For example, Filipino voters were “willing to put up with extrajudicial

killings, political repression, and the gutting of liberal institutions because

they [saw] Duterte as a strong leader. They question[ed] his methods

but not their effectiveness.”30 In some cases, it is likely that supporters

of backsliders do not just overlook the democracy factor but embrace

the illiberalism of their leader—whether it takes the form of systematic

discrimination against certain groups or attacks on the courts—because

they view it as justified, sometimes as payback for perceived wrongs of

the past.

It is important to be cautious, however, about attributing the popularity

of some backsliding leaders to genuine voter satisfaction based on

promises delivered. Most of these leaders manipulate public opinion in

various illegitimate ways. The leaders of Bangladesh, Nicaragua, and

Turkey, for example, have cracked down harshly on those who dissent

or criticize the ruling party. The leaders of almost all twelve backsliders

employ substantial control over the media to shape the information

space in their favor. In the 2022 electoral campaign in Hungary, for

example, the main opposition candidate for prime minister was given

just a few minutes on the state-dominated television to make his case

to voters, in contrast to months of wall-to-wall adulatory coverage of

Prime Minister Orbán and his party.31 Likewise, before the 2023 elections

in Turkey, the state channel TRT gave Erdoğan’s campaign 32

hours of coverage, compared to just 32 minutes of coverage for his main

challenger.32

Backsliding leaders also frequently use state resources to fund their

own parties’ political campaigns and to coopt important businesses and

other key groups, while harassing opponents with regulatory retaliation,

tax inspections, and other punitive measures. During Ortega’s first

decade in power, he simultaneously maintained support from the poor

through patronage and backing from the Nicaraguan business community

in exchange for lucrative contracts.33 In many backsliding contexts,

it would be a serious mistake to say that large shares of voters are going

along happily and knowingly with democratic erosion—many are

being bludgeoned, bribed, or manipulated via illegitimate means into

acquiescing.

In the United States, Brazil, and Poland, backsliding leaders lost

enough popularity, and faced strong enough institutions of countervailing

power, that they ended up losing power in failed reelection attempts.

Their loss of popularity had a mix of causes. In the case of Trump, for

example, the first year of the covid pandemic hit his presidency hard,

both its negative economic effects and the weaknesses it exposed in his

governance style. Although the antidemocratic actions of Trump, Bolsonaro,

and Law and Justice appear to have played some role in weakening

their popular support, it is not a straightforward story.

In all three cases, it appears that the leaders’ antidemocratic actions

did not much faze core supporters, in line with Graham and Svolik’s

finding mentioned above. Survey research ahead of the 2020 U.S. presidential

election showed that even before ballots were cast, there was a

strong desire among Trump supporters for the incumbent to fight against

an electoral defeat. The leading justification provided by those who supported

Trump’s effort to undermine the results was not concern about

the integrity of the election, but simply that they supported Trump and

disliked Biden.34 These supporters either did not perceive their antidemocratic

actions as that harmful or were willing to accept them for other

policy gains.

At the same time, polling data indicate that the antidemocratic actions

of Trump, Bolsonaro, and Law and Justice did hurt them on the

periphery of their supporter circles—among voters who initially gave

them a try but were not necessarily firmly committed. Moreover, their

democratic transgressions helped to mobilize their opponents and get

them to the polls in even greater numbers. Law and Justice’s assaults

on Polish democracy, for example, cost it support from among previous

backers and sparked large-scale antigovernment protests in the

run-up to Poland’s 2023 elections, which produced an alternation of

power.35

Prioritizing Constraint

The idea that a failure of democracies to deliver is a major cause

of the recent wave of democratic backsliding is intuitively appealing.

Many democracies are struggling to provide secure, prosperous lives

for their citizens, and many are struggling to maintain solid democratic

norms and institutions. Yet the evidence for a causal link between these

two phenomena in twelve prominent contemporary cases of democratic

backsliding is mixed at best. In most of the cases, inequality and poverty

were heading downward in the five years before the election that

brought a backsliding leader to power, while growth was largely stable

or even high. Sharp economic downturns did seriously damage the popularity

of incumbent democratic governments in three of the cases (Brazil,

Hungary, and Tunisia), and citizen anger over high levels of crime

and corruption was a key factor in bringing an antidemocratic leader to

power in at least Brazil and El Salvador.


Overall, however, it was a wide range of factors, not just economic

and governance grievances, that led voters in these countries to elect

leaders who ended up eroding democracy. These factors include broader

34 Journal of Democracy

sociocultural anxieties, the impressive electoral and narrative skills of

some of the leaders in question, specific features of electoral laws, the

new fluidity and corruptibility of media environments in many democracies,

and the frequent appeal to voters

almost everywhere of change for

change’s sake.

In addition, most of the winners of

these pivotal elections did not campaign

on promises of dismantling democracy.

Some had illiberalism in their

political pasts, including Daniel Ortega

and Narendra Modi. But even those

for whom that was true focused their

electoral strategies on other issues,

such pro-poor economic policies in the

case of Ortega or economic reform and

dynamism in the case of Modi. Some

appeared to be the more democratic choice compared to their main opponents,

as in Bangladesh in 2008 and Tunisia in 2019. The illiberalism

that emerged in the twelve case-study countries was thus more illiberalism

after the fact than illiberalism by promise. Most voters in these

countries could not be said to have consciously turned away from democracy

in making the choices they did at the ballot box.

What this suggests is that pointing to poor socioeconomic performance

by democratic governments and citizen anger about that performance

as the primary drivers of democratic backsliding is a mistake.

The onus for backsliding belongs on those leaders who gain power for a

wide range of reasons, including in many cases by promising to renovate

democracy, but then once in power relentlessly amass unconstrained

power by overriding countervailing institutions and undercutting basic

democratic norms and procedures. Backsliding in these cases is thus less

about a failure of democracy to deliver than about a failure of democracy

to constrain—that is, to curb the predatory political ambitions and

methods of certain elected leaders.

This conclusion does not absolve the outgoing democratic governments

in these and other cases from their many shortcomings in terms

of how they have governed and what they have delivered to citizens,

which have unquestionably caused or aggravated countless hardships

and wrongs. Indeed, such shortcomings have contributed to the resurgence

in recent years of the old debate—dating back to the 1960s and

before—about whether autocracies are better able than democracies to

deliver economic benefits. But our findings point the primary finger of

blame for democratic backsliding at the politicians and political parties

that have acted antidemocratically and the weakness of democracy’s institutional

guardrails in these countries.


analytic conclusion points to an overarching policy conclusion.

The community of public and private organizations working internationally

to slow or reverse the tide of democratic backsliding should

emphasize bolstering the independence and strength of those institutions

that serve as guardrails against antidemocratic encroachments by political

figures determined to steamroll countervailing institutions and gain

unchecked power. On the side of public institutions, this may include

courts, anticorruption bodies, electoral-management bodies, and those

parts of local government that have preserved some autonomy from national

political control. It may also include work with national parliaments,

if that can be done in a way that augments the role of parliament

as a check on executive power. On the nongovernmental side, this will

often mean support for independent media and independent civic groups

that seek to hold power accountable whether by protecting political and

civil rights, increasing government accountability, or countering political

misinformation and disinformation.

Focusing on fortifying constraint is not the same as a generalized

strategy of political institutional support—it needs to be carefully tailored

to reinforce democratic guardrails and avoid soft-edged governance

programming that may inadvertently help to strengthen an overweening

political power structure. Such a strategy will ideally include a

mix of well-coordinated elements of aid programming, diplomatic interventions,

and economic carrots and sticks. None of the various constituent

elements of such a strategy are new for democracy supporters, but

they should be joined together more purposely into integrated efforts to

buttress prodemocratic constraints on power.

Prioritizing such an approach does not mean international supporters

of democracy should forsake ongoing or potential new efforts to help

new or struggling democratic governments deliver better socioeconomic

results for their citizens. Those efforts are worth doing in and of themselves

to contribute to a better life for people across the democratic

world. And in some cases, they may over time help to alleviate sociopolitical

pressures that could encourage citizens to take risks with disruptive

and potentially undemocratic alternatives. But such efforts should

be viewed as a complement to, not a substitute for, a primary strategy

of strengthening domestic sources and structures of prodemocratic constraint

and disincentivizing politically predatory leaders from deepening

their antidemocratic quests.

How Biden and Inflation Set Harris Up for Defeat: Election 2024. By Matthew Yglesias

— Read time: 5 minutes


Kamala Harris is now suffering the indignity that attaches to any defeated candidate who does the right thing and concedes defeat: She is the target for massive recriminations within her party.1 The arguments are predictable, with moderate Democrats saying that she should have been more moderate and progressives saying she should have been more progressive.


But the most important data point for understanding last week’s election is completely separate from this intraparty debate — and it indicates that Harris’s loss may have had more to do with decisions President Joe Biden made years ago than with anything the vice president’s campaign did or failed to do in the last few months.


The data concerns developed countries that have held elections since the big inflationary wave that started in 2022. In 16 OECD countries, incumbent parties have lost 7% of their vote share on average. Typical is Portugal, where an incumbent center-left party suffered a 13-point swing, or Lithuania, where an incumbent center-right party lost 7.8% of the vote. Swings have been especially large in the Anglosphere, with Conservatives in the UK losing 19.9% of their vote share and New Zealand’s Labour losing 23.1%. Canada hasn’t had an election yet, but Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberals are poised for a catastrophic defeat much larger than what happened to Harris.


In other words: In the grand scheme of things, the Democrats made out pretty well.


None of this entirely exonerates Harris or her decision-making, however. Her campaign maintained that it was an underdog effort. But its actual behavior was risk-averse and conservative, consistently choosing low-variance plays that minimized controversy. It’s the kind of choice you make if you’re confident you have a lead. A better-informed campaign, or one with sounder epistemic practices, would have made some different choices — and the obvious one would have been to show far more concern than Biden ever did about inflation.


In one important way, Biden does bear more responsibility for inflation than other world leaders. Incumbent politicians who lost in other countries, such as Estonia and the Netherlands, were essentially victims of global macroeconomic forces beyond their control. Biden, by contrast, is the president of a country large and powerful enough country to meaningfully influence the entire global economy.


Of course, the Covid-19 pandemic was not his fault. It’s doubtful the world could have emerged from the pandemic without some kind of inflation, as demand surged and supply chains buckled. Then came Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a further shock with unavoidable consequences. And the American Rescue Plan, which Biden signed into law in 2021, helped the US economy recover far more quickly than those in Europe.


But the ARP, at $1.9 trillion, was far bigger than it needed to be — and people said so at the time. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, the epitome of sober-minded bipartisanship, warned before the bill’s passage that it contained enough spending “to close the output gap two to three times over.” Two years later, in June 2023, the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco issued a report on the sources of inflation, estimating that only about 60% of it was due to supply-chain issues. The rest can be attributed to excessive fiscal stimulus or insufficient monetary tightening.


Biden had his reasons for focusing on spending and rejecting a decent Republican offer of a smaller bill — notably the hope that a one-year expansion of the child tax credit would prove so popular that Congress would extend it. But that didn’t work out, so instead of a permanent legacy item, Biden was left with a needless expansionary bit of extra spending. This was a calculated risk with significant upside, and I supported it at the time, but in retrospect it was a mistake.


Less forgivable is Biden’s response once the rate of inflation began to spike: He simply never fully pivoted into inflation-fighting mode. Granted, there wasn’t a whole lot he could have done. He did repackage what was primarily a climate and energy bill into something called the Inflation Reduction Act, which reduced the budget deficit (my idea, by the way!). But as written, it included very little deficit reduction because Democrats wanted to maximize spending on climate programs.


Then a funny thing happened: Within a year of passage, the cost estimates were soaring and the bill was no longer reducing the deficit. Biden showed no interest in going back to Congress to trim the price tag or in any other form of deficit reduction.


In fact, instead of taking every opportunity — however small — to show he cared about fighting inflation, Biden did pretty much the opposite. He continued to push student loan-forgiveness programs through executive action that increased inflationary pressure. He raised the cost of drilling for oil and gas, raised the cost of clean energy through union labor requirements, and raised the cost of lumber while saying he was worried about housing costs. In general, he exerted frighteningly little discipline over progressive interest group demands.


Again, it’s not clear exactly how much substantive difference any of these policy choices could have made. But the answer is not zero. And from a political standpoint, an administration that was seen as doing everything it could to fight inflation would have had a very different profile from the actual Biden administration, which was addicted to everything-bagel liberalism.


Could a different approach have made the difference electorally? There’s no way to know for sure. But it couldn’t have hurt.


The Democrats Need an Honest Conversation on Gender Identity. by Helen Lewis

The Democrats Need an Honest Conversation on Gender Identity. by Helen Lewis 

Nov 10, 2024 at 11:57 PM

One of the mysteries of this election is how the Democrats approached polling day with a set of policies on gender identity that they were neither proud to champion—nor prepared to disown.


Although most Americans agree that transgender people should not face discrimination in housing and employment, there is nowhere near the same level of support for allowing transgender women to compete in women’s sports—which is why Donald Trump kept bringing up the issue. His campaign also barraged swing-state voters and sports fans with ads reminding them that Kamala Harris had previously supported taxpayer-funded gender-reassignment surgery for prisoners. The commercials were effective: The New York Times reported that Future Forward, a pro-Harris super PAC, found that one ad “shifted the race 2.7 percentage points in Mr. Trump’s favor after viewers watched it.” The Harris campaign mostly avoided the subject.


Since the election, reports of dissent from this strategy have begun to trickle out. Bill Clinton reportedly raised the alarm about letting the attacks go unanswered, but was ignored. After Harris’s loss, Representative Seth Moulton of Massachusetts went on the record with his concerns. “I have two little girls, I don’t want them getting run over on a playing field by a male or formerly male athlete, but as a Democrat I’m supposed to be afraid to say that,” he told the Times. The recriminations go as far as the White House, where allies of Joe Biden told my colleague Franklin Foer that the current president would have countered Trump’s ads more aggressively, and “clearly rejected the idea of trans women competing in women’s sports.”


One problem: Biden’s administration has long pushed the new orthodoxy on gender, without ever really explaining to the American people why it matters—or, more crucially, what it actually involves. His officials have advocated for removing lower age limits for gender surgeries for minors, and in January 2022, his nominee for the Supreme Court, Ketanji Brown Jackson, refused to define the word woman, telling Senator Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, “I’m not a biologist.”


On sports—an issue seized on by the Trump campaign—Biden’s White House has consistently prioritized gender identity over sex. Last year, the Department of Education proposed regulations establishing “that policies violate Title IX when they categorically ban transgender students from participating on sports teams consistent with their gender identity just because of who they are.” Schools were, however, allowed to limit participation in specific situations. (In April, with the election looming, this part of the Title IX revision was put on hold.) Harris went into the campaign tied to the Biden administration’s positions, and did not have the courage, or strategic sense, to reject them publicly. Nor did she defend them.  


The fundamental issue is that athletes who have gone through male puberty are typically stronger and faster than biological females. Rather than contend with that fact, many on the left have retreated to a comfort zone of claiming that opposition to trans women in women’s sports is driven principally by transphobia. But it isn’t: When trans men or nonbinary people who were born female have competed in women’s sports against other biological females, no one has objected. The same season that Lia Thomas, a trans woman, caused controversy by swimming in the women’s division, a trans man named Iszac Henig did so without any protests. (He was not taking testosterone and so did not have an unfair advantage.) Yet even talking about this issue in language that regular Americans can understand is difficult: On CNN Friday, when the conservative political strategist Shermichael Singleton said that “there are a lot of families out there who don’t believe that boys should play girls’ sports,” he was immediately shouted down by another panelist, Jay Michaelson, who said that the word boy was a “slur,” and he “was not going to listen to transphobia at this table.” The moderator, Abby Phillips, also rebuked Singleton, telling him to “talk about this in a way that is respectful.”


A few Democrats, such as Colin Allred, a Senate candidate in Texas, attempted to counter Republicans’ ads by forcefully supporting women’s right to compete in single-sex sports—and not only lost their races anyway, but were attacked from the left for doing so. In states such as Texas and Missouri, the political right is surveilling and threatening to prosecute parents whose children seek medical treatments for gender dysphoria, or restricting transgender adults’ access to Medicaid. In this climate, activists believe, the Democrats should not further jeopardize the rights of a vulnerable minority by legitimizing voters’ concerns. “Please do not blame trans issues or trans people for why we lost,” Sam Alleman, the Harris campaign’s LBGTQ-engagement director, wrote on X. “Trans folks have been and are going to be a primary target of Project 2025 and need us to have their backs now more than ever.”


During the race, many journalists wrote about the ubiquity—and the grimness—of the Trump ads on trans issues, notably Semafor’s David Weigel. But at the time, I was surprised how dismissive many commentators were about their potential effect, given the enormous sums of money involved. My theory was that these ads tapped into a larger concern about Democrats: that they were elitists who ruled by fiat, declined to defend their unpopular positions, and treated skeptics as bigots. Gender might not have been high on voters’ list of concerns, but immigration and the border were—and all the same criticisms of Democratic messaging apply to those subjects, too.


Not wishing to engage in a losing issue, Harris eventually noted blandly that the Democrats were following the law on providing medical care to inmates, as Trump had done during his own time in office. On the integrity of women’s sports, she said nothing.


How did we get here? At the end of Barack Obama’s second term, gay marriage was extended to all 50 states, an achievement for which LGBTQ groups had spent decades campaigning. In 2020, the Supreme Court’s decision in Bostock v. Clayton County found that, in the words of conservative Justice Neil Gorsuch, “an employer who fires an individual merely for being gay or transgender defies the law.” Those advances meant that activist organizations, with large staffs and existing donor networks, had to go looking for the next big progressive cause. Since Trump came to power, they have stayed relevant and well funded by taking maximalist positions on gender—partly in reaction to divisive red-state laws, such as complete bans on gender medicine for minors. The ACLU, GLAAD, the Human Rights Campaign, and other similar groups have done so safe in the knowledge that they answer to their (mostly wealthy, well-educated) donors, rather than a more diverse and skeptical electorate. “The fundamental lesson I hope Dem politicians take from this election is that they should not adopt positions unless they can defend them, honestly, in a one-on-one conversation with the median American voter, who is a white, non-college 50-yr-old living in a small-city suburb,” the author (and Atlantic contributing writer) James Surowiecki argued last week on X.


Even now, though, many Democrats are reluctant to discuss the party’s positions on trans issues. The day after Moulton made his comments, his campaign manager resigned in protest, and the Massachusetts state-party chair weighed in to say that they “do not represent the broad view of our party.” But Moulton did not back down, saying in a statement that although he had been accused of failing “the unspoken Democratic Party purity test,” he was committed to defending the rights of all Americans. “We did not lose the 2024 election because of any trans person or issue. We lost, in part, because we shame and belittle too many opinions held by too many voters and that needs to stop.”


Gilberto Hinojosa, the chair of the Texas Democrats, faced a similar backlash. He initially told reporters, “There’s certain things that we just go too far on, that a big bulk of our population does not support,” but he quickly walked back the comments. “I extend my sincerest apologies to those I hurt with my comments today,” Hinojosa said. “In frustration over the GOP’s lies to incite hate for trans communities, I failed to communicate my thoughts with care and clarity.” (On Friday, he resigned, citing the party’s “devastating” election results in the state.)


The tragedy of this subject is that compromise positions are available that would please most voters, and would stop a wider backlash against gender nonconformity that manifests as punitive laws in red states. America is a more open-minded country than its toughest critics believe—the latest research shows that about as many people believe that society has not gone far enough in accepting trans people as think that it has gone too far. Delaware has just elected the first transgender member of Congress, Sarah McBride. But most voters think that biological sex is real, and that it matters in law and policy. Instructing them to believe otherwise, and not to ask any questions, is a doomed strategy. By shedding their most extreme positions, the Democrats will be better placed to defend transgender Americans who want to live their lives in peace.

Sunday, November 10, 2024

We Are Never Going Back. By David Klion

Read time: 7 minutes

We Are Never Going Back

Democrats’ bid to return to a bygone liberal era failed—and now we’re all going to pay the price.

David Klion

November 8, 2024

One of the hardest things to face about Donald Trump’s victory is that it comes with an undeniable democratic mandate. Trump prevailed over Kamala Harris in all seven swing states, and became only the second Republican since the end of the Cold War to win the national popular vote, powered by dramatic gains from voters in nearly every part of the country and across diverse demographics. In 2016, Trump’s surprise win against Hillary Clinton came in spite of a popular vote loss and amid allegations of foreign election interference, which helped rally progressives in a campaign of “resistance” that cast Trump as an accidental aberration from American norms. Back then, that framing felt plausible to many; this time, however, there is no escaping that the American electorate decisively prefers Trump and his reactionary platform over a standard Democratic ticket. As a result, longstanding liberal hopes that the nation’s shifting demographics would ultimately lead to a permanent Democratic majority have collapsed, with a far-right campaign demonstrating its appeal to at least some immigrants and communities of color. It turned out that Trump could weather blowback from a supporter’s racist joke, but Harris could not overcome Joe Biden’s historic unpopularity, attributable first and foremost to a globally punishing inflation crisis, but also to an anti-immigrant panic stoked by Republicans and further encouraged by Biden, and, at least among certain subsets of voters, to Biden’s steadfast support for Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza.


At first glance, the electorate’s decision to return Trump to the White House may seem ideologically incoherent. Voters came out in favor of enshrining abortion rights in seven out of ten states where it was put to a vote (abortion protections also received majority support in Florida, but fell short of a 60% threshold necessary to pass); yet many of the same voters chose a president whose Supreme Court appointees are responsible for outlawing abortion in half the country and whose party is eager to ban it everywhere else. And while white college-educated voters overall stayed Democratic—Harris outperformed Biden’s 2020 numbers with them—various other constituencies upended conventional wisdom about American politics: Many Latinos supported the candidate pledging to put undocumented Latino immigrants in prison camps; many young voters opted for the candidate threatening to reverse student loan forgiveness; many observant Jews voted for the candidate known to associate with neo-Nazis; and many Muslims voted for the candidate who once attempted to ban Muslims from the country (those last two groups were targeted in mutually contradictory ad campaigns funded by the far-right billionaire Elon Musk). Democrats lost significant ground even in some of the traditionally bluest parts of the country; in New York City, for instance, Trump improved on his 2020 showing by more than ten points, with particularly strong gains in Asian and Latino neighborhoods that matched nationwide trends. With this result, Trump demonstrated definitively that he is liberated from making what many of us regard as sense. Instead, he offered vibes—cruel and vindictive compared with the “joyful” vibes cultivated by the Harris campaign, certainly, but still the vibes that resonated with Americans outside the most rarefied precincts.


Indeed, in gravitating toward Trump, voters seemed to be reading past the candidates’ slogans to identify which party was truly promising to overhaul an untenable status quo. Even though Trump continued to use the backward-looking catchphrase “Make America Great Again” he actually campaigned on radical disruption: mass deportations of undocumented immigrants, steep tariffs on foreign imports, a total gutting of the federal bureaucracy overseen by Elon Musk, and a healthcare system run by the anti-vaxxer Robert F. Kennedy Jr., among many other proposed horrors. If he delivers on even a fraction of this, American society will be irrevocably changed. Meanwhile, while the Harris campaign attempted to repudiate Trump with “We Are Not Going Back,” they were the side that seemed to long for a bygone, mythologized era of American greatness—one of bipartisan Cold War liberal consensus defined by civility and a confident establishment. This is the past Harris harkened back to when she toured the battleground states with Liz Cheney and promised to include Republicans in her cabinet, and when she marketed herself as a prosecutor who would uphold the rule of law in contrast with Trump’s multiple felony convictions and flagrant contempt for the Constitution.


This nostalgic approach was grimly epitomized by Biden’s unshakable, ironclad commitment to Israel in the wake of October 2023—a Cold War era position he and much of the Washington foreign policy “blob” have maintained unadjusted despite Israel’s steady rightward descent and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s extensively documented war crimes and brazen defiance of Biden’s own publicly declared red lines. Harris did little to distance herself from this record, even as courageous activists worked to persuade the administration she serves in to reconsider its financial and military backing of Israel’s genocide. The Harris campaign even spurned the Uncommitted movement’s bare minimum ask that a single Palestinian speaker be permitted to take the stage and deliver an anodyne speech at this summer’s Democratic National Convention. Many of us warned the campaign that it risked alienating Arab, Muslim, and younger voters in Michigan and other swing states. But Harris ignored us, preemptively refused to hold Israel materially accountable for anything, and ultimately did lose Michigan by less than two points, or around 80,000 votes. In the heavily Arab American city of Dearborn, where Biden won 88% of the vote in 2020, Harris won only 36%. And an exit poll conducted by the Council on American Islamic Relations showed Harris winning less than half of Muslim voters nationwide, a dramatic drop from Biden in 2020, with anger over Gaza as a key reason for the shift. Even if polling suggested the issue was a low priority to most voters, the administration’s palpable disregard for Palestinian life—and refusal to engage with the young voters who had spent a year seeing images of murdered children on social media—impeded Harris’s ability to energize an activist base, and reflected her broader instinct to privilege imagined past glories over the current demands of her core constituents.


The electorate’s rejection of Harris’s timid strategy may represent the last gasp of the old consensus, as the elite pillars that have oriented generations of liberals crumble under their own contradictions. These institutions—reputable newspapers and magazines, Ivy League universities, nonprofit foundations, publishing houses, and the Democratic Party itself—are hollowed out, anachronistic, and widely distrusted. Colleges and universities, for instance, have played into the right’s hands in the accelerating campus culture wars. Rather than defend the academy as a site of free expression, they have spent energy and credibility beating back the left to capitulate to Republican witch hunts and pro-Israel donor pressure. Journalism, too, is in crisis, with traditional publications facing steep declines in subscribers, revenue, and employment opportunities especially in local news markets, while a handful of nationally influential exceptions are increasingly at the mercy of billionaire owners and their narrow interests. And where elite liberal institutions flounder, the right is waiting to step in. In education, we see this in growing crackdowns on progressive curricula and activist speech, especially against Palestine advocates; in media, the rightwing takeover manifests as an avalanche of disinformation and propaganda from a new ecosystem of billionaire-subsidized newsletters, podcasts, and social media platforms that pander to extremists and disseminate conspiracy theories.


The cruel irony is that even as much of the left has sounded the alarm about liberalism’s impending collapse, we will most assuredly be held responsible for it. We know now that we will not spend the years to come struggling over how best to build our ideal society, but rather struggling to protect what we can against the forces of creative destruction that a disenchanted majority of American voters have chosen to unleash. Trump will dismantle Biden’s accomplishments on every front and then some, and even in a post-Trump Democratic era (should we be so fortunate), we will be hard pressed to win them back. With austerity advocates now able to claim decisive victory in the Biden era’s inflation debate—over whether the public can tolerate higher prices if jobs are abundant and wages are rising—even hypothetical future Democratic administrations are unlikely to risk high inflation again, suggesting little hope for bold new investments in healthcare, education, housing, climate justice, transit infrastructure, or any other progressive priorities. The left’s ability to influence policymakers is itself going to be constrained as Democratic politicians draw ugly lessons from the fact that certain constituencies they normally count on voted for Trump. If 2016 produced a wave of progressive activism on all fronts that Democrats were forced to accommodate, 2024 may push them in the opposite direction.


The ambient misery of this week is a kind of mourning for the hopeful futures that have already been foreclosed and the lives that will inevitably be sacrificed as a result. It would be hubristic to propose a manifesto for progressives at such a time; however, it is not too early to contemplate what might have been done differently to prevent a Trump restoration. It’s certainly plausible that if Biden and Harris had actually enforced a red line against Israel and spoken out against Netanyahu’s genocidal policies with conviction, they could have saved tens of thousands of lives and perhaps earned the trust of large numbers of critically situated voters. But Harris’s defeat can’t ultimately be reduced to a single foregone course of action; it was all but predetermined by a crisis of liberalism years in the making, one born of imperial arrogance, haughty indifference to voter grievances, and an educated elite cloistered from its public and confused about its core values. We are indeed not going back—instead we’re going forward into a dark, dystopian, genocidal future that liberals played no small role in shaping.

The 21st Century’s Greatest, Ghastliest Showman. by Megan Garber

/ Nov 10, 2024 at 12:33 AM


In early 2017, just after Donald Trump took residency in the White House, the New York Times technology columnist Farhad Manjoo engaged in an experiment. He spent a week doing all he could to ignore the new president. He failed. Whether Manjoo was scrolling through social media or news sites, watching sitcoms or sports—even shopping on Amazon—Trump was there, somehow, in his vision. In those early days of his presidency, Trump had already become so ubiquitous that a studious effort to avoid him was doomed. “Coverage of Mr. Trump may eclipse that of any single human being ever,” Manjoo observed. Trump was no longer a single story; he was “the ether through which all other stories flow.”


This week, the former president made himself inescapable once more. He will have another four-year term in office, the Trump Show renewed for a second season. And his political power has been ratified, in part, by a dynamic that Manjoo observed at the start of Trump’s first presidency: His celebrity changes the politics that surround him.


Trump is a showman above all, which has proved to be a major source of his omnipresence. He is image all the way down. He is also narrative shed of its connection to grounded truth. He has endeared himself to many Americans by denigrating the allegedly unchecked power of “the media”; the irony is that he is the media.


The book that best explains Trump’s dominance may well have been published in 1962. In The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-Events in America, the historian Daniel J. Boorstin described the image as a medium—a photograph, a movie, a representation of life, laid out on pulp or screen—that becomes, soon enough, a habit of mind. The image doesn’t merely replicate reality; it also surpasses it. It normalizes spectacle so thoroughly—life, carefully framed and edited and rendered in Technicolor—that reality itself can seem boring by comparison. Images, in Boorstin’s framework, are intimately connected to many of the other phenomena that shape so much of American culture: celebrity, fantasy, all that gives rise to the “thicket of unreality which stands between us and the facts of life.”



In describing imagery in action, Boorstin pointed to Phineas T. Barnum, the famous peddler of spectacular hoaxes and lustrous lies. Barnum was a 19th-century showman with a 21st-century sense of pageantry; he anticipated how reality could evolve from a truth to be accepted into a show to be produced. Barnum turned entertainment into an omen: He understood how much Americans would be willing to give up for the sake of a good show.


Trump is Barnum’s obvious heir—the ultimate realization of Boorstin’s warnings. The difference, of course, is that Barnum was restricted to brick-and-mortar illusions. The deceptions he created were limited to big tops and traveling shows. Trump’s versions go viral. His humbugs scale, becoming the stuff of mass media in an instant. Trump lost the 2020 election, and his refusal to accept the defeat became known, in short order, as the Big Lie. His resentments become other people’s anger, too. In the introduction to his 2004 book Trump: Think Like a Billionaire, the future president includes a quote from a book about the rich—a classic Trumpian boast doubling as an admission. “Almost all successful alpha personalities display a single-minded determination to impose their vision on the world,” it reads, “an irrational belief in unreasonable goals, bordering at times on lunacy.”


The assertion was borrowed from the writer Richard Conniff, who would later profess his shock that the line—he had intended it as an insult—had been used by Trump to bolster his own brand. Trump: Think Like a Billionaire was published not long after the premiere of The Apprentice, earlier in 2004; the show, as it reimagined reality as a genre, also transformed its host into a star. When Trump announced his first presidential candidacy, he staged the whole thing in the gilded atrium of the New York City tower emblazoned with his name, a building that was real-estate investment, brand extension, and TV set. Many, at the time, assumed that Trump was running, essentially, for the ratings—that he might try to channel his campaign into an expansion of his power as an entertainer.


In many ways, it turns out, Trump has done precisely that—despite, and because of, his ascendance to the presidency. Barnum, too, converted his fame as a showman into a second life as a politician. While serving in the Connecticut legislature, he crusaded against contraception and abortion, introducing a law that would become infamous for its repressions of both. Trump’s neo-Barnumian status has not only allowed him to exercise similar power over people’s lives; it has also enabled him to convince a large portion of the American electorate of the supreme rightness of his positions.


In 2015, during Trump’s first presidential campaign, HuffPost announced that it would not report on him as part of its political coverage; instead, it would write about his antics in its Entertainment section. “Our reason is simple: Trump’s campaign is a sideshow,” the publication declared. “We won’t take the bait.”


That category confusion explains a lot about Trump’s durability. He defies the old logic that tried to present politics and entertainment as separate phenomena. He is a traditional politician, and he isn’t at all. He is a man—a person shaped by appetites and whim and spleen—and a singular one, at that. But he has also styled himself as an Everyman: an agent of other people’s resentments, fear, and anger.


It didn’t matter that Trump lost the presidency in 2020. It didn’t matter that he was impeached and impeached again, held liable for rape, convicted of fraud. In another time, with another figure, any one of those developments would have meant a culmination of the narrative, the disgraced politician slinking into obscurity. The end. But Trump has used his remarkable fame—its insulating power—to argue that he is not a politician, even as he has become an über-politician. Each of his might-have-been endings, as a result, has served for him as a new beginning. Each has been an opportunity for him to reset and begin the narrative anew, to double down on his threats and hatreds. The effect of attempting to hold Trump accountable, whether in the courts or in the arena of public opinion, has been only to expand the reach of the spectacle—to make him ever more unavoidable, ever more inevitable.


“It’s probably not a good idea for just about all of our news to be focused on a single subject for that long,” Manjoo wrote in 2017. He was absolutely correct. But he could not foresee what Trump had in store. “Politics is downstream from culture,” the old Breitbart saying goes. But Trump’s reelection is one more piece of evidence that politics and culture mingle, now, in the same murky water. Both seethe in the same dark sea. Trump once again has carte blanche to impose his vision on the world. And his audience has little choice but to watch.