Barely two months ago, I had a
dinner in New York City with an American journalist, and I cannot forget his
view about the presidential election.
“I don’t care what the polls
say, that guy can’t be the president of this country,” he declared, a furrow
defining his disgust. His tongue could not lift the name of “that guy.”
A week later, at lunch in the
remodelled Union Station in scenic Colorado, another journalist showed less
cheer. She, however, voiced dismay to me at the pro-Trump ascendancy. Both are
journalists of over 40 years standing.
They saw an America that was
morphing from an old virtue. An old virtue of civility, of mutual respect.
That virtue drowned in a
resounding splash last week. Donald J. Trump of the swagger held sway, a
one-man insurgency spiced by a raw vitality. He put a whiplash on the American
pulse and those who doubted him woke up around the world on Wednesday morning
to the triumph of a barbaric impulse.
The White House will indeed be
tenanted by a new person in January, and it will not be the first United States
woman president, but the man with the toupee, a puffed face and sometimes
cartoonish face, a sardonic turn of phrases, with a baseball cap, with a crowd
that hoots and jeers gleefully, with a juvenile energy, a billionaire who never
respects women nor pays taxes, stiffs investors and employees, mocks a globalising
economy but fattens on it, etc.
So, a day after, many wonder
how the strongest and wealthiest nation in human history ended up with such a
man as leader. But it is part complacency, and part ignorance. We have
idealised America. It is a land that flows with milk and honey, where the good
always triumphs over evil, where John Wayne always beats the bad guy, where Tom
Hanks shines in a dark plot.
They gave us Internet,
aeroplane, television, Facebook, google, fast food. They coalesced forces to
roast Hitler and other emblems of human backwardness. Coca-cola. Starbucks.
Star Wars. How could they now vote a man that condones pugilist Putin, the
nuclear-thumping dwarf of North Korea, plots to install a wall, calls Hispanics
rapists, shows open contempt for blacks, would initiate mass deportation, etc.
But as the tallies finally
flowed in, we discovered that this was an election in which white America
decided to hug their own. But was this not the same country that voted in a
black man just eight years ago? Yes, and that’s very American. It is a country
that is at peace with rolling back its earlier chants. Remember Walt Whitman,
its poet of democracy? He wrote: “Do I contradict myself? Yes I contradict
myself…I am large, I contain multitudes.”
But a remorse set in quickly
after the Obama boon. Mitch McConnell led the Congress Republicans to boast
that Obama would never get anything through Congress. They would paralyse. Not
long after, a few whites banded together in Washington to inaugurate the Tea
Party, a movement that became a launch pad that derailed the Obama years,
inspired nativist resurgence and threw up such bigoted heroes as Ted Cruz. They
lay the foundation for Trump.
The Americans who gave Trump
victory had clutched the electoral college. Those who lost gave less emphatic
gesture: the majority vote. So, the contradiction is in, and we have to live
with it. If we go through U.S. history, it is all too familiar. He said he
wanted to make America great again, a code phrase for a return to a white America.
I see parallel with America of
another president, less known to many Americans and even to Nigerians. He is
Andrew Jackson. The similarities are striking. Jackson rose on the common-folk
white instead of property rights in earlier years. He focused on whites of the
Anglo-Saxon stock, just like Trump. In his electoral slugfest against Dukakis
of Greek origin, George H. Bush said he belonged to “mainstream America.”
Reagan landed in Alabama and
proclaimed that he believed in “state rights.” Jackson promoted what historians
call “manifest destiny,” that called for setting apart certain areas in the
west for the whites to explore and work. He was to the Indians what Trump is to
American Hispanics and all immigrants.
He railroaded a law that
allowed him to sweep all Indians from their residences with whites into
reserves, and they packed their all in long walks and travels that left many of
them and their children dead. The road has been called a “trail of tears.” He
had a trail. Trump promised a wall.
That part of America rose
again in different times in the U.S. history. In the 1960’s, Governor George
Wallace of Alabama ran for president and called for segregation today,
segregation tomorrow, and segregation forever.” And another candidate George
McGovern’s slogan “Come Home, America” is a precursor of Trump’s disdain for
Pax America and the jettisoning of alliances around the world.
In a text message from the
ebullient governor of Borno State, Kashim Shetima, a perceptive point is made.
He writes, “by his pronouncements, Trump’s doctrine will rest on isolationism,
non-interventionism and protectionism. In essence, other’s problems should be
America’s…” He was also right when he wrote that “it was white America striking
back…the thumping down of the American spirit and unwinding all the gains of 50
years.”
But there are other points.
While we expect great from America, we should at home muse over our own
troubles. The whites fight back but in our local elections, we are no better.
Not long ago, we lit with delight as we corralled Ghanaians out of our shores.
We vote according to what
tribe or religion the candidate professes. We should not be too hard on the
Americans. We are no better. In the last Lagos State elections, the Southsouth
and Southeast folks gave the impressions they could outvote the indigenous
Yoruba and impose their choice. The indigenes coalesced and had their day.
We are trying to indigenise
rice production, the same way Trump wants the jobs back from China. It’s a
nativist impulse that arises in any people when they feel threatened. This is
the dark side of human impulse, and Trump tapped into it. Demagogues always do.
A critic has said Trump did
not mean his rhetoric. Others took it literally rather seriously. But his
followers took it seriously but not literally. I hope so, because that’s how I
saw Soyinka’s red card promise. W.S. is a dramatist, and I saw the theatre once
he uttered it.
Trump is a businessman, and
many critics have said, he will run a transactional government. He hypes it,
calls for the skies, but settles for something acceptable. We hope, in the end
and for the love of all, we get something less apocalyptic than we heard on his
hustings.
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