opinion

US Election: Donald Trump’s back. Polls are tight, and Democrats are worried

Niall Ferguson
Daily Mail
Trump’s back in the race! Just weeks ago he was trailing, but now it’s tight. No wonder Democrats are sounding alarms.
Trump’s back in the race! Just weeks ago he was trailing, but now it’s tight. No wonder Democrats are sounding alarms. Credit: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

He’s back. Trump, that is. Only weeks ago, he was behind in the polls and being left for dust in the fundraising stakes. Now, the race is too close to call – and he has the momentum. No wonder the Democrats are scaremongering.

‘Trump is Speaking like Hitler, Stalin and Mussolini,’ wrote the commentator Anne Applebaum in The Atlantic magazine last week. ‘He and his campaign team believe that by using the tactics of the 1930s, they can win,’ she argued.

Kamala Harris herself is now worried enough to echo this argument. When a radio interviewer recently described Trump’s political vision as fascism, she replied: ‘Yes, we can say that.’

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US Vice President Kamala Harris during a campaign event at Shell Energy Stadium in Houston, Texas, US, on Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. Donald Trump and Kamala Harris are breaking off from the swing-state trail to campaign in an unlikely venue this close to Election Day - Texas, a state that is solidly in the Republican presidential column. Photographer: F. Carter Smith/Bloomberg
Kamala Harris herself is now worried enough to echo this argument. When a radio interviewer recently described Trump’s political vision as fascism, she replied: ‘Yes, we can say that.’ Credit: F. Carter Smith/Bloomberg

She did it again on CNN last Wednesday when she was asked if she believed her opponent met the definition of a fascist. ‘Yes, I do,’ she quickly shot back. ‘Yes, I do.’

And the American liberal press got right behind her, with one outlet arguing that ‘Trump is obsessed with having a dictator-level military’, while another alleged Trump had been heard to say: ‘I need the kind of generals that Hitler had.’

Hillary Clinton’s campaign tried the same thing against Trump eight years ago but failed to persuade voters. ‘America Has Never Been So Ripe For Tyranny’ ran a headline in New York Magazine back then. Clinton was at it again, calling Trump ‘blatantly fascist’ on CNN on Thursday.

Does Trump look or sound like Hitler? To answer that question, I refer readers to his hilarious, self-deprecating performance at an annual charity fundraising dinner in New York on October 18. Or how about the good humour with which Trump dished out fries in a memorable election stunt at a McDonald’s?

The Führer didn’t do stand-up. Nor did Mussolini serve fast food.

In the past three weeks, according to averages of all the polls, Trump has pulled ahead of Harris in all seven of the swing states in this election – Georgia and North Carolina in the South, Arizona and Nevada in the West, and Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin in the Midwest – and not because Americans thirst for fascism. (Just to remind you, fascism was all about state control of the economy and militarisation in preparation for war, pretty much the opposite of Donald Trump’s philosophy.)

Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump
It’s because voters trust Trump over Harris on the economy, which suffered a nasty bout of inflation while Harris was serving as Joe Biden’s vice president, and on illegal immigration, which has spiralled out of control on Biden and Harris’s watch. Credit: AAP

It’s because voters trust Trump over Harris on the economy, which suffered a nasty bout of inflation while Harris was serving as Joe Biden’s vice president, and on illegal immigration, which has spiralled out of control on Biden and Harris’s watch.

I admit it: I was wrong about Donald Trump. I thought on January 6, 2021, when rioters stormed the Capitol that his political career was at an end.

The reality is that, regardless of how recklessly he behaved on that day, the Democrats have failed to persuade around half of likely voters that his conduct revealed him to be a Hitler-like threat to democracy.

If he is re-elected, his critics warn of a threat to the constitutional order. However, they also foresee a threat to what they call the liberal international order.

In a second term, it is often argued, Trump would pull the plug on support for Ukraine. His desire to be a dictator at home, they say, is complemented by his desire to align America with dictators abroad – in particular, Russian President Vladimir Putin. If Donald Trump’s critics are right, then democracy is doomed – not only in America but also in the wider world, beginning in Eastern Europe.

I half-seriously said at the beginning of this year that the US election was a choice between Republic and Empire.

By that, I meant that if you believe Trump poses a threat to the republic, you must vote for the Democratic candidate. But if you believe the Democratic candidate poses a threat to American primacy in the world, then you must vote for Trump.

Yet the question is not how far Trump has authoritarian proclivities; it is how far he would be able to indulge them. Assuming he won on November 5, how would Trump change the Constitution to give himself a third term? That is something unambiguously ruled out by the 22nd Amendment. It is not even something that a president is empowered to propose.

And what if, as in his first term, Trump sought to change US immigration policy by executive order, but the courts struck it down. What could he do if the Supreme Court upheld the initial court ruling?

And, finally, if Trump ordered the US military to take action against domestic political opponents, where is the evidence that the senior echelons of the Army would be willing to carry out such an order?

The rule of law is deeply embedded in the US, not just because it is, by design, a republic of laws but also because it remains a country run to a striking extent by people with law degrees. In addition, it has an officer class deeply committed to the separation of the military from politics.

Not only is there no aspect of the Republican platform that envisions any change to the Constitution, but, ironically, it is the more radical Democrats who openly discuss constitutional changes that would fundamentally alter the US political system to their own advantage.

To give one example of many, in an article published two years ago in the New York Times, two liberal professors at, respectively, Harvard and Yale, Ryan Doerfler and Samuel Moyn, urged Democrats not to try to ‘reclaim’ the ‘broken’ Constitution but to ‘radically alter the basic rules of the game’.

‘In democracy … majority rule always must matter most,’ they declared. It should not have to ‘surviv[e] vetoes from powerful minorities that invoke the constitutional past to obstruct a new future.

‘One way to get to this more democratic world,’ they wrote, ‘is to pack the Union with new states’, in order to ‘break the false deadlock that the Constitution imposes through the Electoral College and Senate on the country, in which substantial majorities are foiled on issue after issue’.

To anyone who reveres the US Constitution – the most successful political document in history – all of this is blood-curdling. It is nothing less than a call for revolution: for replacement of the American republic with a tyranny of the majority.

And who is to say that, if elected president, with majorities in the Senate and the House, Kamala Harris would not be open to such revolutionary schemes?

The real threats to American democracy take other forms, too – not least the ever-rising federal debt burden.

It’s worth recalling that history has few examples of great powers that stayed great for long after the costs of debt service exceeded the costs of defence, as they have this year for the first time.

That, more than Trump’s Russophilia, is the real problem for America’s allies.

On its current trajectory – which I assume would continue under a Harris presidency – US defence spending simply does not suffice simultaneously to defend Ukraine, Israel and also Taiwan if all three were to come under attack.

And that is quite likely. The foreign policy of the Biden-Harris administration likely condemns Ukraine to be defeated; Israel to risk a war against Iran, with only limited US support; and Taiwan to fear a blockade by China at some point in the next four years.

The signature term of this administration has been ‘de-escalation’. On closer inspection, this term is the functional opposite of ‘deterrence’.

We cannot know for sure if Trump is right when he says that the attacks on Ukraine and Israel would not have occurred if he had been re-elected in 2020. All we know is that no such acts of aggression by authoritarian powers occurred during his first term.

So, Republic or Empire? I would say the latter is more vulnerable to four more years of Democratic government than the former to four more years of Trump.

This election remains excruciatingly close. It could turn on the decisions of ten or twenty thousand registered voters in a few dozen counties.

But of this, you can be sure: Not one of those swing voters is voting for Kamala Harris because they’ve been persuaded that Donald Trump is the reincarnation of Adolf Hitler.

The fact that Harris has resorted to playing the Hitler card is a sign of desperation, so I’ll go ahead and say it.

She’s losing this election.

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