The commentary on how Donald Trump’s presidency might transform global reality after his inauguration on Monday has been boundless. So has commentary in individual countries on what Trump might mean for them. But as commentators anticipate the Trump future they often miss how much the furniture has already been moved, before Trump’s actual ascension to office. Trump the negotiator may value his own unpredictability, but much of the reaction to his second presidency is baked in. He is not a novelty and neither, from a foreign perspective, is the America that decided to re-elect him.
The 16 years of Obama-Trump-Biden isn’t quite a generation, but those are usually reckoned at 20-30 years, so 4 more years of Trump just about gets there. The 16 years of Bill Clinton and George W. Bush formed a fairly coherent mini-era of strong growth (ending with the 2008 collapse) and post-Cold War openness (ending with terrorist action and reaction, and the emergence of the China-US relationship as the core of geopolitics and geoeconomics). The past 16 years have been much more about the re-shaping, and relative diminution, of the West and the institutions it built and dominated; the rise of leaderless regions to economic prominence, utterly dependent on globalized markets but without the power or ambition to decisively shape them (Southeast Asia and the Gulf, in particular, but also Central/Eastern Europe, Africa and, perhaps, Latin America, as well as not-so-leaderless India); and the none too successful efforts of the US and China to assert dominance. The resulting “order” has been described as multi-polar, but there is a noticeable shortage of effective poles.
It is this second era that was solidified by the defeat of Biden-Harris and the victory of Trump. There were once expectations (or hopes) among some that the first Trump administration was an anomaly and Biden would effect a restoration of sorts, pushing the US and the world order it dominated back toward a Clinton-Bush-Obama normalcy. Such expectations underestimated a number of deeper transformations after 2008, notably technological transformations but also changes in the US itself as well as the endurance of Xi Jinping’s version of China. Both Xi’s China and Trump’s US were often seen as exceptions to post-Cold War rules of globalization and the spread of liberal democracy and peace. That view finally expired last November.
The speed with which businesses have adjusted to Trump reflects an acceptance of realities that predated the last election cycle. So too do the policies of foreign actors. Many of these have been discussed in previous SIGnal posts, most recently on the Gulf. Japan is reluctantly adjusting its relationship with China. Europe is coming to accept that the sweeping and radical proposals of Enrico Letta and Mario Draghi, both commissioned by the EU, may actually have to be followed if the EU is to last. The heads of Europe’s telecommunications champions, Nokia and Ericsson, have recently pressed, along with SAP, for the Italians’ proposals to be implemented. These three tech giants do not know what Trump’s tech policies will be. They are simply acknowledging that the landscape has permanently changed.
In developed-world national politics, the dominant mode is one of turbulence (Canada, Britain, Taiwan, Germany, the Netherlands, France) sometimes veering into chaos (South Korea). Governments struggle to manage deep transformations in technology, demographics, climate, geopolitics, and geoeconomics. What they are being compelled to accept is that the United States is no longer willing or able to back even an imperfect ordering of world power along lines that will benefit all. Despite some false dawns along the way, that trend began sometime in the younger Bush’s presidency. What has changed is the sense of its permanence.
All of this has occurred before the inauguration. The new president and Congress may believe that they can control this process but the major work has already been done.