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Opinion

Trump vs Reagan: Why The Donald is no Ronald

December 1, 2016 13:08
How will Trump’s policies unfold?
3 min read

In 1981, the British band Heaven 17 released a single called Fascist Groove Thang. The song, a fierce attack on Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, described the US President-elect as a "fascist god in motion" , bewailing "evil men with racist views spreading all across the land" and "Democrats out of power across that great wide ocean." Sounds familiar? The BBC banned it from the airwaves citing legal concerns. Thirty five years on, with Donald Trump as President-elect, the world is crying out for Reagan. After his election victory, Trump remarked that he was looking forward to having the same relationship with Theresa May, Britain's Prime Minister, that Reagan had once enjoyed with Thatcher. A Trump visit to Britain may take place next summer.

There are some interesting- if eerie - similarities between the situation in 1979/1980 when Thatcher and Reagan came to power and the state of the world today. Thatcher herself was not averse to indulging in 'Trumpian' electioneering, remarking in 1978 that British people feared that they might be "rather swamped by people of a different culture". In May 1979, she came to power in Britain partly because of a backlash against the post-war consensus, as opposition to the role of the trade unions intensified, and amid public concern that Britain was a diminished country. The consensus politics of the previous thirty-five years had apparently passed their sell-by date. A similar backlash resulted in the Brexit vote of June 2016, while Trump won the US presidential election partly because he too had convinced the American public, by fair means or foul, that the United States was in severe decline and only he could arrest it.

Trump's election mantra to "make America great again" recalls Thatcher's own talk of restoring Britain to greatness when she was in power and Reagan's attack on the Democrats' defeatism. But this is where the comparisons between Trump and Reagan/Thatcher end. Significantly, Reagan came to power amid heightened fears of a new threat from Moscow in the wake of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 and the collapse of détente. In 2016 as in 1980, a resurgent Russia is once more dominant in the Middle East. It is also posing a renewed and alarming threat to vulnerable NATO member states in Eastern Europe.

However, Thatcher and Reagan were united in their visceral dislike of totalitarianism and their determination to stand up to Moscow.