The election campaign in the USA has begun. Will we witness an ugly political competition like we have never seen before?
Georg Schild: The election campaign is the precursor to power, and in the USA, the battle has always been fought with hard blows, not just since Donald Trump. President Andrew Jackson was often caricatured as “King Andrew” in the 1830s. Even worse, Abraham Lincoln was frequently depicted as an ape in 1860, playing on his name “Abe”. Trump revives this tradition of denigrating the opponent when he calls Hillary Clinton “Crooked Hillary”, Joe Biden “Sleepy Joe”, and his intra-party rival Nikki Haley “Tricky Nikki”.
What does Trump stand for in terms of his campaign?'
GS: Trump makes vague and contradictory statements about what he intends to do if re-elected. He declares that he will secure the border with Mexico, immediately end the war in Ukraine and the Middle East conflict. And he questions NATO. But he has no domestic and foreign policy concept. His statements should be viewed from a psychological perspective. He declares himself to be the savior who can achieve everything, and the masses cheer him on. This indicates a deeper problem within American society.
Which one?
GS: Europeans often portray Trump as a potential dictator. This is an odd comparison because government programs do not serve as a basis for legitimacy in the USA as in Europe. Trump does not want to extend the influence of the government. He is more like presidents Herbert Hoover and Ronald Reagan, who sought to weaken the government’s role in the life of the people. Trump announced that he wants to cut taxes, lay off government employees, dissolve ministries, end assistance programs for minority groups, and repeal the health insurance system introduced under Barack Obama.
But why do people cheer him on?
GS: Many of the people at Trump’s campaign rallies come from the white lower-middle class. They work hard and believe that the government restricts their freedom through taxes and the regulation of gun ownership. And, very importantly, they believe that the government gives preferential treatment to other groups and minorities, especially Blacks. The descendants of the white, Protestant, English settlers who cheer for Trump see themselves as the “true” Americans. A president like Barack Obama and a vice president like Kamala Harris do not fit into this worldview. This is where Trump’s criticism of the government comes into play: In a populist manner, he promises to restore old power structures by rolling back the regulating state – and thus allowing whites to act as freely as they could in a mythically idealized early period of the country. This is the “again” in “Make America great again”.
This looks like a deliberate division of society.
GS: Indeed, Trump deliberately fosters a societal division that can endanger the democratic constitutional order. It’s almost like 1860 all over again…
What do you mean by that?
GS: In 1860, Abraham Lincoln was elected president with votes only from the North. Lincoln was considered an abolitionist, an opponent of slavery. Southerners feared for the future of their plantation system based on slave labor. They did not accept the election result and instead seceded from the Union. There are conservative Republicans who express similarly critical views about democracy today. Utah Senator Mike Lee, for example, writes on his website: “Democracy itself is not the goal.”