Trump or Biden, Europe is the loser
A narrow result and looming gridlock spell trouble for
transatlantic ties.
The U.S. remains as divided as ever, giving Europe an
uncertain path forward when it comes to its erstwhile ally
BY MATTHEW
KARNITSCHNIG
November 4,
2020 6:32 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/donald-trump-or-joe-biden-europe-is-the-loser/
BERLIN —
Whoever wins the U.S. election, Europe has already lost.
It’s no
secret that most Europeans have been praying Joe Biden would win the
presidency; he may yet, but not with anything like a landslide. That might end
up being worse than the alternative.
If Donald
Trump, the president Europe loves to hate, had prevailed by a wide margin,
Europe would at least have had clarity on its options and could plan
accordingly.
Instead,
America remains as divided as ever. That’s not just bad for the U.S., it will
also temper hopes in Europe for a clear path forward in the transatlantic
relationship.
Yes,
transatlantic relations would inevitably improve under a Biden presidency after
the bitternerness of the Trump years (how could they not?). Nonetheless, the
ambitious agenda many European leaders were hoping to pursue on everything from
environmental policy to trade to defense, already seems out of reach.
The reason
is twofold. Not only will Biden lack a strong mandate if he wins by the skin of
his teeth, but Congress looks likely to remain divided, with the Democrats
controlling the House of Representatives and the Republicans in charge in the
Senate.
The
technical term for that constellation is “gridlock.” It will force Biden into
the same corner that Trump faced for the past two years and that bedeviled much
of Barack Obama’s time in office.
Without a
majority in both houses of Congress, neither president was able to pursue much
of his legislative agenda, relying instead on executive fiat, orders that can
be reversed with the stroke of a pen by a successor.
For Europe,
that makes the U.S. a flighty partner when it comes to pursuing an ambitious
global agenda.
One needn’t
look further than the Iran nuclear deal of 2015 to understand what’s at stake.
Without a Democratic majority in the Senate, Obama faced a choice of no deal or
one that lacked the full legitimacy of a treaty under U.S. law. He chose the
latter course, only to see the accord, which Europe and the U.S. negotiated
with Iran and other world powers over a period of more than a decade, collapse
after Trump came into office and abandoned it.
The same
dynamic was at play with the Paris climate accord. Without a congressional
stamp, it was much easier for Trump to withdraw.
That’s why
European leaders were hoping Biden would win by a landslide with the Democrats
riding his coattails in Congress.
Indeed,
many of the polls in the run-up to election day pointed in that direction,
feeding expectations in some corners of the Continent of a “revolution” on the
scale of Ronald Reagan’s 1980 win, a victory that triggered a dramatic change
of direction in American politics.
A strong
Biden win could have allowed Washington and its European allies to pursue the
kind of sweeping transatlantic agenda many think is essential in order to renew
and redefine the alliance, especially in the face of the growing challenge
posed by China.
It wasn’t
meant to be. Though some in Europe, especially in Germany, have signaled
interest in trying to resuscitate the effort to craft a transatlantic free
trade deal, it may not be worth the effort if the next president can’t get it
through Congress.
At the back
of Europe’s mind will also be the question of what happens four years from now,
even if Biden wins this time. Given his age, Biden could well choose to be a
one-term president. If he were to be succeeded by a Republican in the mold of
Donald Trump — a distinct possibility given the current American political
climate — why bother negotiating deals that could evaporate as soon as he
exits?
The answer
might be that Europe doesn’t have any better options, especially when it comes
to security. Confronted with an increasingly belligerent Russia, Europe needs
America’s security umbrella more than at any time since the end of the Cold
War. Germany and other countries will do whatever they can to keep the U.S.
engaged in Europe’s defense.
Yet that
issue could remain a source of tension with a Biden administration, which, like
Trump, is keen to focus more on China in the coming years. A Biden
administration would likely follow Trump’s policy of pushing Europe to take on
more responsibility for its own security, albeit with a less aggressive tone.
With
Europe’s economy hammered by the pandemic and the public’s appetite for more
spending on defense tepid at best, the security question seems bound to remain
a source of transatlantic tension.
In other
words, even if most Europeans can’t wait to see the back of Trump, they may
soon find themselves stuck in the same situation they’ve been in for the past
four years: Hoping for the best but fearing the worst.


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