How Do We Talk to Foreign Audiences After Trump's Subversion?

AuthorMoskowitz, Ken
PositionDonald Trump

Title: How Do We Talk to Foreign Audiences After Trump's Subversion?

Author: Ken Moskowitz

Text:

When I was the U.S. Embassy press officer in Kyiv, Ukraine in the late 1990s, the public affairs section sponsored programs showcasing and explaining American democracy in the post-Soviet republic. One major event I organized was a public symposium entitled "Holding Elections in a Free Society". We featured American government and academic experts on topics such as how to maintain a level playing field among competing political parties, registering to vote, ensuring fairness in the counting of ballots, election monitoring, equal access to the media, and similar features of our electoral system. The implicit message, of course, is that our election system is worthy of emulation.

But our experience in last November's presidential election, and the groundless objections about its integrity and result raised by President Donald Trump, culminating in a pro-Trump mob's attack on the U.S. Capitol on January 6, did not resemble the exemplary depiction in my symposium. How could American diplomats justify holding such programs today, after the president himself condemned our Federal elections as rigged and massively fraudulent, our national government as corrupt, federal bureaucrats as members in a disloyal or self-serving Deep State, and the federal and state courts as biased institutions?

The world has noted the deterioration in America's democratic culture. In the 2019 Index of Democracy published by the Economist Intelligence Unit, the rating of the U.S. on its democracy scale fell from 8.05 in 2015 to 7.96 in 2019 (with 10 as the top score), dropping it further into the "flawed democracy" from the "full democracy" category. The U.S. now ranks 25th of 167 countries rated. American diplomats might be shocked to learn that the Economist team now grades U.S. democracy lower than Mauritius, Chile, and Uruguay according to its measures of features such as the electoral process and pluralism, and the functioning of government.

The Humbling of American Advocacy for Democracy

Andrew Preston, a professor of American history at the University of Cambridge, citing Woodrow Wilson promising to "teach the South American republics to elect good men," has written that America must get its own house in order before it can preach about democratic values. In my own thirty years of public diplomacy work, many of my foreign interlocutors, even in friendly counties like...

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