The U.S. is becoming increasingly ungovernable,
and some experts believe it could descend into
civil war. What should Canada do then?
By Thomas Homer-Dixon
January 02, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- "Globe
and Mail"
-- By 2025, American democracy could
collapse, causing extreme domestic political
instability, including widespread civil violence. By
2030, if not sooner, the country could be governed
by a right-wing dictatorship.
We
mustn’t dismiss these possibilities just because
they seem ludicrous or too horrible to imagine. In
2014, the suggestion that Donald Trump would become
president would also have struck nearly everyone as
absurd. But today we live in a world where the
absurd regularly becomes real and the horrible
commonplace.
Leading American academics are now actively
addressing the prospect of a fatal weakening of U.S.
democracy.
This
past November, more than 150 professors of politics,
government, political economy and international
relations
appealed to Congress to pass the
Freedom to Vote Act, which would protect the
integrity of US elections but is now stalled in the
Senate. This is a moment of “great peril and risk,”
they wrote. “Time is ticking away, and midnight is
approaching.”
I’m
a scholar of violent conflict. For more than 40
years, I’ve studied and published on the causes of
war, social breakdown, revolution, ethnic violence
and genocide, and for nearly two decades I led a
centre on peace and conflict studies at the
University of Toronto.
Today, as I watch the unfolding crisis in the United
States, I see a political and social landscape
flashing with warning signals.
I’m
not surprised by what’s happening there – not at
all. During my graduate work in the United States in
the 1980s, I sometimes listened to Rush Limbaugh,
the right-wing radio talk show host and later
television personality. I remarked to friends at the
time that, with each broadcast, it was if Mr.
Limbaugh were wedging the sharp end of a chisel into
a faint crack in the moral authority of U.S.
political institutions, and then slamming the other
end of that chisel with a hammer.
In
the decades since, week after week, year after year,
Mr. Limbaugh and his fellow travellers have hammered
away – their blows’ power lately amplified through
social media and outlets such as Fox News and
Newsmax. The cracks have steadily widened, ramified,
connected and propagated deeply into America’s
once-esteemed institutions, profoundly compromising
their structural integrity. The country is becoming
increasingly ungovernable, and some experts believe
it could descend into civil war.
How
should Canada prepare?
In
2020, president Donald Trump awarded Mr. Limbaugh
the Presidential Medal of Freedom. The act signalled
that Mr. Limbaugh’s brand of bullying, populist
white ethnocentrism – a rancid blend of aggrieved
attacks on liberal elites, racist dog-whistling,
bragging about American exceptionalism and appeals
to authoritarian leadership – had become an integral
part of mainstream political ideology in the U.S.
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But
one can’t blame only Mr. Limbaugh, who died in early
2021, and his ilk for America’s dysfunction. These
people and their actions are as much symptoms of
that dysfunction as its root causes, and those
causes are many. Some can be traced to the country’s
founding – to an abiding distrust in government
baked into the country’s political culture during
the Revolution, to slavery, to the political
compromise of the Electoral College that slavery
spawned, to the overrepresentation of rural voting
power in the Senate, and to the failure of
Reconstruction after the Civil War. But successful
polities around the world have overcome flaws just
as fundamental.
What
seems to have pushed the United States to the brink
of losing its democracy today is a multiplication
effect between its underlying flaws and recent
shifts in the society’s “material” characteristics.
These shifts include stagnating middle-class
incomes, chronic economic insecurity, and rising
inequality as the country’s economy – transformed by
technological change and globalization – has
transitioned from muscle power, heavy industry, and
manufacturing as the main sources of its wealth to
idea power, information technology, symbolic
production and finance. As returns to labour have
stagnated and returns to capital have soared, much
of the U.S. population has
fallen behind. Inflation-adjusted
wages for the median male worker in the fourth
quarter of 2019 (prior to the infusion of economic
support owing to the COVID-19 pandemic) were lower
than in 1979; meanwhile, between 1978 and 2016,
CEO incomes in the biggest companies rose from
30 times that of the average worker to 271 times.
Economic insecurity is widespread in broad swaths of
the country’s interior, while growth is increasingly
concentrated in a dozen or so metropolitan centres.
Two
other material factors are key. The first is
demographic: as immigration, aging, intermarriage
and a decline in church-going have reduced the
percentage of non-Hispanic white Christians in
America, right-wing ideologues have inflamed fears
that traditional U.S. culture is being erased and
whites are being “replaced.” The second is pervasive
elite selfishness: The wealthy and powerful in
America are broadly unwilling to pay the taxes,
invest in the public services, or create the avenues
for vertical mobility that would lessen their
country’s economic, educational, racial and
geographic gaps. The more an under-resourced
government can’t solve everyday problems, the more
people give up on it, and the more they turn to
their own resources and their narrow identity groups
for safety.
America’s economic, racial and social gaps have
helped cause ideological polarization between the
political right and left, and the worsening
polarization has paralyzed government while
aggravating the gaps. The political right and left
are isolated from, and increasingly despise, each
other. Both believe the stakes are existential –
that the other is out to destroy the country they
love. The moderate political centre is fast
vanishing.
And,
oh yes, the population is armed to the teeth, with
somewhere around
400 million firearms in the hands of civilians.
Some
diagnoses of America’s crisis that highlight “toxic
polarization” imply the two sides are equally
responsible for that crisis. They aren’t. While both
wings of U.S. politics have fanned polarization’s
flames, blame lies disproportionately on the
political right.
According to Harvard’s renowned sociologist and
political scientist Theda Skocpol, in the early
2000s fringe elements of the Republican party used
disciplined tactics and enormous streams of money
(from billionaires like the Koch brothers) to turn
extreme laissez-faire ideology into orthodox
Republican dogma. Then, in 2008, Barack Obama’s
election as president increased anxieties about
immigration and cultural change among older, often
economically insecure members of the white
middle-class, who then coalesced into the populist
Tea Party movement. Under Mr. Trump, the two forces
were joined. The GOP became, Dr. Skocpol writes, a
radicalized “marriage of convenience between
anti-government free-market plutocrats and racially
anxious ethno-nationalist activists and voters.”
Now,
adopting Mr. Limbaugh’s tried-and-true methods,
demagogues on the right are pushing the
radicalization process further than ever before. By
weaponizing people’s fear and anger, Mr. Trump and a
host of acolytes and wannabees such as Fox’s Tucker
Carlson and Georgia Representative Marjorie Taylor
Greene have captured the storied GOP and transformed
it into a near-fascist personality cult that’s a
perfect instrument for wrecking democracy.
And
it’s not inaccurate to use the F word. As
conservative commentator David Frum
argues, Trumpism increasingly resembles European
fascism in its contempt for the rule of law and
glorification of violence. Evidence is as close
as the latest right-wing Twitter meme: widely
circulated holiday photos show Republican
politicians and their family members, including
young children, sitting in front of their Christmas
trees, all smiling gleefully while cradling pistols,
shotguns and assault rifles.
Those guns are more than symbols. The Trump cult
presents itself as the only truly patriotic party
able to defend U.S. values and history against
traitorous Democrats beholden to cosmopolitan elites
and minorities who neither understand nor support
“true” American values. The Jan. 6 storming of the
U.S. capitol must be understood in these terms. The
people involved didn’t think they were attacking
U.S. democracy – although they unquestionably were.
Instead, they believed their “patriotic” actions
were needed to save it.
Democracy is an institution, but underpinning that
institution is a vital set of beliefs and values. If
a substantial enough fraction of a population no
longer holds those beliefs and values, then
democracy can’t survive. Probably the most important
is recognition of the equality of the polity’s
citizens in deciding its future; a close runner up
is willingness to concede power to one’s political
opponents, should those equal citizens decide that’s
what they want. At the heart of the ideological
narrative of U.S. right-wing demagogues, from Mr.
Trump on down, is the implication that large
segments of the country’s population – mainly the
non-white, non-Christian, and educated urban ones –
aren’t really equal citizens. They aren’t quite full
Americans, or even real Americans.
This
is why Mr. Trump’s “Big Lie” that the 2020
presidential election was stolen from him – a
falsehood that nearly
70 per cent of Republicans now accept as true –
is such potent anti-democratic poison. If the other
side is willing to steal an election, then they
don’t play by the rules. They’ve placed themselves
outside the American moral community, which means
they don’t deserve to be treated as equals. There’s
certainly no reason to concede power to them, ever.
Willingness to publicly endorse the Big Lie has
become a litmus test of Republican loyalty to Mr.
Trump. This isn’t just an ideological move to
promote Republican solidarity against Democrats. It
puts its adherents one step away from the
psychological dynamic of extreme dehumanization that
has led to some of the worst violence in human
history. And it has refashioned – into a moral
crusade against evil – Republican efforts to
gerrymander Congressional districts into
pretzel-like shapes, to
restrict voting rights, and to
take control of state-level electoral
apparatuses.
When
the situation is framed in such a Manichean way,
righteous ends justify any means. One of the two
American parties is now devoted to victory at any
cost.
Many
of those with guns are waiting for a signal to use
them. Polls
show that between 20 and 30 million American
adults believe both that the 2020 election was
stolen from Mr. Trump and that violence is justified
to return him to the presidency.
In
the weeks before the November, 2016, U.S. election,
I talked to several experts to gauge the danger of a
Trump presidency. I recently consulted them again.
While in 2016 they were alarmed, this last month
most were utterly dismayed. All told me the U.S.
political situation has deteriorated sharply since
last year’s attack on Capitol Hill.
Jack
Goldstone, a political sociologist at George Mason
University in Washington, D.C., and a leading
authority on the causes of state breakdown and
revolution, told me that since 2016 we’ve learned
that early optimism about the resilience of U.S.
democracy was based on two false assumptions:
“First, that American institutions would be strong
enough to easily withstand efforts to subvert them;
and second, that the vast majority of people will
act rationally and be drawn to the political centre,
so that it’s impossible for extremist groups to take
over.”
But
especially after the 2020 election, Dr. Goldstone
said, we’ve seen that core institutions – from the
Justice Department to county election boards – are
susceptible to pressure. They’ve barely held firm.
“We’ve also learned that the reasonable majority can
be frightened and silenced if caught between
extremes, while many others can be captured by mass
delusions.” And to his surprise “moderate GOP
leaders have either been forced out of the party or
acquiesced to a party leadership that embraces lies
and anti-democratic actions.”
Mr.
Trump’s electoral loss has energized the Republican
base and further radicalized young party members.
Even without their concerted efforts to torque the
machinery of the electoral system, Republicans will
probably take control of both the House of
Representatives and Senate this coming November,
because the incumbent party generally fares poorly
in mid-term elections. Republicans could easily
score a massive victory, with voters ground down by
the pandemic, angry about inflation, and tired of
President Joe Biden bumbling from one crisis to
another. Voters who identify as Independents are
already migrating toward Republican candidates.
Once
Republicans control Congress, Democrats will lose
control of the national political agenda, giving Mr.
Trump a clear shot at recapturing the presidency in
2024. And once in office, he will have only two
objectives: vindication and vengeance.
A
U.S. civil-military expert and senior federal
appointee I consulted noted that a re-elected
president Trump could be totally unconstrained,
nationally and internationally.
A
crucial factor determining how much constraint he
faces will be the response of the U.S. military, a
bulwark institution ardently committed to defending
the Constitution. During the first Trump
administration, members of the military repeatedly
resisted the president’s authoritarian impulses and
tried to anticipate and corral his rogue behaviour –
most notably when Joint Chiefs Chairman General Mark
Milley, shortly after the Capitol insurrection,
ordered military officials to include him in any
decision process involving the use of military
force.
But
in a second Trump administration, this expert
suggested, the
bulwark could crumble. By replacing the civilian
leadership of the Department of Defense and the
Joint Chiefs with lackeys and sycophants, he could
so infiltrate the Department with his people that
he’ll be able to bend it to his will.
After four years of Mr. Trump’s bedlam, the U.S.
under Mr. Biden has been comparatively calm.
Politics in the U.S. seems to have stabilized.
But
absolutely nothing has stabilized in America. The
country’s problems are systemic and deeply
entrenched – and events could soon spiral out of
control.
The
experts I consulted described a range of possible
outcomes if Mr. Trump returns to power, none benign.
They cited particular countries and political
regimes to illustrate where he might take the U.S.:
Viktor Orban’s Hungary, with its coercive legal
apparatus of “illiberal democracy”; Jair Bolsonaro’s
Brazil, with its chronic social distemper and
administrative dysfunction; or Vladimir Putin’s
Russia, with its harsh one-man hyper-nationalist
autocracy. All agreed that under a second Trump
administration, liberalism will be marginalized and
right-wing Christian groups super-empowered, while
violence by vigilante, paramilitary groups will rise
sharply.
Looking further down the road, some think that
authority in American federalism is so disjointed
and diffuse that Mr. Trump, especially given his
manifest managerial incompetence, will never be able
to achieve full authoritarian control. Others
believe the pendulum will ultimately swing back to
the Democrats when Republican mistakes accumulate,
or that the radicalized Republican base – so
fanatically loyal to Mr. Trump – can’t grow larger
and will dissipate when its hero leaves the stage.
One
can hope for these outcomes, because there are far
worse scenarios. Something resembling civil war is
one. Many pathways could take the country there –
some described in Stephen Marche’s new book The
Next Civil War: Dispatches from the American Future.
The most plausible start with a
disputed 2024 presidential election. Perhaps
Democrats squeak out a victory, and Republican
states refuse to recognize the result. Or
conversely, perhaps Republicans win, but only
because Republican state legislatures override
voting results; then Democratic protestors attack
those legislatures. In either circumstance, much
will depend on whether the country’s military splits
along partisan lines.
But
there’s another political regime, a historical one,
that may portend an even more dire future for the
U.S.: the Weimar Republic. The situation in Germany
in the 1920s and early 1930s was of course sui
generis; in particular, the country had experienced
staggering traumas – defeat in war, internal
revolution and hyperinflation – while the country’s
commitment to liberal democracy was weakly rooted in
its culture. But as I read a history of the doomed
republic this past summer, I tallied no fewer than
five unnerving parallels with the current U.S.
situation.
First, in both cases, a charismatic leader was able
to unify right-wing extremists around a political
program to seize the state. Second, a bald falsehood
about how enemies inside the polity had betrayed the
country – for the Nazis, the “stab in the back,” and
for Trumpists, the Big Lie – was a vital
psychological tool for radicalizing and mobilizing
followers. Third, conventional conservatives
believed they could control and channel the
charismatic leader and rising extremism but were
ultimately routed by the forces they helped unleash.
Fourth, ideological opponents of this rising
extremism squabbled among themselves; they didn’t
take the threat seriously enough, even though it was
growing in plain sight; and they focused on marginal
issues that were too often red meat for the
extremists. (Today, think toppling statues.)
To
my mind, though, the fifth parallel is the most
disconcerting: the propagation of a “hardline
security doctrine.” Here I’ve been influenced by the
research of Jonathan Leader Maynard, a young English
scholar who is emerging as one of the world’s most
brilliant thinkers on the links between ideology,
extremism and violence. In a forthcoming book,
Ideology and Mass Killing, Dr. Leader Maynard
argues that extremist right-wing ideologies
generally don’t arise from explicit efforts to forge
an authoritarian society, but from the
radicalization of a society’s existing
understandings of how it can stay safe and secure in
the face of alleged threats.
Hardline conceptions of security are “radicalized
versions of familiar claims about threat,
self-defence, punishment, war, and duty,” he writes.
They are the foundation on which regimes organize
campaigns of violent persecution and terror. People
he calls “hardliners” believe the world contains
many “dangerous enemies that frequently operate in
and through purported ‘civilian’ groups.” Hardliners
increasingly dominate Trumpist circles now.
Dr.
Leader Maynard then makes a complementary argument:
Once a hardline doctrine is widely accepted within a
political movement, it becomes an “infrastructure”
of ideas and incentives that can pressure even those
who don’t really accept the doctrine into following
its dictates. Fear of “true believers” shifts the
behaviour of the movement’s moderates toward
extremism. Sure enough, the experts I recently
consulted all spoke about how fear of crossing Mr.
Trump’s base – including fear for their families’
physical safety – was forcing otherwise sensible
Republicans to fall into line.
The
rapid propagation of hardline security doctrines
through a society, Dr. Leader Maynard says,
typically occurs in times of political and economic
crisis. Even in the Weimar Republic, the vote for
the National Socialists was closely correlated with
the unemployment rate. The Nazis were in trouble
(with their share of the vote falling and the party
beset by internal disputes) as late as 1927, before
the German economy started to contract. Then, of
course, the Depression hit. The United States today
is in the midst of crisis – caused by the pandemic,
obviously – but it could experience far worse before
long: perhaps a war with Russia, Iran or China, or a
financial crisis when economic bubbles caused by
excessive liquidity burst.
Beyond a certain threshold, other new research
shows, political extremism
feeds on itself, pushing polarization toward an
irreversible
tipping point. This suggests a sixth potential
parallel with Weimar: democratic collapse followed
by the consolidation of dictatorship. Mr. Trump may
be just a warm-up act – someone ideal to bring about
the first stage, but not the second. Returning to
office, he’ll be the wrecking ball that demolishes
democracy, but the process will produce a political
and social shambles. Still, through targeted
harassment and dismissal, he’ll be able to thin the
ranks of his movement’s opponents within the state –
the bureaucrats, officials and technocrats who
oversee the non-partisan functioning of core
institutions and abide by the rule of law. Then the
stage will be set for a more managerially competent
ruler, after Mr. Trump, to bring order to the chaos
he’s created.
A
terrible storm is coming from the south, and Canada
is woefully unprepared. Over the past year we’ve
turned our attention inward, distracted by the
challenges of COVID-19, reconciliation, and the
accelerating effects of climate change. But now we
must focus on the urgent problem of what to do about
the likely unravelling of democracy in the United
States.
We
need to start by fully recognizing the magnitude of
the danger. If Mr. Trump is re-elected, even under
the more-optimistic scenarios the economic and
political risks to our country will be innumerable.
Driven by aggressive, reactive nationalism, Mr.
Trump “could isolate Canada continentally,” as one
of my interlocutors put it euphemistically.
Under the less-optimistic scenarios, the risks to
our country in their cumulative effect could easily
be existential, far greater than any in our
federation’s history. What happens, for instance, if
high-profile political refugees fleeing persecution
arrive in our country, and the U.S. regime demands
them back. Do we comply?
In
this context, it’s worth noting the words of Dmitry
Muratov, the courageous Russian journalist who
remains one of the few independent voices standing
up to Mr. Putin and who just received the Nobel
Prize for Peace. At a
news conference after the awards ceremony in
Oslo, as Russian troops and armour were massing on
Ukraine’s borders, Mr. Muratov spoke of the iron
link between authoritarianism and war. “Disbelief in
democracy means that the countries that have
abandoned it will get a dictator,” he said. “And
where there is a dictatorship, there is a war. If we
refuse democracy, we agree to war.”
Canada is not powerless in the face of these forces,
at least not yet. Among other things, over
three-quarters of a million
Canadian emigrants live in the United States –
many highly placed and influential – and together
they’re a mass of people who could appreciably tilt
the outcome of coming elections and the broader
dynamics of the country’s political process.
But
here’s my key recommendation: The Prime Minister
should immediately convene a standing, non-partisan
Parliamentary committee with representatives
from the five sitting parties, all with full
security clearances. It should be understood that
this committee will continue to operate in coming
years, regardless of changes in federal government.
It should receive regular intelligence analyses and
briefings by Canadian experts on political and
social developments in the United States and their
implications for democratic failure there. And it
should be charged with providing the federal
government with continuing, specific guidance as to
how to prepare for and respond to that failure,
should it occur.
If
hope is to be a motivator and not a crutch, it needs
to be honest and not false. It needs to be anchored
in a realistic, evidence-based understanding of the
dangers we face and a clear vision of how to get
past those dangers to a good future. Canada is
itself flawed, but it’s still one of the most
remarkably just and prosperous societies in human
history. It must rise to this challenge.
Thomas Homer-Dixon is executive director of the
Cascade Institute at Royal Roads University. His
latest book is Commanding Hope: The Power We Have to
Renew a World in Peril.
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