Disarray
In Democratic Ranks: Has Modi Picked Two Term Trump?
Saeed Naqvi
A tantalizing tweet or two can change
the atmospherics, otherwise Narendra Modi may well be hosting a two term Trump
in Ahmedabad next week. The race for the Democratic nomination to fight Trump
is a melee at this stage which could help enhance Modi’s reputation as a gambler.
It must be remembered, of course, there are nine months left for American
elections. Much can change.
So far the Democratic race has similarities
with the primaries which lead to a Hillary Clinton-Trump contest in 2016. Back then,
what was in bad odour with the electorate was the Washington establishment. The
two who reached out for the establishment’s jugular from two diametrically opposite
ideological positions were Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders. But the Democratic
National Committee (DNC) had set its heart on Hillary Clinton as the party’s
nominee for President. In doing so it overlooked a crucial detail: the national
mood was against the Establishment and Clinton, more than most was the core of
the Establishment.
We all know what happened. Since I was
witness to the drama on that fateful night of the election results, let me
reproduce bits of what I wrote:
“A dozen or so friends, who had
assembled in Lucknow boy turned New Yorker, Nusrat Durrani's trendy DUMBO loft
under the Brooklyn Bridge, did not have the heart to uncork champagne bottles
because we were not sure which one of the Clinton supporters in the party might
be offended. So champagne bottles stood on the table like a row of ponderous
bishops.”
“Our adorable Jewish World Banker friend couldn’t bear to look at the screen. ‘I feel faint; I must leave.’ Another from the state department was on frantic long distance calls advising her family to prepare for the worst. A neighbour, banged frantically at the door, and barged in, beads of perspiration on her brow. She could not bear to watch the results alone. She needed to hold her neighbour’s hand. It was all too unnerving, the earth was moving from beneath people's feet.”
Our very own Surjit Bhalla had dutifully
alerted New Delhi: Trump’s victory would be the “end of western civilization.”
The reason I have indulged in this bit
of nostalgia, even on the pain of being repetitious, is quite straightforward:
the nomination race scripted by the DNC and the improvisations introduced en
route could make November 2020 resemble its 2016 version when the party’s
biased high command waylaid Sanders, ahead in the popularity stakes, by citing
a 1962 law.
Now, in 2020, once again Sanders is
ahead in the field. This should not surprise observers because the Sanders
phenomena did not recede even after 2016. In fact a Fox New Poll in 2017,
established his exceptional popularity. The poll showed Sanders +28 rating
above all US politicians on both sides of the political spectrum. Trevor Timm of
the Guardian, London, wrote:
“One would think with numbers like that,
Democratic politicians would be falling all over themselves to be associated
with Sanders, especially considering the party as a whole is more unpopular
than the Republicans and even Donald Trump right now. Yet instead of embracing
his message, the Establishment wing of the party continues to resist him at
almost every turn.”
That was written in 2017. The situation
remains unchanged. In fact there seems to be a greater urgency in Democratic
ranks to stop Sanders than to stop Trump winning a second term. This priority
has been explicitly spelt out by that superior pundit of American journalism,
Thomas Friedman of the New York Times. As early as November, 2019, he began to
promote Michael Bloomberg, Billionaire and former New York Mayor, as the Democratic
nominee. Friedman demonstrates impeccable manners by making a disclosure:
Bloomberg philanthropies has contributed to the Museum Mrs. Friedman is
building in Washington to promote reading and literacy. He agrees “capitalism
is not working for enough people in America.” Having thus protected himself,
Friedman eulogizes the billionaire aspirant in a column titled “Why I like Mike”.
What can anyone say if the NYT grants
him his self-indulgence – and not just once. By the time the Democratic race
for the nominee hots up in January, Friedman produces another Bloomberg
boosting column. This time there is panic writ large all over him because
Sanders is ahead in a field of six. If Senator Joe McCarthy were to reappear by
some magical incantation, he would hold Friedman in a tight embrace for the
columnist’s disdain for an “avowed socialist.” The Trump machine “will cast
Sanders as Che Guevara – and it won’t even be that hard.”
Just consider the scale of the
exaggeration: America’s best known columnist conjures up images of Che to scare
Americans away from Sanders. The senator from Vermont has to be painted in
lurid colours because he describes himself as Democratic Socialist, dedicated
to a platform which seeks to reverse inequality. “Ours is a capitalist country”
Friedman thumps his chest.
To make Donald Trump a one term
President, Friedman and his ilk have located the sure-fire Democratic winner –
Mike Bloomberg. This most favoured candidate crossed over from the Republican Party
just the other day. Frisk and search operations against blacks and Hispanics
was a racist nightmare during his terms as New York Mayor. Stories of his
sexist misbehavior are legion. He shall be forgiven all his misdemeanor. His big
bucks matter. He catapulted onto the stage for the eighth Democratic debate in
Las Vegas without having gone through the normal process of primaries. He made
a donation of $350 million to the NDC, has already splurged $400 million on
ads. Who knows a billion may still be in the pipeline. American exceptionalism possibly
bestows on aspiring candidates a choice: they can drudge their way to the
nomination by mobilizing the people or, they can simply buy the nomination, off
the shelf. In the end the likes of Friedman will probably enlighten us which
way to the top is more Democratic?
Trump may well thump his pal on the back
during the Motera stadium festivities: “you were clever endorsing me at Howdy
Modi; the disarray in Democratic ranks will prove you right.”
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