Project 2025: blueprint for a far-right future | thearticle


Project 2025: blueprint for a far-right future | thearticle

Play all audios:


Politics as usual is out of time: 2024 is proving to be a year of stark choices. Democracy’s mettle and the advantages it confers for stable, serious government will be tested to the limit


in the UK, Europe and the US. Keir Starmer’s seemingly unstoppable march to power on July 4 may look like a normal swing of the pendulum after 14 years of Tory-led miscalculation,


incompetence and scandal. Britain is moving left as the rest of Europe shifts to the right. At least, as a social democrat I’d like to think so. But this feels more like politics in the last


chance saloon: one final chance to prevent a great fragmentation: a big bang that resets the political landscape, not in the sense of Boris Johnson’s flimsy Red Wall/Blue Wall coalition but


something altogether more fundamental. Europe is already in the throes of an upheaval. In America, Donald Trump flies the Republican ensign. But, in truth, he’s a freebooter riding on a


wave of discontent which he exploits for his own gain, with perplexing success. The collapse of the centre and the rise of the Right has been a long time coming. The 2008 crash and the more


recent pandemic have left entire populations across the industrialised world gasping for air, struggling to make ends meet. Voters in large numbers have become disaffected, perhaps


terminally, from a system that promises to do better but repeatedly fails to meet their needs let alone their dreams. Who can blame them? Hope can’t put food on the table. The mould has been


broken which should come as no surprise except to incurable optimists. It’s not hard to see why. Traditional politics has become unmoored from popular sentiment. The political class, to


quote John Gray, the New Statesman’s contrarian columnist, no longer understands those it rules. The stories they tell no longer chime with people’s lived experience. Others, with a more


compelling tale, with more seductive endings, have stepped into the void. What seemed like a surefire win for Johnson – Brexit and the 2019 election Brexit bounce — turned out to be the Tory


party’s undoing. Brexit sounded like a good story: free at last from Europe’s shackles to fulfil our destiny. But it turned out to be a false prospectus. Meanwhile the heart of moderate


Conservatism – the accumulated experience of traditional Tory acumen which instinctively adapts to the world as it changes — was ripped out to satisfy one man’s overweening ambition. The


rump, a deeply unimpressive cabal, lacks the wisdom to pull back from the brink. In France, Emmanuel Macron is betting the farm on a general election that could see Marine le Pen’s National


Rally capture the lower house and with it the levers of the economy. The centre has collapsed, the Left is hopelessly divided. The centre-Right – the party of General de Gaulle — is a shadow


of its former self. A Le Pen presidency in 2027 is no longer unthinkable. The temptation for centrists is to dismiss these wild swings as a passing storm and the emerging political Right as


lightweight insurgents. A case can be made for that point of view. Stay tuned. Normal service will be resumed. But that’s a mistake. The fragmentation and in some cases the virtual


disappearance of parties which have dominated the industrialised West since WWII is rooted in something fundamental: disillusion at a market-led economic model which, instead of levelling up


has merely entrenched a two-tier wealth system. Most of us are reliant on the post-war formula of weighing and parsing, trimming and tacking, upping or lowering taxes a bit, spending less


or borrowing more from a finite pot. Aspiration faces depressingly stubborn headwinds. Making ends meet is what most can aspire to. And then there’s those who have defied gravity. The


world’s billionaires, backed by their political buddies, have increased their wealth by an estimated £2.6 trillion since the pandemic. The rest, whether poor, temporarily poor or just


managing, have lost money. Mr and Mrs Average live in a state of perpetual insecurity. That’s the driving force. Which brings us to the question: what do these insurgent parties have to


offer? And are they here to stay or will it be business as usual in the next round? It’s tempting to dismiss the far-Right parties as one-trick ponies: immigration, immigration, immigration.


There’s some truth to that. Migration is the topic that pushes most buttons. But that too would be a mistake. The far-Right, like the far-Left, has a world view articulated better by some


than others. This differs from country to country but, essentially, it pivots around the idea of the nation (and the family) as the sacrosanct bedrock of everything. As usual, America sets


the pace. A seminal document touted as a blueprint for a Trump second term sets out, in remarkable detail, a vision of how Republicans can “take their country back” from the “ruling elite”.


Project 2025 A Mandate for Leadership is worth paying attention to. Nigel Farage, Giorgia Meloni, Marine le Pen, Viktor Orban and Trump may not be carbon copies of each other. But the same


causes, the same impulses and, often, the same solutions drive them. Here’s a sample: “Defang and defund woke warriors” (federal civil servants, teachers, unions, even the military) who have


infiltrated every American institution. Slash green policies. Resume full-throttle gas and oil extraction. End diversity and inclusion policies. Regulate LGBTQ, transgender and sex


education in schools. Seal America’s borders. Withdraw from the IMF and the World Bank. Trump and his backers, both in and out of government, learnt one big lesson from his first term:


governing is time-consuming and not everybody is a pushover. There’s a whole “elite” out there waiting to scupper his best intentions. It’s not so different from Johnson’s “Blob” or Liz


Truss’s “deep state”. The answer, at least in America’s case (say the authors), is simple: reset how the country is governed. Redefine its cardinal doctrine, the separation of powers between


the executive, Congress and the judiciary. Make the President first among equals with extraordinary powers. This is what should keep us awake at night: not the policies, which are


debatable, but the urge, which has deep roots, of all parties at either end of the spectrum, to short-circuit democracy with authoritarian fixes. The ultimate fate of our political


institutions — and of parties on what used to be called the radical fringe — will not be decided at any of this year’s elections. It will be decided by the generation that has just turned


old enough to vote: Gen Z. In Britain over eight million young people who could not vote in 2019 are now eligible. Starmer says he intends to reduce the voting age to 16. They and how their


lives turn out will decide who governs the industrialised West. Can western economies plagued by falling investment, insufficient productivity and social tensions be re-engineered to


generate growth, jobs and functioning public services? Can enough houses be built to allow Gen Z to become homeowners and feel they have a stake in their future? These questions, not the


phoney culture wars that have become the far-Right’s marching tune, will determine what the political landscape looks like. Our leaders need to pull their fingers out. A MESSAGE FROM


THEARTICLE _We are the only publication that’s committed to covering every angle. We have an important contribution to make, one that’s needed now more than ever, and we need your help to


continue publishing throughout these hard economic times. So please, make a donation._