Hillary Clinton – the Ideal Choice in Normal Circumstances
15 December 2016
By Eyad Abu Shakra
In normal circumstances, and in an established democracy like the USA, there
would not have been a need to choose between the two presidential candidates.
In an advanced and sophisticated institutions-based country, the presidential
primaries should have been enough to differentiate between a serious
politician and a maverick gate-crasher; between real programmes and protest
posturing; and finally, between responsible and rational approaches that put
attainable choices and unadulterated solutions before the American electorate
and cheap populism that drags political discourse into the lowest abyss of
personal slander, contradictory promises, and sickening out-biddings.
Given all the above, a candidate like Donald Trump should not have been picked
as the official candidate of one of the two parties of government in America,
i.e. the Republican Party and the Democratic Party, in the first place.
However, we are most certainly not in normal times or circumstances. The value
system of America today is not the one that built the most powerful country,
the most advanced educational system, and the most vibrant and energetic
economy in the world.
True, protest is not something new to politics. Accidental and controversial
politicians have appeared during certain periods in American history, but
political life in the USA has so far remained covered by broad political and
social consensus.
At one stage in the mid – 20th century, there was a large group inside the
Democratic Party, namely in the states of the 'Old South', that was
ideologically more conservative than the Republicans of the North and
Northeast. This, however, began to gradually change as the North and Northeast
moved towards the Democrats, while the Southern states which gave America its
last three Democratic presidents before Barack Obama (Lyndon Johnson, Jimmy
carter and Bill Clinton) steadily became solid Republican strongholds.
Indeed, Prof Paul Krugman, the noted academic, writer and Nobel laureate, said
something quite interesting in a lecture he gave in London a few years ago.
Krugman said ''In today's America there is not a single Republican anymore who
is to the Left of the Democrats, and not one Democrat who stands to the Right
of the Republicans''. Obviously, what he meant was that ideological
polarization in America is now complete; and each of the two main parties now
had its clear-cut political criteria: the Democrats are the social and
religious liberals who respect individual freedoms as much as they cherish
social rights, support state intervention in one way or another, support
public peace and collective responsibility that insure safety nets for the
underprivileged and minority groups. They also tolerate racial, gender,
religious and sectarian diversity.
In the opposite camp, the Republicans are now the religious, sectarian and
social conservatives who vigorously uphold absolute individual freedom even at
the expense of public good, view safety nets as restrictive to these freedoms
and regard government intervention as a hindrance to individual ambition and
detrimental to free enterprise, success and greatness. In fact, hawkish
Republicans go even further, preaching that America must go back to the one
built by the 'founding fathers', i.e. a white, Christian homeland closed off
to outsiders and foreigners.
The latter is exactly the choice that was recently put forward to American
voters; and due to the clear-cut difference between the Democrat and
Republican candidates, we are witnessing two noteworthy phenomena:
The first is that due to solidified political positions of the two parties'
support bases, any movement or shift is becoming virtually impossible as are
the chances of listening, convincing and compromise. Such a situation has led
to a nasty and vicious campaign.
The second is that the two partisan bases now reflect contradictory 'value
systems' that pose a real threat to social harmony, and subsequently public
peace.
Going back to ''in normal circumstances'', I would say Hillary Clinton
deserved to win because she is a wise, rational, moderate and experienced
politician.
Trump, on the other hand, is an unscrupulous 'populist', who is willing to
gamble anything, and say anything. It is truly unfortunate that Americans have
grown so hateful toward the 'political establishment' in Washington that they
voted for such a candidate.
Eyad Abu Shakra is the managing editor of Asharq Al-Awsat. He has been with
the newspaper since 1978.
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