Month: November 2020
Stevenson’s army, November 9
The head of GSA is refusing to release transition money — and government communications equipment — because she would have to conclude that Biden won the election.
Politico has the most extensive list of possible cabinet nominees.
A ballot counter tells how she did her job.
Historical note: this weekend marked the anniversary of the day in 1973 when both houses of Congress override Pres. Nixon’s veto of the War Powers Resolution.
My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I plan to republish here. To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).
The broader picture isn’t pretty
While the victory of Joe Biden in the presidential contest is cheering, the broader picture isn’t pretty. It’s not only that President Trump got about 70 million votes, despite four years of erratic, corrupt, racist, misogynist, and incompetent governance. The “down ballot” contests went badly for the Democrats.
They gained two seats in the Senate, but that is not enough to wrest control from the Republicans. There is a slim chance they could win control in two Georgia run-offs on January 5, but the hopes they had of an unequivocal outcome did not materialize. A Republican majority in the upper house will severely limit Biden’s political freedom, as a majority is needed in the Senate not only for legislation but also for appointment of judges and Administration officials. Biden will need all the skills he built up over more than four decades in Congress to get Republicans to cross the aisle while holding on to his Democratic supporters. He will not be able without a Senate majority to admit DC and Puerto Rico as states, which should be the first priority of a Democratic-controlled Senate.
The picture in the House is better but not great. There the Democrats held on to their majority but may have lost a handful of seats.
The big problem is not in the House of Representatives but in the state houses and governorships, which will be redrawing Congressional districts next year on the basis of this year’s fraught census. It was conducted under non-ideal conditions due to the epidemic, and Trump is still trying to skew the results in the Republican direction by not counting non-citizens (as the constitution requires). The Republican-controlled state legislatures are past masters at gerrymandering Congressional districts to enhance Republican representation both in their own bodies and in the Congress.
How could this happen? In short, the blue wave met a red wave. Turnout was up from around 60% in 2016 to over 66% in 2020. I have a college classmate who argues that the main motivating issue was the economy. I doubt that. I think it was race. The “white” majority in the United States has discovered what the demographers have long known: their numbers are in relative decline. They fear this decline will lead to a decline in political power. We’ll need to await more detailed parsing of the results to be certain, but my guess is that some people disgusted with Trump nevertheless wanted to reassert traditional American values, which include white control of the levers of power.
Rick Perlstein on NPR this morning told you everything you need to know about the history of the factions within the Republican party that wanted to hold on to power without commanding a majority:
The Republican party has become overwhelmingly white, despite the small drift of black males in his direction. Nor does Trump’s ability to attract Cuban American and Venezuelan American votes prove the contrary. I’ll bet that the overwhelming majority of those who voted for Trump regard themselves as white. This will continue until we get rid of the Electoral College, admit DC and Puerto Rico as states, and make same-day registration a reality throughout the land. Then Republicans will need to appeal more broadly across racial lines to gain a majority. That is the direction it appeared Lincoln’s party was prepared to take in the early 2000s. It is a shame that approach did not prevail.
For now, though, guys like me will have to be relieved that Biden has triumphed. It was really close. Biden will end up with something like 5 million more votes than Trump and possibly as many electoral votes as Trump got in 2016. But Trump’s 70 million will have their say in an unrepresentative Senate and a gerrymandered House.
PS: On the lame duck months until January 20, here is a first approximation:
Stevenson’s army, November 6
The news media are waiting to “call” the election in any of several states that would give Biden enough electoral votes for the presidency.
The Biden-Harris campaign has a transition website ready to launch.
Politico has a daily “transition playbook” for news.
Control of the Senate won’t be settled until Georgia votes on Jan. 5.
WSJ says Democratic efforts failed to win control of more state legislatures in advance of redistricting.
And it looks like civil war in Ethiopia.
My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I plan to republish here. To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).
Trump is the fraud, Biden will win
President Trump last night spewed falsehoods by claiming that the election was being stolen from him:
There is little true in this statement. The fraud he is claiming is fraudulent. The press has responded with appropriate opprobrium.
In the meanwhile, counting of absentee ballots in Georgia and Pennsylvania has put Joe Biden in the lead. There is no reason to believe those margins won’t increase, as Democrats voted absentee more than Republicans. Biden will be sworn in January 20.
The road between now and then still has some curves in it. Trump is filing multiple lawsuits in several states and hopes to get one or more of them to the Supreme Court. He may also ask for recounts in some states, which take time. But when the Electoral College meets in state capitals on December 14, the outcome in each of the 50 states should be clear. In some states, there is still a possibility of a few “faithless” electors who vote for someone other than the person who won in the state, but Biden will reach a majority in the Electoral College and Congress will certify him the winner. That much is beyond a reasonable doubt.
Unfortunately, it looks as if the Republicans will retain their majority in the Senate by a vote or two. This is important, because both higher-level Administration appointments and Federal judges require the “advice and consent” of the Senate. The Republicans will do everything they can to block Biden nominees they don’t like. This could slow the new Administration to a crawl and prevent Biden from correcting the mass of right-wing judges, including some grossly unqualified, confirmed during the Trump Administration. Two Georgia Senate seats may need to go to a runoff in January, because Georgia requires it if no candidate gets more than 50% of the vote. But the odds of the Democrats winning both of those are slim.
So the United States will continue with “divided” government, but divided this time in favor of the Democrats. The fate of the Republican party is unclear, but Trump’s desultory remarks last night suggest that he intends to leave the White House claiming that he lost to fraud and that he will pursue that line after he leaves office. He and his sons may try to continue to control the party. That would spell the end of Republicanism as a center-right party and condemn it to a future of xenophobia, racism, mendacity, and increasing irrelevance as demographic changes move the American majority in the other direction.
The Democrats have problems too. Its left backed Biden but isn’t wedded to him. The Republican Senate majority will force him to try to reach across the aisle and adopt a more moderate stance than many on the left want. If he can get even a couple of Republican Senators to vote with him, Biden would be greatly empowered. But a move to the center could incite a rebellion on the left. He’ll need all his vaunted Congressional experience to keep the Democrats united.
Biden is currently winning the popular vote by 4 million. But there are more than 69 million Americans who voted for Trump despite his incompetence and failures. They are an enormous challenge. Politics doesn’t stop after an election.
High hopes for Biden in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Ismet Fatih Čančar gave this interview, originally published in Politicki.ba:
Q: Why are US presidential elections important for Bosnia and Herzegovina?
With the fall of the Berlin Wall and the defeat of the Soviet Union, the global order was marked by American hegemony, which gained its greatest momentum during the 1990s. A good part of those nineties was marked by the issue of Bosnia and Herzegovina, first through aggression against our country, and then in the post-Dayton period. The United States has historically been involved in these processes. First, they stopped the war through the Dayton Peace Agreement. In the post-Dayton period, a new process of “state-building” began, which has not yet been completed.
The upcoming US presidential election is an opportunity to continue this process for several reasons. First due to the fact that the Democratic presidential candidate Joseph Biden is one of the last active politicians in the United States who has a personal connection and experience with Bosnia and Herzegovina. Secondly, as early as in 1993, Biden has correctly identified, in his speech on “Face the Nation,” war criminals in Bosnia, clearly warned about genocide, and then, as he is today, was a strong advocate of a more proactive American role in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Biden’s vision of Bosnia and Herzegovina was too ambitious and too radical for the Clinton administration. For our country, that vision is far-sighted and far-reaching. It is still the same vision that Biden wholeheartedly defended behind the speaker podium of the Senate. Back then he explained it as a national interest and a moral obligation of the United States in the post-Dayton framework. Biden reaffirmed that vision in his recently published program. The founding idea of this program is to building a civil state based on the experiences of a multicultural and multiethnic democratic society.
And that is why the presidential elections in the United States are an opportunity for a turning point in Bosnia and Herzegovina, where we have been witnessing a general deterioration of conditions, both political, economic and social, for some period now.
Q: Biden has announced his vision which he intends to pursue when it comes to Bosnia and Herzegovina. What is good and what is bad in that document?
Biden’s vision that has been published is substantially positive. In any case, it is good that such document has come to life. This is perhaps the first concrete signal in the last decade of bureaucratic autopilot by both the US and the EU that the very top of the US leadership is putting the issue of Bosnia and Herzegovina on the agenda, as well as the Balkans which have seen increased instability, growing appetite for redrawing borders, an increasing number of right-wing populist movements.
This document, of course, has its own political context. It is an expression of Biden’s own election campaign; promoting democracy as the most effective social order, but also restoring the credibility of American leadership in the world as a reliable partner that can constructively and successfully solve extremely complicated problems. The character of the Bosnian state – a sui generis state – is such that cosmetic changes cannot help this country, but which rather requires serious structural reforms, which first imply the reform of the Dayton Constitution, and then a strong step forward towards NATO and EU membership. Biden’s vision recognizes a more efficient approach and its engagement means including Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Atlantic Pact, protecting Bosnia from foreign malignant influences such as Russia and China, and preserving Bosnia and Herzegovina’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.
The document itself would have had a much stronger appeal if it happened in some normal circumstances, when no political career is being auctioned and in the midst of the presidential campaign. Hence, there is some doubt as to how high Bosnia and Herzegovina will be on the list of American politics even after the presidential election.
However, there is one dimension that is rarely talked about. Biden’s document testifies that in the American heterogeneous society, the Bosnian community has become visible, for whose interest are fighting both sides of the political spectrum, the Democrats and the Republicans. I appreciate that this is a positive phenomenon. These are our great national resources and opportunities that exist in interstate relations, which we do not know how to use. Or at least not yet.
Q: What if Trump wins?
No need to dramatize. We already have four years of experience of Trump’s mandate behind us. Nothing radical has happened in the region, although attempts have been made from all directions to push through a new, much more dangerous and insidious plan to redraw the borders and exchange territories between Kosovo and Serbia; a plan which would have very bad consequences for Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Under Trump’s mandate, US leadership in the world has weakened significantly. The image of democracy has been destroyed through the constant undermining of the basic principles of multilateralism, disregard for human rights, and the encouragement of autocrats and nationalist movements. In addition, the importance of the alliance and the historical partnership between the US and the EU has been weakened. The so-called “soft power” has been undermined and an unprecedented level of polarization is caused in all fields.
Regardless of the outcome, Bosnia and Herzegovina needs to continue its work to improve the security framework for all its citizens and peoples, through the joint work of all relevant institutions and international partners. It is certain that Bosnia and Herzegovina will have the support of the US administration in this process.
Q: All polling shows that Biden is the winner and the next resident of the White House. What preparatory work should Bosnia and Herzegovina do?
First of all, we should wait for the election results. All polling showed Hilary Clinton’s victory in 2016 and we received a surprise instead.
However, it is true that our country has a unique opportunity to capitalize on this moment that could come from the Biden administration. Pro-Bosnian patriotic forces should take the initiative, in terms of creating a program and a roadmap for the radical changes identified in Biden’s document.
One should not be deceived that Bosnia and Herzegovina will so easily and so quickly position itself within the priorities of American foreign policy. From our side, it is necessary to purposefully engage all our resources that are available in American academic and business circles. This also requires a sophisticated diplomatic way of involving our traditional friends and partners in the project. A mitigating circumstance for achieving these goals is that Biden was personally and heavily involved in the Bosnian case and that his political influence and image in the world were partly built on it.
All this together requires the creation of a diplomatic orchestra that could meet these demanding tasks.
It is important to note that the foundations already exist. Through the actions of the US Embassy so far (previous and current Ambassadors) we could sense the possible development of the political concept of reforms. A civil democratic state, modeled on the example of dozens of modern European states, is the only possible solution in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the Western Balkans. Bosnia and Herzegovina must uncompromisingly insist on such principles.
Q: Trump has two special envoys for the Balkans. Does Biden need (at least) one? Is the Embassy enough?
The fact is that the outcome and effectiveness of a program or initiative does not largely depend on how many actors are involved. Especially in this case, efficiency is based on commitment, determination, and strength of material, political and diplomatic support put into the project.
During his visits, Special Envoy Matthew Palmer has on several occasions expressed a clear position on the indivisibility of Bosnia and Herzegovina, US support for our country’s Euro-Atlantic path, and the continuation and development of the partnership between Bosnia and Herzegovina and the United States. The goal is to raise this relationship to a higher level.
I still think that the two envoys for the small Balkans are a little too much. If we go back to the history of the 1990s and compare it with the mission of Holbrooke and the Clinton administration, who managed to create the Dayton Peace Agreement in a relatively short time, but in much more difficult war conditions, we can conclude that quantity is not crucial in these processes.
In addition, the question of both the Peace Implementation Council and its role in all of this arises. We are witnesses that the mandate of the High Representative in Bosnia and Herzegovina has been derogated for a long time and that it is at a very low level. Perhaps it would be more economical, politically profitable for the US administration to focus on the function of the High Representative in Bosnia and Herzegovina instead of creating new initiatives. I am deeply convinced that resolving the Bosnian issue opens the way for the complete integration of the Balkans into the Western currents of the advanced democratic world.
Q: Given that Biden will work closely with the EU, how much will that prevent him from implementing this plan for Bosnia and Herzegovina?
It is clear that Biden has identified the EU as a necessary partner in this process, with a desire for the Western bloc to act in a coordinated manner. At the same time, I think that will be the biggest challenge for Biden. How to successfully bring partners together in a Europe that, although there has been increased rhetoric about European independence, suffers from even larger internal lines of division. There is also the United Kingdom, which, as the most loyal partner in the transatlantic alliance, is looking for its place in the post-Brexit space and I believe that they can play a very important role in key processes in Bosnia and Herzegovina together with the United States.
Under the Obama administration, transatlantic ties have been successful or very successful through a number of joint programs in Europe. With the arrival of Biden, the caliber of people who would return to leading foreign policy positions would be consistent with that alliance. The US and the EU need each other, and the current experience of the Trump administration is an exception. To Democrats, this is proof of the value of the alliance. Hence, we can expect that Biden will work on renewing that alliance, but also on restoring American leadership on the European continent. This means reaffirming NATO’s role as the most effective security umbrella in the world, a closer relationship with Brussels for a coordinated approach, a tougher stance towards Russia and further investment in democratic processes in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The EU-led “structural dialogue” in Bosnia has shown all the shortcomings in its actions. American leadership is therefore a necessary corrective factor.
In addition, it is important to point out that the main motivator of US cooperation with the EU is not Cold War nostalgia, but rather the understanding in Washington that – America alone – is a weak America, and that in a more competitive world we face, Europeans are still the most important American allies.
All this is a complex process. I appreciate that in the efforts to implement fundamental reforms and build lasting peace and prosperity in Bosnia and Herzegovina, partnership and close cooperation between the United States and the EU is desirable for the realization of this project.
Stevenson’s army, November 5
The blue wave hit a red seawall.
Democratic efforts and hopes to win down ballot races and state legislatures fell far short.
President Trump has been defeated but not humiliated.
President-elect Biden will enter office crippled by a Republican Senate.
The pollsters have failed us all.
Military Times notes the military ballots still to be counted.
Start thinking about the 2022 Senate contests.
My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I plan to republish here. To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).