Originally Posted by
Stavros
Anne Applebaum, The Twiight of Democracy. The Future of Poltiics and the Parting of Friends (Allen Lane: The Penguin Press, 2020).
Anne Applebaum, who in recent years has published compelling books on the Cold War in Russia, the Ukraine and Eastern Europe, has written a very personal book in which she explains how the friends who attended a party at her home in Poland on New Years Eve 1999, now ignore her, and in some cases, refer to her -and her Polish politician husband- as 'the enemy''.
In doing so, she tries to explain how she believes she has remained faithful to the politics views she holds dear- she is a liberal Republican- while friends have abandoned the 'centre ground' for an extremist politics characterised by its Nationalism and its crude bigotry. In Poland and Hungary, friends who suffered under the dictatorship of the Communist Party in their youth, motivated by a bogus claim their countries are threatened by Muslim immigrants, even the EU to which they belong, have been happy to see the Rule of Law and Democracy, which once they cherished, set aside in order to rescue the country from a fate worse than death.
She thus writes chapters on Poland and Hungary, and an entertaining chapter on her time in London writing for the Conservative monthly paper The Spectator -where she got to know Boris Johnson, Fraser Nelson and Simon Heffer, all three regular contributors to the Telegraph newspaper -and quotes Boris Johnson at an evening meal in 2014-
"Nobody serious wants to leave the EU", he said. "Business doesn't want it. The City" (London's financial district) "doesn't want it. It won't happen" (p70).
There are chapters on Spain, a concluding chapter that uses the Dreyfus Affair to show that the current situation is not unique, with a preceding chapter on the US called 'Prairie Fire', arguing this term and some terminology of the Weather Underground is more or less the same as that used by the man who claims to be the 45th President of the USA. Arguing that from its inception, the Founders were anxious that their experiment might not last, Applebaum argues that it has stood up to every major challenge, but that the crisis engendered by the election in 2016 of a man who does not regard the Constitution as important -he knows little about it other than it restricts the freedom of the Preident to do whatever he wants- could be a fatal crisis.
Throughout the book she argues that when democracies fail, it is often due to internal weakness rather than external attack, and that it is when lawmakers and opinion makers abandon a consensus that holds the system together, that it weakens. She raises issues of Nationalism in relation to legal and illegal immigration, and suggests that a crude Nationalism has appealed to the voters who secured the 2016 victory, tenuous though that was given the majorty voted for Hillary Clinton.
So though her arguments are powerful and supported by evidence, much of it from the opinion makers she once knew as friends, she has not widened her scope to look at long term trends such as de-industrialization, the changing nature of capitalism since the 1980s and Globalization, with an odd absence of the impact on American politics of Barrack Obama's election victories and the problem of Race.
In spite of these flaws, this is a riveting book that helps to explain how people who should know better are prepared to ditch their 'sacred' principles to support a more narrow interest, even if it means supporting the kind of political leaders they once would have shunned and condemnd. I am reminded of Christopher Hitchens, an urbane, literate and liberal man, who was shocked by 9/11 and never the same after it. Had he spent more time in the Mid- East than he did in Mid-town Manhattan, he might not have been shocked. One wonders, in 2020 how many more shocks we must experience before life returns to normal -Applebaum yearns for it, even as she suspects it will never happen.