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France avoids disaster, but tremors of political instability remain

France

France dodged disaster in its presidential election – but it's beginning to look as though the political equilibrium that has dominated politics around the world for many years is in the process of coming apart.

Emmanuel Macron, a pro-European Union reformer and ally of the business community, defeated Marine Le Pen, standard-bearer of the far-right National Front, by nearly two-to-one.

But that sensible result came after the first round of French elections April 23 saw the near-collapse of the 50-year serial dominance of the left-wing Socialist Party and center-right Republican in favor of the National Front and a new centrist party, En Marche! (Onward!), created almost entirely by Macron.

It now looks as though France is becoming a multi-party country along untraditional lines, an outcome once unimagined by most political theorists. The old divisions – ‘Right’ (i.e. business) and ‘Left’ (i.e. workers and unions) – are being shaken up by pro- or anti-European Union views and even more deeply by the antagonism between social and economic winners (symbolized by Macron) and losers (led by the Le Pen family, Marine and her father before her.)

In England, the UKIP (United Kingdom Independence Party) kicked over the managing political elite – both Conservatives and Labour – by provoking a ferocious, factually challenged and yet successful campaign against the European Union.

Led by a hard-leftwinger, Labour is in the process of being chewed up by the Scottish National Party and will likely be marginalized and suffer a huge defeat in the June national election.

Like France, England looks as though it's moving into a three-party-plus-two politics: Conservatives, Labour, UKIP (or the residue of the Brexit movement) and the centrist Liberal Democrats and the Scottish Nationalists. England has always had a split personality about Europe: Never fully in, but never fully out. To a degree, attitudes about what we used to call the “Common Market” follow whether voters are “winner” in the economy (educated, adaptive and upwardly and globally mobile) or “losers”  (un-educated, and at risk of being displaced by both globalization and automation in the workplace.)

At the end of the day, the Donald Trump phenomenon in America will be understood as a somewhat similar, outside-the-system factor that helped reshuffle a “stable” (ossified, to some) right versus left political order, Republicans versus Democrats.

Similarly, time was when Republicans represented the main street business community while Democrats spoke for the working class and urban minorities.

That’s not as simple these days.

In linking immigration and globalization to the decade-long slide of the largely white working class, Trump-ism has forced a decoupling of economic right and left as the primary engine of American politics and helped the evolution of a four-party system, here from left to right: Liberal Democrats (Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren); Left-Center Democrats (Joe Biden, Barack Obama); Right Center (main street) Republicans; and Trump-ists (the more scary of whom are also called the alt-right.)

How come all of these changes are arising just now?

My guess is that the two key factors are the enormous rise of immigration across previously secure state boundaries and the disproportionate downward effect of global competition, automation and immigrant willingness to work for low wages.

This general pattern is less obvious in Michigan for a series of purely local reasons. One is race and ethnicity, with Detroit's population still around 80 percent African-American.

We should also note the disproportionate influence of West Michigan on state politics, in part the outcome of many millions of dollars contributed over the years to the Republican Party by wealthy families in the region.

Still, the overall pattern of political differences being very broadly defined by winners versus losers can be seen. Based on polling and focus group results, Trump voters are largely less educated, at greater risk of displacement by automation in the workplace and deeply threatened, they say, by the forces of globalization, immigration and a decline in American values.

Last fall’s Hillary Clinton voters, better educated, increasingly productive and mobile, and more easily able to adapt to changes in the world economy, make up the core of a party of economic and social winners.

Non-party or minor party voters tend to wish a plague on both their houses and place their priority on sheer survival.

When very long-standing social structures begin to come apart at the seams and begin the process of re-orientation, it's normal to expect heightened social stress and political conflict.

There’s no doubt whatsoever that's what we're seeing. And as I argued in last week's column, candidates who can articulate a plausible platform of bringing people together are likely to win.

As reader Robert Monroe commented last week, "While we are deeply divided, we are still a purple swing state. I believe the candidate who comes out with a deep and coherent vision of the meaning and future of work stands the best chance of united the voters. Both parties seem caught in the old paradigms and solutions.

“Technology will continue its destructive creation, and no one seems immune to the changes coming."

Let’s hope we are somehow luckier than we deserve.

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