Merlin Weekly Macro: Do you hear the drums of discontent?
As French voters express discontent and in the US President Biden faces questions over his future, the Jupiter Merlin team address the investment implications.
In what was described by Italy’s Georgia Meloni as a ‘stitch-up’, the candidates for the key institutional jobs were divvied up in a proverbial smoke-filled room by the leaders of France, Germany, Spain, Holland, Greece and Poland (Donald Tusk, now Poland’s prime minister, is also a former President of the European Council; he is entirely familiar with the drill). Ursula von der Leyen, back for a second term as President of the Commission; Antonio Costa (Portuguese socialist former prime minister) for President of the Council; Kaja Kallas, the strongly anti-Putin Estonian prime minister to take over from the hapless Josep Borrel as the ‘foreign minister’. All still must be ratified by the new parliament but given it is believed that the leaders of at least 21 of the 27 member states agree with every single proposal, the very strong likelihood is that under instructions from their capitals, MEPs’ ratification should be a formality. Meloni together with the EU’s perpetual sinner, Hungary’s Viktor Orban, made her displeasure very clear; as a sop, in attitude somewhere between throw-the-dog-a-bone and Marie Antoinnette’s ‘let them eat cake’, a modestly embarrassed von der Leyen offered up concessions on immigration to smooth ruffled feathers. Electorates tend to be less easily fobbed off than politicians.
In the event in France, ‘so what?’ became ‘so a lot’, when under direct assault from Marine Le Pen’s National Rally, President Macron immediately threw down the gauntlet to his domestic electorate in a snap parliamentary election designed to put the French nationalists back in their box; it was a risky strategy yet to reach its conclusion next weekend. But for the rest of the EU, ‘so what?’ remains entirely applicable. It appears to be business as usual: carry on as if nothing has happened which, to the electorate, sends off signals of contempt.
Arrogance? Aloofness? Anxiety? Stupidity? A combination of all the above? How best to categorise the Brussels attitude to the EU’s democratic deficit; the ‘so what’ conundrum? Of the key policy areas which most vex voters in the EU, all are centralised. Immigration: harmonisation and common standards of vetting, processing and hosting migrants and asylum seekers; wherever migrants land in the EU, all member states will have to share the burden of sanctuary. Climate change: while responsibility for compliance is delegated nationally, pan-EU emissions targets are determined centrally; whether for example German households where over 85% have gas-powered hot water and heating, or the disproportionately large Dutch dairy industry and its bovine methane emissions, or the diktats about internal combustion engine vehicles and their usage in urban areas in France and other countries, the popular pushback and divisiveness are powerful political factors across Europe. Ukraine is another source of tension: about whether to admit it to the EU (according to the European Commission’s Public Opinion Monitoring Unit 52% of Germans, 43% of French people, and 34% of Italians believe the EU should not accept Ukraine as a new member in the coming years) and whether its reconstruction will be a financial burden on EU member states (69% of Germans, 61% of French, and 52% of Italians believe the reconstruction of Ukraine will be an economic burden for the EU); how much military or humanitarian aid should be provided (47% of Germans and 62% of Italians think their governments should not be providing military support); who should have the responsibility for the ongoing refugee crisis etc. All of these are immensely difficult and complex issues but for whatever reason, Brussels seems determined to make life more difficult for itself by ploughing on regardless, insensitive to the prevailing mood.
In democratic societies, we elect governments to govern and leaders to lead. Governments are entitled to feel annoyed and frustrated when they are berated either for doing ‘the right thing’ (as in Ukraine, for example) or for implementing what was voted for (take Emmanuel Macron: he made it very clear in his original manifesto that dealing with diesel emissions was a key target for his new government; when he introduced legislation to tackle those emissions it sparked the Gilets Jaunes protest movement creating significant social unrest but the key leaders of the Gilets Jaunes were often found to be strong supporters of Macron and had voted for him!). A system based purely on Vox Pop would soon be no system at all, but chaos. However, canny politicians keep a close ear to the ground at least to judge the mood; they also have the knack of being able to carry their electorates with them, winning their confidence. Those who lose touch, or become arrogant or complacent, or are too insensitive or stupid to realise what is afoot are the ones who invite ridicule, restiveness and reaction, something that is only accentuated in today’s fast-paced, soundbite-driven, interconnected, multi-media world. The result tends to be polarised and populist politics. The simple tenet of politics remains enduring: you take the electorate for granted at your peril.
The US system works back from polling day on November 5th (fixed, immovable). All the states are required to declare their agreed nominees to be entered on the ballot papers at all levels subject to election (president, senate, representative, governor); the last scheduled to make its announcement appears to be Indiana on September 10th. Most states will have made their choices by the end of August. The national Democratic Convention to endorse the party’s Presidential nominee and running mate is scheduled for August 19-22. If the Democrats decide to jettison Biden, they have barely six weeks to decide a credible candidate via an open caucus; it is very tight, almost too late.
Just when you thought this US election campaign could not get any weirder (Trump was due to be sentenced for his Stormy Daniels conviction on July 11th , the latest twist to which is the Supreme Court ruling this week that Trump has “broad immunity from criminal prosecution from his time in office as President”), it could be about to take another dramatic turn. Hold on to your hats.
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