By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
In the years following World War II, Western countries' voters
on the left and right supported liberal internationalism. They found a common
cause in their support for policies that sought to expand international
trade and cooperation and prevent the spread of communism. For
decades, this “vital center,” as Harvard historian Arthur Schlesinger,
Jr., termed it, held. But times have changed. Since the early 1990s,
an antiglobalist backlash has seen the support
of Western voters for parties favoring trade liberalization and
multilateral cooperation fall by nearly 50 percent. The British vote to leave
the European Union and the election of U.S. President Donald Trump, both in
2016, famously symbolized this transformation.
The current phase of antiglobalism in the West was birthed in the collapse
of the Soviet Union and the breakdown of the postwar compromise between
free-market capitalism and social democracy. During the Cold War, political
parties across the West—left and right alike—were united in their commitment to
combating the threat of communism. On the home front, they maintained a broad
consensus to preserve welfare states. When the Soviet Union collapsed, however,
the West’s politics changed. Foreign policy was no longer focused on the threat
from the East. Political discourse moved on, and new growth strategies were
fashioned in a world free of great-power conflict. Liberalizing markets and
rolling back social protections to promote globalization eroded manufacturing
and created a climate of economic insecurity. As voters lost their financial
security and sense of national autonomy, they became increasingly receptive to
appeals from parties on the extremes.
The success of the antiglobalists has proven costly for the West, domestically
and internationally. At home, a fragmented electorate has made it difficult for
governments to muster the power and authority needed to govern in several
countries, including Austria, Denmark, the Netherlands, Spain, and the United
Kingdom. This failure has fueled voter dissatisfaction, which, in turn, leads
to greater political volatility and dysfunction. Internationally, this
fragmentation has weakened support for Western priorities in multilateral
institutions and fueled doubts about the benefits of liberal
democracy. Early hopes that the unified response of Western democracies to
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine would help break
the antiglobalist fever have not been fulfilled.
Instead, since the invasion, antiglobalists have
made deeper inroads in France, Italy, Sweden, and elsewhere. Meanwhile,
the possibility persists that Trump may return to the White House in 2025.
If Western
governments hope to tame the antiglobalist passions
roiling their societies, they could restore the balance between staying open to
the world and safeguarding economic security at home. History is not the guide
that many think it is. Turning inward or replaying the Cold War will not
fix this problem. A new approach is needed to revitalize the center.
Things Fall Apart
During the Cold War,
the professed commitment of Western leaders to a liberal world order won
considerable electoral support. In the United States, liberal
internationalism was backed by Democratic and Republican voters and significant
business, labor, and agriculture segments. In Europe, voters favored closer
economic and security ties with their neighbors and Washington. In Japan, the
ruling Liberal Democratic Party also supported liberal internationalism,
willingly tying its security to the United States while relying on state-led
development, which secured the support of workers and farmers.
Cold War imperatives
gave Western voters a reason to support liberal internationalism. So did the
generous social protections granted by the postwar welfare state. The nature of
these welfare provisions varied across the West, and support for them was
always more assertive on the left. But the public widely accepted that
governments were responsible for balancing the imperatives of free markets and
economic security. Indeed, postwar Western policymakers viewed the welfare
state as an essential part of the East-West struggle for ideological dominance;
it softened the rough edges of market capitalism for working-class
voters and countered Soviet claims that only communism offered a “worker’s
paradise.”
To be sure, Western
support for liberal internationalism was never unanimous. Every country had its
naysayers. In the United States, progressive Democrats, including Senators
Frank Church of Idaho and Vance Hartke of Indiana, worried about unchecked
executive power and consequently opposed excessive military spending and
interventionism. On the right, isolationist Republicans, including Senators
John Bricker of Ohio, Everett Dirksen of Illinois, and William Knowland of California, derided the United
Nations and strong transatlantic ties as infringements on U.S.
sovereignty. Some dissenting voices in France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the
United Kingdom fiercely resisted cooperation with the United States, fearing
its hegemony. At the same time, debates over neutrality raged in Austria,
Sweden, and Switzerland. The critical dividing line in these disputes remained
between those parties in the vital center and those on the extremes.
During the Cold War,
parties calling for an alternate foreign policy stood little chance
of winning public backing. Consistently high levels of Western economic growth,
caused by the huge expansion in trade resulting from the postwar economic
recovery and the removal of tariffs, helped strengthen this consensus.
Suspicions of Soviet intentions and fears of nuclear war also made
voters skeptical of left-wing parties that seemed “too soft” on communism and
right-wing parties that were considered too reckless or belligerent to be
entrusted with the country’s security. Politicians who strayed too far to the
right or the left—as did U.S. presidential candidates Barry Goldwater and
George McGovern in 1964 and 1972, respectively—proved unelectable.
Mainstream party
support for liberal internationalism remained consistently solid and resilient,
despite occasional challenges. The most serious came in the 1970s when sluggish
growth and runaway inflation caused a strong disagreement between the
center-left—which called for increased government spending and market
regulation—and the center-right, which argued for privatization,
deregulation, and welfare reform. The center-right won. In the early 1980s,
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, and
U.S. President Ronald Reagan each began experimenting with
different center-right economic policies. The success of their programs put
pressure on other Western governments to follow suit. Even French President
François Mitterrand’s socialist government found it necessary to pivot toward
greater market liberalization.
The Center Can Not Hold
In the 1990s,
however, everything changed. After the end of the Cold War, Western leaders
began to see political advantage in liberalizing trade and granting greater
authority to international technocrats. Parties on the center-left and the
center-right saw the resulting market-driven form of globalization as
a way to win the support of the most internationally competitive sectors of
business and attract younger, educated, and middle-class voters who benefited
from market liberalization. The leaders' agendas in France, Germany, the United
Kingdom, and the United States were cut from the same neoliberal cloth.
The enthusiasm of
Western leaders for globalization after the Cold War succeeded in expanding
markets and the reach of multilateral institutions. The EU and
the World Trade Organization took on functions that had once been the exclusive
preserve of the nation-state. With the lifting of the Iron Curtain, many
industries in Western Europe moved east as workers from Eastern Europe moved
west in search of better jobs. U.S. and Western investment in China
accelerated.
At the same time, the
ideologies and alignments that the Cold War froze began to thaw. As fears of
communist expansion and nuclear Armageddon receded, voting for a maverick was
no longer potentially fatal. Western voters, accordingly, became more willing
to take a chance on those parties, candidates, and platforms that were once
considered beyond the pale.
Recognizing this new
reality, parties on the far left and far right began to reinvent and reposition
themselves. Left-wing parties such as Denmark’s Red-Green Alliance, France’s
Communist Party, and Sweden’s Left Party combined traditional antiglobalist politics of trade protectionism with
positions on transnational issues, such as global justice, climate change and
nuclear proliferation, to broaden their appeal among younger voters. On the
right, parties, including Austria’s Freedom Party and France’s Front National,
jettisoned long-standing rhetorical commitments to laissez-faire capitalism in
favor of antiglobalism and social protection, hoping
to appeal to disenchanted working-class voters.
In the following
years, left- and right-wing parties also became adept at using antiglobalism to mobilize voters experiencing hard times.
In the wake of the 2008 financial crash and the ensuing eurozone crisis,
Syriza, a left-wing party in Greece, and Podemos, an anti-neoliberal party in
Spain, exploited growing Euroskepticism and
opposition to the EU’s demand for austerity to rally voters to their
side. In the run-up to the Brexit referendum in 2016, Nigel Farage, the
leader of the UK Independence Party, made gains in northern and eastern England
by fusing an anti-immigration message with opposition to EU membership. In
2017, Marine Le Pen, the leader of France’s Front National, unsuccessfully ran
for president, merging the party’s long-standing opposition to mass immigration
with a new “strategic plan for reindustrialization” aimed at French regions hit
hard by globalization.
These efforts did not
catapult antiglobalist, populist parties into a
national government. However, they did succeed in putting mainstream parties on
the defensive by capturing a larger share of the national vote. Parties on
the hard right, in particular, experienced unprecedented success in these
years, their share of the national vote in Western democracies tripling between
1990 and 2017. This success was due in no small part to these parties’
willingness to fuse the explosive issue of immigration with opposition
to trade liberalization and supranational institutions such as the
EU; they succeeded in expanding their vote share, especially in impoverished
regions.
Antiglobalism also became a driver of change within mainstream
parties. Feeling pressure from antiglobalists over
trade, immigration, and international cooperation, center-right parties
became more nationalist and nativist and, in many cases, more
protectionist. On the center-left, social democratic parties in Northern
Europe sought to outflank those on their left who criticized globalization
as a “race to the bottom” by urging that welfare standards be harmonized
to curb the “advantage” of low-wage countries in Southern Europe. In the
United States, Trump and Senator Bernie Sanders ran campaigns in 2016 that
appealed to white working- and middle-class voters who felt left behind by
globalization. At the height of the Cold War, parties on the center-left
and center-right had more in common than they did with the parties and factions
on the political extremes. Today, in many cases, this is no longer true.
Back In The 1950s
Although liberal
internationalism has come under sustained assault, it is needed now more than
ever. The rise of China, and increasing Russian aggression, have
inaugurated a new age of great-power rivalry. To understand how to proceed,
many foreign policy analysts such as Michael Beckley, Hal Brands, and Dominic
Tierney have begun studying the Cold War for clues on reviving the vital
center. Some suggest that policymakers today can capitalize on voters’ worries
about growing Chinese power and assertiveness, just as their predecessors used
the specter of Soviet influence during the Cold War to steer public opinion.
Some go further, drawing stark parallels between a “new axis of autocracy”
led by China and the threat posed by the former Soviet Union and its allies in
the 1950s.
Foreign threats can
certainly boost domestic solidarity. But the Cold War analogy can be
misleading. Western solidarity then stemmed from more than fears of Soviet
expansion. Western democracies also found a common purpose in their commitment
to domestic social protections and liberal democracy. Social protection was
seen as a complement to fighting communism during the Cold War because the
conflict compelled Western leaders to prove that democratic capitalism, rather
than communism, could offer workers greater economic security, equality, and
opportunity. As U.S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson put it in 1950:
“There is no longer any difference between foreign questions and domestic
questions. They are all part of the same question.” Without renewing this
embrace of economic security and inclusive growth, invoking the threat of China
is not enough to bring antiglobalists back into the
fold.
Nor
is fearmongering about China likely to unite Western democracies. Some
capitals are more concerned by Beijing’s geopolitical ambitions than others.
Western governments differ on how best to deal with China, even on the
explosive issue of Taiwan. French President Emmanuel Macron’s recent statement
that Europe should not become a “vassal” in Washington’s rivalry with Beijing
dramatically illustrated the lack of consensus. Most Western leaders favor a
mix of carrots and sticks, hoping to maintain access to China’s markets and
labor at the same time as they benefit from the protection of U.S. military
power. For most Western democracies, dealing with China is not a zero-sum game.
Here, too, the Cold War analogy breaks down.
Isolating China is
not an option. China’s role in the global economy is too significant for it to
be cordoned off through decoupling. Combating climate change also necessitates
Beijing’s involvement, as China is the world’s largest carbon emitter. Chinese
cooperation will be indispensable to any attempt to determine the climate
future.
Shoring Up The Center
Today,
Western democracies are struggling to keep foreign and domestic
policy in balance. Commentators, including Francis Fukuyama, Robert Kagan, and
Kori Schake, see the war in Ukraine as a watershed moment for reaffirming the
West’s commitment to the liberal order. But the revitalization of the liberal
order will depend on more than the resolve of Western democracies in the
current international crisis. To rebuild popular support for liberal
internationalism, Western leaders could reimagine the relationship between
foreign and domestic policy. They can reconnect their international policies to
recognizable benefits at home for working families.
At a time when trade
liberalization and other traditional foreign policies have fallen into
disfavor, and the domestic coalitions associated with them have
splintered, leaders could find new arguments about the necessity of international
openness and cooperation. They could also forge unique domestic bargains and
political alliances to support them. Western democracies cannot return to
the postwar liberal order. They can, however, search for new ways of securing
the benefits that the former order brought.
Renewal will
require innovation, investment, and sustainable development. Some of these
processes are already underway. Yet given the depth of the antiglobalist
backlash, far more action and vision are needed if Western democracies
can hope to revive the political center while still competing
geopolitically.
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