Kevin Drum – Did Putin Swing the Election to Trump? Of Course He Did:

I'm a little surprised this hasn't produced more panic. In the United States I understand why it hasn't: Democrats don't want to sound like sore losers and Republicans don't care as long as their guy won. But what about the rest of the world? It's been common knowledge for a while that Russia does this kind of stuff, but their actions in the US election represent a quantum leap in how far they're willing to go. And there's not much doubt that Putin will keep at it.

After all, it worked a treat. And thanks to a gullible press and normal partisan politics, it'll keep working. The next leak will get as much attention as these did, and the one after that too. We have no societal defense against this stuff.

Meanwhile, the hour of the inauguration cometh, and all those politicians who were rude about him are now going to have to deal with him. Hugo Rifkind in the Times (£):

"Actually,” said the prime minister to Sky’s Sophy Ridge on Sunday, “we have a longstanding special relationship with the United States. It’s based on shared values.” Similar words have been uttered, probably, by every British PM for the past 50 years. Although I suspect Theresa May was the first to have to utter them with a face like a nauseous undertaker, after being asked whether she shared the president-elect’s value that it’s fine for a famous man to grab women by the crotch.

This is ridiculous, but it is not silly. Rather, it is an early taste of what Donald Trump’s ascension to the leadership of the free world entails, domestically, for America’s allies. Everybody knows that he has coarsened American political debate. Now he begins the process of coarsening everybody else’s….

Trump is everybody’s problem now. Remember, this is a guy, an American president-elect, who the actual Pope described as “not Christian”. François Hollande, the French president, said Trump made him “want to retch”. Will they meet before he leaves office this year? How will that one go? Angela Merkel has been frosty, which is unsurprising considering their rival stances on refugees. Trump also described her as “ruining Germany”, apparently in pique, after she was Time magazine’s 2015 cover star. Yet it is inconceivable that they will not, at some point, have to share a platform….

Trump’s victory does not negate his flaws. His xenophobia, sexism, racism, petulance, avarice and contempt for decency are still there, and all the people who saw them, liberal or otherwise, presumably still can. Yet our leaders will defer, and they will be ashamed, and so will we. What America swallowed, the world must digest. We have Trumpism in our guts now, like threadworms. So the queasiness begins.

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7 responses to “It worked a treat”

  1. marc biff Avatar
  2. Martin Adamson Avatar
    Martin Adamson

    Did Putin intervene back in the 2008 and 2012 elections, when Obama was very publicly the pro-Russian candidate and both McCain and Romney took very hardline anti-Russian positions?

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  3. Hal Avatar
    Hal

    What a gang… Putin, Assange, Trump… right meets far left! An alliance between the “alt-right” and “useful idiots”. Twit(ter)-in-Chief.

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  4. djf Avatar
    djf

    So the clairvoyant Mr. Drum can read the minds of voters and figured out that the devastating revelations from the DNC & Podesta emails (that (1) the Dem primaries were rigged against Sanders – surprise! – and (2) the media were Hillary lapdogs – who knew?) shifted just the right number of votes in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin to give Trump an electoral college victory. Amazing.
    Does it occur to you that Hillary Clinton was a terrible candidate, who ran a phoned-in, lackadaisical campaign, and lost in spite of having every advantage (money, media support, organization, an extraordinarily weak opponent who was more interested in attacking other Republicans than Clinton)?
    Now, after Obama has greenlighted Iran’s getting nuclear weapons (after a decent interval), has financed Iran’s terror and military adventures, and has absent-mindedly set the Middle East on fire and given it as a gift-wrapped package to Iran and Russia – now, you’re worried that Trump is the real danger?
    Anyone who shares Obama’s “values” can have them. I wish a person other than Trump were becoming president, but I am relieved that the next president will not be part of the same party that brought us the last eight years of shame and disaster. Trump will probably be bad, but how could he be worse?

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  5. Mick H Avatar
    Mick H

    How could he be worse? Stay tuned.

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  6. Bob-B Avatar
    Bob-B

    A Trump presidency may well make Obama look rather better than he actually was.

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  7. Hal Avatar
    Hal

    Bob-B,
    On the domestic front Obama wasn’t too bad. But his Nobel was (in advance!?!) for foreign policy. And I doubt you’ll find many people in Aleppo cheering either Obama or his successor.

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