If you want to know why Trump won, just look at the response to his winning
If you want to know why Trump won, just look at the response to his winning
writes
Brendan O'Neill.
The lofty contempt for ‘low information’ Americans. The
barely concealed disgust for the rednecks and cretins of ‘flyover’
America who are apparently racist and misogynistic and homophobic. The
haughty sneering at the vulgar, moneyed American political system and
how it has allowed a wealthy candidate to poison the little people’s
mushy, malleable minds. The suggestion that American women, more than 40
per cent of whom are thought to have voted for Trump, suffer from
internalised misogyny: that is, they don’t know their own minds, the
poor dears. The hysterical, borderline apocalyptic claims that the world
is now infernally screwed because ‘our candidate’, the good, pure
person, didn’t get in.
This response to Trump’s victory reveals why Trump was victorious.
Because those who do politics these days — the political establishment,
the media, the academy, the celeb set — are so contemptuous of ordinary
people, so hateful of the herd, so convinced that the mass of society
cannot be trusted to make political decisions, and now those ordinary
people have given their response to such top-down sneering and
prejudice.
Oh, the irony of observers denouncing Middle America as a seething
hotbed of hatred even as they hatefully libel it a dumb and ugly mob.
Having turned America’s ‘left behind’ into the butt of every clever East
Coast joke, and the target of every handwringing newspaper article
about America’s dark heart and its strange, Bible-toting inhabitants,
the political and cultural establishment can’t now be surprised that so
many of those people have turned around and said… well, it begins with F
and ends with U.
The respectable set’s allergy to Trump is fundamentally an allergy to
the idea of democracy itself. To them, Trump’s rise confirms the folly
of asking the ignorant, the everyday, the non-subscribers to the New York Times,
to decide on important political matters. They’re explicit about this
now. In the run-up to election day, big-name commentators wondered out
loud if democracy is all it’s cracked up to be. Trump’s ascendancy
showed we need better checks and balances on ‘the passions of the mob’,
said Andrew Sullivan.
We should ‘cool and restrain [these] temporary populist passions’, he
said, and refuse to allow ‘feeling, emotion’ to override ‘reasoned
deliberation’. The little folks only feel and wail, you see, and it’s
down to the grown-ups in the system to think coolly on their behalf.
Elsewhere, a writer for the New York Times
asked Americans to consider installing a monarchy, which could rise
above the ‘toxic partisanship’ of party politics — that is, above open,
swirling, demos-stuffed political debate. In a new book called ‘Against
Democracy’ — says it all — Georgetown philosopher Jason Brennan
argues for an epistocracy, an ‘aristocracy of the wise’, who might
decide political matters for those of us who are ‘low information’ (ie.
stupid). This echoes the anti-democratic turn of liberals in the 2000s,
when it was argued that daft, Bush-backing Americans increasingly made
decisions, ‘not with their linear, logical left brain, but with their
lizard, more emotional right brain’, in Arianna Huffington’s words.
Such vile contempt for the political, democratic capacities of the
ordinary person has been in great evidence following Trump’s win —
across Twitter and in apocalypse-tinged instant responses — and it is
likely to intensify. Anti-Trump will morph more explicitly into
anti-democracy.
If this all sounds familiar, that’s because it’s the same kind of
pleb-fearing horror that greeted the Brexit result four months ago. ‘Why
elections are bad for democracy’, a headline in the Guardian said. The people are deluded and it is the task of those with ‘reason and expertise’ to ‘un-delude’ them, said a writer for Foreign Policy. ‘What if democracy doesn’t work? What if it never has and never will?’, wondered a pained George Monbiot.
Boom. That’s it. The secret and not-so-secret cry of the elites and the
experts and the observers over both Brexit and Trump is precisely that:
‘What if democracy doesn’t work?’ It’s not so much Trump they fear as
the system that allowed him to get to the White House: that pesky,
ridiculous system where we must ask ordinary people — shudder — what
they think should happen in the nation.
The anti-Brexit anti-democrats claimed they were merely opposed to
using rough, simplistic referendums to decide on huge matters. That kind
of democracy is too direct, they said. Yet now they’re raging over the
election of Trump via a far more complicated, tempered democratic
system. That’s because — and I know this is strong, but I’m sure it’s
correct — it is democracy itself that they hate. Not referendums, not
Ukip’s blather, not only direct democracy, but democracy as an idea.
Against democracy — so many of them are now. It is the engagement of the
throng in political life that they fear. It is the people — ordinary,
working, non-PhD-holding people — whom they dread and disdain. It is
what got Trump to the White House — the right of all adults, even the
dumb ones, to decide about politics — that gives them sleepless nights
This nasty, reactionary turn against democracy by so many of the
well-educated both explains the victory of Trump, which neatly doubles
up as a slap in the face of the establishment, and confirms why
democracy is more important today than it has ever been. Because it
really would be folly, madness in fact, to let an elite that so little
understands ordinary people, and in fact loathes them, to run society
unilaterally. Now that would be dangerous, more dangerous than Trump.