Macron is becoming everything Trump should have been
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — The gatekeepers of the establishment status quo don’t have Donald
Trump to kick around anymore. Except that Trump’s voters — more than 74 million
of them — aren’t going anywhere.
These are people who chose Trump despite all of the daily shenanigans, tweets
and drama, and rejected the candidacy of Joe Biden, a known establishment
fixture best described as a pragmatic centrist. Biden’s major career flaw is
what makes him unpalatable to those tens of millions of Trump voters — his
tendency to follow the prevailing political winds rather than stand against
them.
For example, Biden was quite willing to commit U.S. troops to war in the Middle
East when the rest of the Washington establishment was on board — the ultimate
beneficiaries being Saudi Arabia and Israel. But now that congressional
Democrats have voted against Saudi Arabia’s excesses in both regional conflicts
and human rights violations, Biden is following suit, blocking U.S. guided
missile sales to the Saudis and ending U.S. support for the Saudi-led war in
Yemen.
The global tide is turning on many issues, but it didn’t start in America with
Biden or the Democrats. It arguably started with French President Emmanuel
Macron, a pragmatic centrist who was elected in 2017 by cobbling together a
coalition of disaffected voters from both the right and the left.
Macron has long been sticking his neck out in favor of better Western relations
with Saudi foe Iran. That includes encouraging the U.S. to stick with the
multilateral Iran nuclear/trade agreement from which Trump withdrew and which
Biden now seems to have an interest in reinstating.
Macron has also advocated greater French and European cooperation with Russia,
even on matters such as cybersecurity. Former French President Charles De Gaulle
believed that Europe should extend “from the Atlantic to the Urals.” Macron
wants to pry Russia away from China’s influence and Europe away from U.S.
dependence. It’s a posture that puts France and Europe at odds with U.S.
interests and will likely encourage even greater U.S. animosity toward Russia in
order to increase pressure on European allies. It’s also a position mirroring
that of Trump, who viewed China as the primary global threat. Trump’s lack of
charm and elegance did him and the U.S. a disservice in convincing others of the
Chinese threat.
Macron has elegance, and his worldview isn’t really that much different from
Trump’s — nor is his view of how things should be at home. Trump had an extreme
aversion to any COVID-19 sanitary restrictions that might do harm to the U.S.
economy. The prevailing global posture still largely favors lockdowns when any
hint of doubt exists about potential sanitary risks. Currently, it’s the threat
of new COVID-19 variants from Britain and South America that have various
“experts” demanding preventative lockdowns. Macron’s panel of experts was no
different in expressing the opinion that further lockdowns were inevitable.
Then, word leaked out in the French media that Macron had insisted on taking
back control from the experts, expressing frustration during a meeting with
advisers that the only suggestion the health experts ever offer him is to lock
down the country. Instead of blindly following that advice, Macron rejected
their demands. Two weeks later, Macron’s instincts appear to have proven
correct. The apocalyptic “variant” scenario envisioned by the experts has yet to
materialize, and the French health care system and the COVID-19 infection rate
are no worse off than they were at the start of the year.
Macron’s act of political courage has averted what would have been a gratuitous
act of national economic suicide. Trump, on the other hand, was unable to do the
same. The U.S. is just starting to discover the repercussions of lacking a
thoughtful, credible, pro-liberty voice of dissent to counter the dominant
establishment status quo narrative.
One example of such a failure is the scandal now swirling around New York Gov.
Andrew Cuomo, who had been hailed by virtually the entire U.S. establishment as
a COVID-era hero. The New York State Department of Health recently released
records showing that more than 9,000 recovering coronavirus patients were
discharged from hospitals into nursing homes, leading to more nursing home
deaths than previously disclosed. Where was the effective opposition at the
time?
In an October speech, Macron said the woke culture promoted by the American left
is a potential threat to French society, referring to “certain social science
theories entirely imported from the United States, with their problems.”
America could use an Emmanuel Macron of its own — a free-market,
limited-government pragmatist who is capable of surfing the rapidly shifting
global landscape while deftly opposing the division and chaos sowed by the
political establishment.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN