It is hard to fathom the political pickle we are currently in. On this side of the Atlantic we (some of us) watched with horror as our friends in the US elected a political neophyte to the highest office in the land. From early on, it was clear that President Trump was completely mystified by the business of government. There were obviously things he wanted to do; he was admirably clear about what these were (fix healthcare, reduce crime, stop illegal migration by building “the wall”, appoint conservative judges, fix campaign finance). Some of them were entirely within the gift of the presidency, such as nominating Supreme Court justices. But many were not, requiring the cooperation of the legislative branch of the US system (ie the Congress). This should have been unproblematic for the at least the first part of his administration, given that he was elected as a Republican president, and the Republican party controlled both the Senate and the House of Representatives (and a majority of state Governorships to boot). The Republicans even tightened their grip on the Senate after the 2018 mid-term elections (although they lost control of the House). But yet, Trump achieved remarkably little beyond securing a conservative majority on the Supreme Court. While this is not to be sniffed at, his term was more marked by an inability to govern than to get stuff done. He seemed to be more interested in trashing the very norms and institutions he should have been using. The simplest explanation is that he was an amateur and basically not up to the job. He famously said of healthcare “Nobody knew health care could be so complicated” in 2017. But everybody did know (except apparently him). Maybe he should have been paying more attention.
But Trump’s
rise can be seen as part of a reaction to professional politics and the “elite”
that populates it, as represented at the time by Hillary Clinton. There’s no
doubt she knew all about politics from her experience as former First Lady,
Senator, Secretary of State and so on. But she just couldn’t get enough voters
to believe that she was on their side, and would get the sort of things done
that they wanted. Trump was the perfect foil; a way of holding two fingers up
to the system (apologies for this British cultural reference, in the US it is
of course one finger). The problem is he proceeded to trash the system and the
institutions that made it work, to the extent that it sort of did work, if only
haltingly. And so a vacuum was created that was filled with conspiracies, distrust,
misinformation, outright lies and an increase in domestic political violence
(threatened and executed). The tragedy for us on this side of the Atlantic is
that it appears that there are those that seek to follow the same playbook,
whether actively or passively. And, at least initially, they managed to strike
a similar cord.
For us it
was not a disputed election that brought things to a head, but a contentious
referendum. There’s no point relitigating Brexit. The decision was passed to
the people, the people decided and we all have to live with the political,
economic and cultural consequences. The outcome was in part about sticking it
to the elite, or at least that section of it that seemed to have actual arguments,
facts, analysis, the biggest political beasts (one remembers press conferences
with Balls, Osborne and Cameron) and, of course, experts. And in order to “get
Brexit done” we were then, by some margin, prepared to entrust our system to
Boris, a man who in normal times would have been completely disqualified from
the highest office by his track record of lying and buffoonery. We apparently
had had enough of “experts”, and handed the keys to those who would not pay
undue respect to important institutions,
not to mention personal integrity. Things then began to look up when Boris was
dispatched precisely because of his lack of integrity (although no doubt basic
political and economic incompetence played a role). But, alas, this turned out
to be a lull, the calm before an economic storm brought on by monumental hubris
which magnified the effects of a basic incompetence. Once again, some the stabilizing
and constraining institutions which previously might have moderated the
excesses of the political class were ignored or undermined. In the case of the
Truss/Kwarteng omnishambles, non-budget, “fiscal event” these were mainly economic
institutions like the OBR, the Bank of England, and the top civil servant in
the Treasury who was apparently too “orthodox” for comfort. Trussteng knew
better than the faceless (if experienced) bureaucrats, and better than the
markets that they proudly professed to worship. They had been warned of course,
in public debate, that fantasy economics don’t usually fare well when they collide
with reality, but they either didn’t listen, or didn’t care, or actually
believed the fantasy. We may never know which it was. But they managed to
persuade the key selectorate that they knew what they were doing, and so the keys were duly passed on to them.
If someone
had proposed a script with a plot that followed the twists and turns of the
last few months in UK politics, it would have been rejected out of hand as
being too far-fetched. And the idea of a popular insurrection (albeit an unsuccessful
one) in the US would also have seemed implausible not that long ago. But this
torrid tale of people promoted or trusted beyond their abilities, of the triumph
of the amateur and the charlatan over the serious and experienced, holds lessons
for us. Knowledge, experience and character all count, particularly when it
comes to running things like governments and economies. It turns out that this is no easy job and takes skill, experience, application and even a little luck (or the aid of Providence). Democratic political
systems no doubt can be frustrating and exasperating, but the answer cannot be
to entrust them to those who don’t really have a clue about what they are
doing. Trusting the expert and the experienced, may also mean trusting the cautious,
and that may mean that change is slow and incremental. But in the complex world
in which we live, that may be the best we can hope for, no matter how impatient
we may be. Better slow change than quick disaster.
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