Become a Member
Opinion

It’s not surprising that the strongman won, but we should be careful what we wish for

If Jews don’t feel safe in America, there is nowhere in the diaspora for us to feel safe

November 6, 2024 16:58
2161923146
Donald Trump pumps his fist (Getty Images)
3 min read

When my next-door neighbour told me over dinner that Vladimir Putin had helped fund 9/11 to destabilise the West, I considered him nothing more than a conspiracy theorist. But a few months later he was dead. His name was Alexander Litvinenko and he was murdered to stop him talking.

Over the years I’ve pondered Alexander’s words many times. What he said then – in early 2006 – has certainly come to pass. Wars, terrorism, radicalisation, immigration have all led to a growing distrust in democracy. Whether that would have happened without 9/11 is something we will never know.

The 2008 financial crisis, the Arab Spring, the advent of social media, Covid have all played their part too but what is clear now – with two large-scale wars having an impact on all of us - is that we are on a precipice. And when democracies feel so unstable, voters do what they have always done and turned to the person who seems like they have the easy answers; the mythological ‘strong man’.

There are many reasons why Donald Trump has won power again; I am certainly not discounting the manifest failings of the Democrats. But if the world felt safer, people would not be turning to extremes.