Politics

Politics may be broken. But it’s only politics that can save us | Jonathan Freedland


No one would cast Robert Mueller as the lead in a romcom. And yet watching him deliver a statement on Wednesday regarding his inquiry into Donald Trump, Russia and obstruction of justice was to experience a sensation familiar to all romcom devotees.

It comes when the hero needs to reveal his true feelings but instead becomes tongue-tied. (Hugh Grant built a career on that moment.) You, the audience, are willing him to ditch the sub-clauses and double-negatives and just spit it out. You formulate the sentence in your head: it’s simple and straightforward. But he just can’t get the words out.

So it was with special counsel Mueller. The closest he came was when he declared that, “if we had had confidence that the president clearly did not commit a crime, we would have said so.” It was so nearly there, but not quite. He didn’t say the next logical sentence, which would have been: “But I could not exonerate him.” Still less did he add the words, “because the evidence suggests the president did, in fact, clearly commit several crimes”. Mueller didn’t get that far. He never reached: “I think I love you.”

That left a good part of the audience deflated. They were hoping for so much more. They longed for Mueller to say it out loud: “Trump is a crook who should be driven from office.” In fact, they’d been yearning for that moment of catharsis since the day Mueller was appointed. It was what got them through this abnormal, abhorrent presidency. They could bear the daily lies, the routine racism and misogyny, the corruption and the pettiness – witness the White House order to hide a warship named after John McCain during Trump’s recent visit to a naval base in Japan, lest the reminder of his late critic should anger him; they could bear all that, because they thought that Mueller would one day ride in on his charger and slay the dragon.

A similar fantasy animates the UK’s equivalent of the Trump presidency, our own populist upheaval of 2016: Brexit. The 8,300 people who have crowdfunded Marcus Ball’s private prosecution of Boris Johnson also dream of a courtroom catharsis. This week that prospect became a bit more real, as Johnson was summoned to appear in court to answer the accusation of misconduct in a public office when he repeatedly claimed Britain gives £350m a week to the EU during the referendum campaign.

Marcus Ball



‘The 8,300 people who have crowdfunded Marcus Ball’s private prosecution of Boris Johnson dream of a courtroom catharsis.’ Photograph: Kirsty O’Connor/PA

In both cases, and in others besides, the urge is for the law to succeed where politics has failed. In Britain and the US, there are many who believe that Trump and Johnson should pay for their conduct through ostracism, rejection and loss of power. Instead, they see Trump about to arrive in London for a state visit, the guest of the Queen, his appalling children bagging trophy shots of themselves with William, Kate and Harry (though, it seems, thanks to maternity leave, not Meghan), while Johnson is currently the favourite to succeed Theresa May as Britain’s prime minister. Far from paying for their deceits, they profit from them; they are rewarded not with shame and ignominy, but power.

The fury and frustration this engenders runs wide and deep. Powering it is anger at a political system that is not doing what it’s supposed to. Sometimes that sentiment comes from the left, as it does with the anti-Trump resistance who can read in the US constitution that a president guilty of “high crimes and misdemeanours” should face impeachment, and yet see that only around one in 10 members of the House of Representatives are publicly in favour of starting impeachment proceedings now. Sometimes it can come from the right, as it does, largely though not exclusively, over Brexit, expressed by those who say the country voted to leave the EU in 2016, voted again for parties who promised to leave in 2017, and yet are still waiting. And sometimes it can come from all sides, as it did this week in Israel, where the voters went to the polls in April thinking they were electing a government only to see Benjamin Netanyahu fail to assemble a coalition, thereby triggering a fresh vote in September.

In each case, the democratic system is failing to deliver on its promises. And there is the larger, background failure represented by decades of stagnant wages for most, while the super-rich soared into the financial stratosphere; the slow, faltering recovery since the crash of 2008; and the absence of punishment for those guilty of causing that crash. To watch the National Theatre’s absorbing production of The Lehman Trilogy is to be reminded that only one US banker – just one, at Credit Suisse – was jailed for his role in the financial crisis that nearly tanked the global economy. The number of bankers jailed in the UK? A big, round zero.

Donald Trump



‘Impeachment might help Trump’s 2020 campaign by rallying his base and allowing him to play the victim.’ Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

Politics finds itself paralysed, pressed between two conflicting sets of democratic obligations. On the one hand, politicians’ duty can seem simple: to implement the will of the people. That was the mesmerically clear message that propelled the Brexit party to first place in last week’s European elections, demanding MPs “just get on with it” and take Britain out of the EU as instructed in 2016.

But, on the other hand, in a liberal democracy elected representatives have other duties too, obligations that don’t always match the immediate public will. They are required to protect the norms and institutions that safeguard democracy itself, such as the rule of law, the independence of the judiciary and a free press. They are required to look beyond partisan self-interest and protect the national interest.

In the US, that should surely lead the House of Representatives to do its constitutional duty and, at the very least, open an impeachment investigation into Trump, with the 10 incidents of egregious obstruction of justice set out by Mueller as its starting point. Impeachment may not be politically advantageous for the Democrats, who control the House. Indeed, it would probably hinder their 2020 campaign, by shifting the focus away from jobs and healthcare, and help Trump’s, by rallying his base and allowing him to play the victim. Polling shows no majority demanding it. And yet, Mueller’s implicit message to Congress was clear: indicting Trump is not my job, it’s yours.

In Britain, MPs could justifiably say that they are already doing their duty on Brexit. Yes, they have failed to find the compromise that would “just get it done”, but that’s because they are tasked with turning an abstract idea – “Brexit” – into a concrete reality, and there is no specific form of the latter which commands a majority either in parliament or the country. It was MPs’ duty to expose that fact, even if it is making them hugely unpopular in the process.

Implementing the people’s will is rarely as simple as it sounds, especially when the people are divided down the middle, as Britons are on Brexit and as Americans are on impeachment. A referendum in a parliamentary system has paralysed politics in Britain; a rule-breaking, corrupt president loyally supported by his party has paralysed politics in the US.

There is no lawyer or judge who can get us out of this mess, however appealing that fantasy might be. We cannot escape the public square for the courtroom. In a democracy, there is only one jury that can settle these political battles – and that jury is ourselves.

Jonathan Freedland is a Guardian columnist





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