海角大神

When real-world pressures give ideologues pause

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Rui Vieira/AP
British Prime Minister Liz Truss, flanked by members of her Cabinet, listens to Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng speak at the Conservative Party conference this week. The government bowed to market pressure and dropped plans to cut income tax for top earners, part of its $45 billion package of unfunded cuts.

The words carried added power by virtue of the speaker, and his manner: a famously cerebral former British cabinet minister, in a quiet, almost matter-of-fact tone.

鈥淩eality bites,鈥 Michael Gove remarked on Sunday, the opening day of his Conservative Party鈥檚 annual conference.

He was reflecting on the collision between an ideologically driven rightward swerve in the party鈥檚 economic policy and the panicked response of the financial markets 鈥 sending interest rates soaring and the value of Britain鈥檚 currency plummeting.

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Even the most doctrinaire of politicians cannot ignore reality. Some leaders seem ready to put problem-solving ahead of ideology when real-world pressures are strong enough.

Yet the fundamental clash British Prime Minister Liz Truss is facing 鈥 between a rigidly ideological agenda and real-world pressure to rethink things 鈥 confronts other politicians across Europe, and in America as well.

We live in an age of fiercely ideological politics, with a nationalistic brand of populism on the rise.

But a constellation of crises 鈥 the war in Ukraine, inflation, the threat of recession, and the challenge of climate change 鈥 is forcing politicians of all stripes to figure out how to respond when 鈥渞eality bites.鈥

In the short term, at least, there are signs this is prodding some to soften the hard edges of their ideological doctrines, to prioritize problem-solving, and even to engage with their critics or political foes.

It is uncertain whether that trend will have a lasting effect, or whether the angry divisions in a number of world democracies have become too firmly embedded to allow such a turnaround.

In Britain, however, the bite of reality does seem to be having an effect.

Chris O'Meara/AP
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (left) speaks at a news conference about Hurricane Ian. An opponent 10 years ago of federal aid for New York state in the wake of Hurricane Sandy, he appealed to political foe President Joe Biden for such government assistance in the wake of Ian.

Barely 24 hours after Mr. Gove spoke, Prime Minister Truss鈥 plan to overhaul economic strategy by focusing on tax cuts began to wobble. The markets were dubious over how the cuts would be paid for, and with the benefits tilting toward the wealthiest, her growth plan was politically toxic.

On Monday, her finance minister announced she would not go ahead with an income tax cut for the richest.

Her retreat was the more remarkable because she had taken office only weeks earlier modeling herself on former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Britain鈥檚 first female prime minister was famous for refusing policy 鈥淯-turns鈥 with the memorable remark at another Conservative Party conference: 鈥You turn if you want to. The lady鈥檚 not for turning.鈥

It鈥檚 still not clear whether Ms. Truss will make further U-turns. She is still arguing that the way to recharge Britain鈥檚 sluggish economy is to cut financial burdens on businesses and those who run them, while paying less attention to redistributing the nation鈥檚 wealth to the less well-off.

But the markets are likely to have a major say in what comes next.

Economic and geopolitical realities are already having a political effect in other European countries.

Within days of Vladimir Putin鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz abandoned his country鈥檚 entrenched political orthodoxy by pledging billions of dollars in new defense spending. He has also ruled out activating a new pipeline to import Russian gas and, with other European states, moved to break his country鈥檚 long energy reliance on Moscow.

In a particularly dramatic sign of 鈥渞eality鈥 trumping ideology, his Green Party coalition partners have backed temporarily reopening coal mines to help avert a winter energy squeeze and reduce Mr. Putin鈥檚 scope for using gas as a tool of political pressure.

In Italy, although it鈥檚 too early to say with any certainty, the newly elected right-wing populist prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, seems aware that she鈥檚 facing reality pressures of her own.

Though deeply euroskeptic 鈥 and combatively nationalistic 鈥 she used her victory speech to emphasize her aim of 鈥渦niting this country.鈥

And perhaps in part because she knows Italy鈥檚 fragile economy needs its share of a huge post-pandemic European Union recovery package, she added that 鈥渢he situation Italy and the EU are heading for is particularly complex and needs the contribution of all of us, requiring a serene atmosphere with reciprocal respect.鈥

This past week, there was even a sign that reality may be biting in highly partisan America.

It came in Florida, which has suffered terrible destruction to life and property from Hurricane Ian.

Gov. Ron DeSantis is one of the leading Donald Trump-style populists in the Republican Party. Bitterly opposed to President Joe Biden鈥檚 policies, he is seen as a potential presidential candidate in 2024.

As a congressman, he was a strident opponent of federal government support for New York state after Hurricane Sandy, a decade ago. He called such a bailout typical of a 鈥減ut-it-on-the-credit-card mentality鈥 that he was determined to fight.

Now, however, as the recovery from Ian was getting underway, he himself sought urgent federal financial help for his state.

鈥淲e live in a very politicized time,鈥 he told a TV interviewer. 鈥淏ut you know, when people are fighting for their lives, when their whole livelihood is at stake, when they鈥檝e just lost everything, if you can鈥檛 put politics aside for that, then you鈥檙e just not going to be able to.鈥

Whether he, or other Western politicians, are able or willing to keep doing so remains to be seen.

That may ultimately depend on one of the major 鈥渞eality pressures鈥 they are encountering 鈥 the basic needs, and the voices, of the voters.

Monitor Backstory: Seeing patterns in the news

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As a reporter, Ned Temko had a front-row seat to a remarkable string of world-changing events. As a Monitor columnist, he looks for global patterns. And at a time of mounting global stressors, he sees a spirit of communality emerging as a simple human response. In this episode, Ned speaks with the Monitor鈥檚 Clay Collins about the work of connecting world events and the underlying human impulses.

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