Obama gets the conservative vote

by Philip Stevens
Financial Times (U.K.)
3/22/12


The world does not get a vote in the US presidential election. Never mind,
politicians across the globe are lining up regardless behind Barack Obama.
It is not just the usual suspects – soggy Europeans who abhor the
culture wars waged by US conservatives. The Republicans are trailing in
places where they have traditionally had a strong edge on the Democrats.


The tone was set during David Cameron’s visit to Washington. Feted at
the White House, Britain’s Conservative prime minister all but endorsed
Mr Obama’s claim to a second term. Thumbing his nose at the
Tory party’s American cousins he declined to meet Republican leaders. Mr
Cameron’s government is legislating in favour of gay marriage. A
conversation with Rick Santorum might have been a little strained.

Centre-right parties hold office just about everywhere in Europe. Yet it is a
struggle to find leaders who would admit, even privately, to be crossing
their fingers for Mitt Romney. Mention Mr Santorum or Newt Gingrich and
they wince.


Politicians in the eastern half of the continent often approve of the
Republican front-runner’s tough stance towards Russia. Mr Obama’s
“reset” with Moscow was not universally popular in former vassal states
of the Soviet empire. On almost every other big foreign policy issue –
Iran’s nuclear ambitions, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, or the
handling of China – Europeans are closer to Mr Obama.

This is not to say that he has lived up to their exalted hopes. In
2008 Mr Obama was running against George W. Bush’s foreign policy
record. He was young, black and a multilateralist to boot. He talked
about diplomacy as an alternative to war. Europeans fondly imagined he
would set about remaking the world in Europe’s image. Unsurprisingly,
they have been disappointed.


That has been less true of voters. The 2011 Global Attitudes Survey
from the Pew Research centre showed that 88 per cent of Angela Merkel’s
German voters still expressed confidence in Mr Obama. The figure for
France was 84 per cent, for Britain 75 per cent and for Spain 67 per
cent.


The gulf between conservatives on either side of the Atlantic is as
much about cultural dissonance as policy disagreements. Arguments about
Russia or Middle East peace talks can be managed. Much harder is finding
any remaining common political ground between Christian Democrats and
Tea Party conservatives. There have always been differences about the
size and role of the state and about social policy. But now the gap
looks unbridgeable. Whatever happened, Europeans lament, to the party of
the east coast establishment? The Atlantic alliance, after all, was
built by Republicans.

The present Republican leadership is not shedding many tears.
Plaudits from Europeans do not fire up the party’s base. To the
contrary. As Mr Romney limps a little faster towards the Republican
nomination, he accuses Mr Obama of turning the US into a “European-style
entitlement society”. Little wonder that a recent survey by the polling
company YouGov showed that nearly three-quarters of voters in
welfare-friendly Sweden backed Mr Obama.


On the other side of the world, Mr Romney might have expected cheers
from America’s Asian allies. Japan, South Korea and Singapore have
traditionally favoured Republicans. So too has India. Republicans have
been identified as pro-business and pro-trade and, in a dangerous
neighbourhood, ready to maintain a powerful US presence. Mr Obama was
marked down for an early attempt to frame a conciliatory approach to
China.

Like Europeans, however, these allies worry about the rightward shift of
today’s Republicans. They struggle to make the connection between
the party of Eisenhower, Reagan and George H.W. Bush and the evangelical
conservatism of the Tea Party. They have grown used to Mr Obama, and
appreciate a toughening of his stance against China. The present US
administration, you hear Asian diplomats say, is “predictable”.


Oddly enough, China would also be expected to start with a bias in
favour of the Republicans. Richard Nixon, after all, gave the Communist
regime its opening to the world. Beijing prefers rightwing realpolitik
over liberal hand-wringing about human rights. The Republicans are
judged to be on the side of open markets; the Democrats as reflex
protectionists.

Mr Romney is doing his best to turn such calculations on their head.
He says the Chinese have “walked all over Mr Obama”. Its human rights
abuses mean that it cannot be a trusted partner. As for trade, one of
his first acts as president would be to indict Beijing for “currency
manipulation” and slap duties on Chinese imports.

The story is much the same on the other side of the Pacific. The last
President Bush built good relations with leaders in Brazil, Mexico and
Colombia. Mr Romney has seemed intent on alienating them by joining the
Republican bidding race for much tougher immigration controls.

The Republicans do have at least one stalwart ally. Mr Romney has won the
support of Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu by stepping up the military
threat to Iran and promising to move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to
Jerusalem. Both moves are opposed by other US
allies.

As far as the outcome in November goes, of course, none of this much
matters. Americans, rightly, will make their own choice. What is
striking, though, is just how far the Republicans have strayed from the
centre-right mainstream of western politics. Something odd is happening
when the world’s conservatives vote Democrat.




http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/c4941666-738d-11e1-94ba-00144feab49a.html



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