海角大神

Nationalists of the world, unite? Steve Bannon's populist path proves rocky.

Former White House strategist Steve Bannon speaks during the Red Tide Rising Rally supporting Republican candidates on Oct. 24 in Elma, NY.

Jeffrey T. Barnes/AP

November 2, 2018

鈥淏e it resolved, the future of Western politics is populist, not liberal.鈥

That鈥檚 the case that former White House strategist Steve Bannon is making as a guest in Toronto鈥檚 Roy Thomson Hall tonight as part of the prestigious semi-annual Munk Debates. It鈥檚 the perfect venue for the former Trump official to reaffirm his international ambitions 鈥 to create a global platform for populists spanning from Brussels to Brazil.

His appearance comes when the global liberal order is under assault, with a clear rise of nationalists at the polls and authoritarian leaders nipping at the institutions and norms in place since World War II. Mr. Bannon鈥檚 world tour heightens insecurities and anxieties, as no one knows whether something more ominous will emerge to replace or redefine the current order. And his Toronto visit has touched off a firestorm over whether giving him a platformpromotes hate or serves as an exercise in free speech.

Why We Wrote This

Populism's global resurgence has alarmed many, as has former Trump advisor Steve Bannon's effort to empower populism's international proponents. But Mr. Bannon's task is far more difficult than it seems.

Yet overshadowed by the protest over democratic principles lie doubts about whether his ideas stand any chance of coalescing 鈥 if populists and their followers have any need or capacity to band together, particularly under an American umbrella.

In Europe, where he鈥檚 gone the farthest with a group called The Movement, a meeting point for populists that is to officially launch in January, Bannon has been met with mixed reviews. There are some leaders, like Matteo Salvini in Italy, who are seizing on the cachet of a person behind the rise of Trump. But others see him as an outsider, attempting to pull right-wing populists together where so many at the European level have failed.

Kimmel silenced, as political and corporate pressures converge

鈥淎 lot of these nationalists in Europe are fairly anti-American. The last thing they need is an American busybody trying to organize them,鈥 says Stefan Lehne, a visiting scholar at Carnegie Europe in Brussels who focuses on relations between the EU and member states. 鈥淚 think what is true is you have rise of populist parties, in North America, in many parts of Europe, in other parts of the world. This has to do with globalization, the responses to it, migration, and other other issues.

鈥淵ou do have a rise of populism,鈥 Mr. Lehne says. 鈥淲hat you do not have is a populist movement.鈥

Nationalism on the march

Bannon鈥檚 emergence on the international stage is impeccable in timing, just when mainstream parties from the Americas to Asia are losing voter support. Angela Merkel, Germany鈥檚 chancellor and a linchpin of the European Union, said this week she will step down as party leader amid disastrous electoral results for her 海角大神 Democratic party.

Ian Bremmer, founder of risk consultancy firm Eurasia Group in New York, calls it a period of 鈥済eopolitical recession鈥 that has been exacerbated by President Trump, but began before he took office, with the rise of China, the failure to align Russia with the West, and voter disillusionment in the West amid economic and cultural change.

鈥淐learly right now the momentum in democracies around the world is with the nationalists, and not with the globalists or the pro-globalization forces,鈥 says Mr. Bremmer.

Why a government shutdown looms as Congress splits town

The shift in politics comes amid polarization that has deepened divisions and, at its worst, turned deadly 鈥 most recently at a Pittsburgh synagogue. It also comes as anxieties are heightened about the repercussions of hateful rhetoric, after pipe bombs were sent via mail to Democratic leaders and supporters in the US.

Bannon has become an outcast in many circles in the US. Recent events ahead of the US midterm elections have seen him pull in attendance in the low double digits. But his former position in the Trump inner circle has given him clout internationally.

Cynthia Levine-Rasky, a board member of the Urban Alliance on Race Relations in Toronto, says Bannon鈥檚 invitation to this city should have been rescinded because it undermines democratic principles and flames white nationalist violence 鈥 and also has global ramifications.

鈥淥ften when we think of Bannon we only think of his role in the White House and role before that at Breitbart News,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut he has broadened his purview, his influence, his interactions, his ambitions globally. So I think it鈥檚 essential to remember not just what he did but what he is currently doing, which is in some some ways far more onerous and far more descriptive and revealing of his real danger,鈥 she says.

Nationalists, not internationalists

The most concrete work he hopes to accomplish is in Europe, with The Movement, which he wants to serve as a campaign center ahead of Europe鈥檚 crucial parliamentary elections next May, to build bridges among populist parties that rail against immigration and the EU.

Former White House strategist Steve Bannon delivers a speech at the 'Atreju 2018' meeting organized by the Brothers of Italy party in Rome on Sept. 22.
Alessandro Bianchi/Reuters

Mr. Salvini, Italy鈥檚 deputy prime minister and leader of the far-right Northern League, has welcomed Bannon to the European front. But the reception has been lukewarm elsewhere. The populist parties of Europe have distinct aims, based on whether they are indebted to or must bail out other members, whether they have a large influx of migrants or don鈥檛. Salvini, for example, wants fewer migrants by way of forcing other EU members to take them in. Prime Minister Viktor听Orb谩n of Hungary wants no migrants, and refuses a European migrant quota system flat out.

Bannon has talked about a global populist platform from Singapore to Brazil, where Jair Bolsonaro, a far-right, authoritarian politician who said on the campaign trail that a 鈥済ood criminal is a dead criminal,鈥 was just elected the next president.

But like elsewhere, the Brazilian electorate voted on domestic issues 鈥 recession, corruption, and crime. 鈥淏razil鈥檚 turn has much more to do with domestic factors than with a narrative around a global front,鈥 says Robert Muggah, co-founder and research director for the Igarap茅 Institute, a think tank in Rio de Janeiro.

And Brazil, like so much of the world, has a complicated relationship with the US, where distrust is always just below the surface. Mr. Muggah says he sees no signs that Mr. Bolsonaro wants to lead a US-allied, right-wing axis in the region, despite having cozied up to Trump.

And that is a limitation Bannon will face globally, says Bremmer, whether in the EU or Latin America or Asia. 鈥淭here鈥檚 never been a phrase, 鈥楴ationalists of the world, unite,鈥 and for good reason. It just doesn鈥檛 work,鈥 he says.

But many say the populist ambition needs to be recognized, and for those who want to thwart it, it must be done with abundant debates and solutions for the disillusionment with the system.

Canada has been far more immune to divisive politics than other countries, but Ontario this year elected populist Doug Ford as its new premier. And fringe groups on the far right could be susceptible to Bannon鈥檚 messaging. Still, Michael Taube, a political commentator in Canada and a former speech writer for Stephen Harper, the former Conservative prime minister, says censoring Bannon would be far more dangerous to democracy.

鈥淭o bring these ideas out in the open is much healthier and much better for democratic society to operate in,鈥澨齅r. Taube says. 鈥淚f we all want to live in an echo chamber, it鈥檚 very easy to create.鈥