As America ponders its political future, the dynamics of politics in Europe offer U.S. lawmakers interesting food for thought. The change there isn’t necessarily about a movement to political extremes but a different kind of shift.
While America has a very real fascination with the Old World, observing but not reflecting hampers opportunities for growth. The United States is stuck in a reality that for many across the pond seems arcane: It has one of the oldest constitutions alive, one that is in desperate need of updating.
Great Britain has certainly just witnessed an update, with many commenting that it has bucked the trend with its shift left. Upon returning to the United Kingdom for the recent election, I saw that the sentiment was less about political ideology and more about discontent over failed promises — failures that saw new parties on the right, such as Nigel Farage’s Reform U.K., pick up a 14 percent share of the total votes cast, with Labour, politically now left of center, taking 34 percent.
Political ideology might mean a lot to a select few, but it fails to resonate with a public that is crying out for a different way of governing — one that is about making sure that things run properly rather than succumbing to filibusters, political machinations and outright lies.
Understanding the nuances of policies is less of interest to voters coping with everyday life under any given administration. For all that we can hear that the U.S. economy is doing well, life still feels more expensive, with fewer people we know getting the jobs they seek.
It is clear that voters across the West are calling out for an antidote following lockdowns, economic strife and wars. Political parties that are new or have been out of power for a generation offer up the opportunity for renewal, presenting a tantalizing vision of a better future.
In France, it is discontent that has similarly driven voters away from President Emmanuel Macron’s party — not toward the right, as the second round of elections demonstrated but, as in Britain, a shift left.
While many claim that democracies are sliding toward right-wing populism, the last few weeks have demonstrated that change is a greater priority for voters. Shifts have in fact gone both ways — right and left — yet what is common is that voters have decided to go elsewhere.
Arguably, this was what brought Donald Trump to power as president in 2016 and led to Boris Johnson’s resounding 2019 victory in the U.K. and Giorgia Meloni’s win in Italy in 2022. While all offered conservative agendas, they provoked a break with past leaders, even from within their own parties.
The same old version of politics just doesn’t work. People are weary of past narratives and want to find new ways to trust their elected officials.
Unfortunately, the United States is trapped in a cycle that doesn’t appear to offer voters any real vision of something new. Where are the senior voices within the GOP and Democratic Party that are standing up for change and willing to propose a different way forward? While the mechanisms exist, the willpower desists.
Change needs an alternative to be proposed, yet as Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt assert in their book “How Democracies Die,” the U.S. no longer has party gatekeepers keeping destructive candidates at bay.
Change in the GOP would now represent a movement to the center — for when people are split, finding common ground is the only recourse to heal a divided nation.
For the Democrats, a joint ticket featuring someone such as Joe Manchin as vice president might similarly reach across the political chasm — which would set aside an agenda of the few for the desires of the many, no matter how hard a pill that may be for Democrats to swallow.
If news from Europe can offer anything to America, it is knowing that you can’t present people with the same recipe and believe it will taste any different. You must find new ingredients and use a different mold, addressing not just what you felt people needed yesterday but providing for what they want today — with a decent serving of truth rather than a sprinkling of a world that is unattainable.
James Coltella is a freelance writer who grew up in the United Kingdom and Italy. He wrote this for the Chicago Tribune.