Alphen, Netherlands. 7
November. James Freeman Clarke once said,
“A
politician thinks of the next election; a statesman of the next generation”. President Obama has just
been re-elected by the next generation.
Now is his chance to be the statesman he needs to become.
If 2008 was an economic-storm election to lose 2012 could be (could be) the
election to win with a US economy predicted to grow at 3% next year with three
million jobs being created over the next four years. What is truly remarkable is that the
president held together a coalition of young white suburbanites, women and
urban minorities to get re-elected in what is still an instinctively
centre-right country. Certainly, this US
election has profound lessons not just for Republicans and conservatives but also
for Europeans.
The first lesson for
Europeans concerns the growing political gap in western societies between old and young, men and
women, whites and minorities. Women, who
make up 54% of the US electorate, voted 55% for Obama. Albeit a chronic generalisation the message
from American women seems to be that at a time of economic crisis they want
more government not less. They also
reject the machismo pain is gain logic of fiscal discipline and austerity which
may make financial and economic sense over the longer-term, but causes suffering in
the short-term. Those preaching fiscal
common sense clearly failed to resonate with many in an America facing a
fifteen trillion dollar deficit and soon to peer over the edge of a fiscal
cliff which come 1 January, 2013 could cut 4.7 percentage points off the US economy, and see taxes soar
and public services savagely cut.
The second lesson concerns
the impact of changing demographics on the vote in all western societies. In the US the white vote is now down to
72%. In most European countries it is
between 80-85% but given immigration it is heading in a similar direction. For conservatives it means they can no longer
hold onto their 1950s view of society and for all the frictions and failings of
fifty years of the liberal experiment it has created a society that whilst fairer
is grossly uncompetitive. As
globalisation bites that decadent reality will become ever more apparent. For progressives immigration might work in
the short-term because it shifts the ‘class’ vote in their favour but at the cost of social cohesion that is now a distant memory.
It also reinforces a culture of dependency on government which is
economically unsustainable.
There is another third
and potentially more dangerous lesson. If (as now seems possible at midnight
Washington time) Obama wins the presidency but Romney wins the popular vote
what legitimacy the president? At
electoral day’s end the candidate who wins the most votes should be the one who
is elected. There are several countries
on both sides of the Atlantic where too often a leader is elected on a minority
vote, not least my own country Britain. Semantic
and sophisticated arguments can be made to justify this but over time all that
happens is the growing alienation of a large minority who believe the systems
works against them. Alienation is a real threat to European democracy already under threat from centralising EU technocrats and Euro-federalists.
There are also aspects of this vote that are peculiarly
American. No US president has ever been
elected with unemployment over 7% as it is today. Obama won as much on charisma as policy, which
was very hard to discern on either side.
His charisma and celebrity made contact with the lives of millions of ordinary Americans in a
way that a billionaire white, wooden opponent too close to irresponsible, greed-stricken
extremist capitalism simply did and could not.
Democrats should and will rejoice but they should also remember that Obama
is a one-off political phenomenon. Four
years hence it will be back to Washington business as normal…almost.
Sadly, it is the precisely
the mix of extreme capitalism and the politics of entitlement implicit in this
election that has led Europe to the edge of the abyss. America (like Europe) is today a society unable
to face the hyper-competitive facts of globalised economic life and one in which capitalism red in tooth and claw is championed. How and if that contradiction is resolved will define Americans (and Europeans) in the coming age. There can and must be no return to some form of sweat shop economy but nor can Americans or Europeans defy economic gravity. Rather, the political class left and right must seek a new balance
between competitiveness and compassion, between government and civil society,
between liberty, responsibility and entitlement to sustainably pay for the
values that Americans and Europeans share and which not
only define who we are but what we stand for together in the world.
Julian Lindley-French