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TALKING POLITICS

What Trump Means to Us

TALKING POLITICS

Catherine Carr

News, News & Politics

4.72.5K Ratings

🗓️ 29 October 2020

⏱️ 42 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Helen and David talk about what four years of Trump - and of talking (and talking) about Trump - have meant for their thinking about America and about democratic politics. Is it possible to give a balanced picture of Trump's presidency? Have the last four years followed a pattern or has it just been chaos? What is the likely legacy of Trump's extraordinary level of global fame? Plus we discuss whether 2020 marks the beginning of the 'short' twenty-first century and what that means for Trump's place in it.


Talking Points:


Will historians see 2020 as the start of the ‘short’ 21st century?

  • If so, Trump belongs to the interregnum. He’s not a dramatic break. 
  • Certainly there are continuities, for example, in the Middle East. But there are also discontinuities with China and Iran.
  • Is the pandemic a fundamental watershed?  


Is American power in decline? 

  • In some ways, the US is more powerful this decade than it was the decade before.
  • The US has a strong domestic energy supply again.
  • The Fed is still an international lender of last resort.
  • One of the consequences of the pandemic was that in March the Fed effectively extended an indirect dollar credit line in principle to China. 
  • The story about rising Chinese power is not straightforwardly at American expense. 
  • The domestic political turmoil in the US is going to be consequential to the American-Chinese strategic competition.


The Republican party got what they wanted out of a Trump presidency, the courts.

  • In that sense, 2020 could be another watershed year: pre-Barrett and post-Barrett.
  • Although history of the court suggests that partisan affiliations don’t always predict outcomes.
  • Since the late 1960s/early 1970s, American politics has become judicialized. 
  • The crucial point is the intense politicization of these decisions.


Trump invokes huge depths of revulsion in many Americans. Trying to stand back and look at his presidency historically can seem like moral indifference.

  • The narrative about Trump as a singular evil is the lens through which many people have lived their lives in the past four years.
  • This narrative takes a pretty distorted view of the American past as well as the state of the republic before Trump.
  • Trump seems incapable of understanding the distinction between the president as head of state and the president as head of government.
  • Geopolitically, the Trump presidency has made a difference, especially in relation to China.


Mentioned in this Episode:


Further Learning:

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello, my name is David Ronserman and this is Talking Politics. Today it's just me and Helen Thompson, Helen is back.

0:15.0

And we're going to be talking about what the last four years of Donald Trump in the White House has meant for us.

0:23.0

Talking Politics is brought to you in partnership with the London reviewer books.

0:28.0

If you enjoy listening to Talking Politics you'll definitely enjoy reading the LRB.

0:33.0

That's why they publish a reading list of relevant writing from the archive to accompany every episode on lrb.co.uk

0:41.0

And also why you, Talking Politics listeners, are invited to subscribe for just one pound of issue.

0:48.0

via the URL lrb.me slash talk.

0:53.0

That's lrb.me slash talk.

0:57.0

Talking Politics in partnership with the London reviewer books.

1:02.0

Helen, I was looking and it doesn't exactly map but it nearly does. Talking Politics since we started it.

1:17.0

Pretty much coincides with the Trump years. So we started in September 2016, a couple of months, just a bit more than a couple of months before he won.

1:26.0

But we were already talking about him a lot. And then we've been talking about him a lot ever since like the rest of the world.

1:31.0

I don't know how you feel about it and there are various ways we could approach this.

1:35.0

But one thing I think he of is to take a step back and ask you a big sort of historical perspective question.

1:42.0

Because I've heard a couple of people say in different contexts that 2020 will turn out to be the year that the 21st century really started.

1:53.0

Because of COVID essentially just happens to coincide with the presidential election but that's not the issue.

1:59.0

And that historians are likely to look back on the 21st century a bit like Eric Hobbs born does on the 20th as a short century if it starts in 2020 who knows where it'll end.

2:09.0

Maybe it would be a long century because it'll run into the 22nd century.

2:13.0

But Eric Hobbs won famously said that the 20th century was a short century that ran more or less from 1914 to 1989.

2:21.0

So this is a long winded way of saying if 2020 is the start of the 21st century because of COVID, then Trump belongs to that into regimen period between the end of the short 20th century and now sort of 1990 to 2020 those 30 years.

2:32.0

The four years of the Trump presidency are in that period.

2:35.0

And that cuts against I think how most people feel about Trump that he represents some huge break and that you know something extraordinary and unprecedented happened in 2016 and suddenly we entered Trump world and everything changed.

...

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