What If Trump Won't Go?
Europe
Preparing for the Worst in Washington
Concern is
growing in the European Union that Donald Trump might refuse to recognize the
election results if he loses. Preparations are underway for the worst-case
scenario.
By Markus Becker, Christiane
Hoffmann und Peter Müller
16.10.2020, 18.37 Uhr
German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas with European counterparts
Foto:
Janine
Schmitz / photothek.net / imago images
A horror scenario is making the
rounds these days in both Berlin and Brussels: Should the outcome of the U.S.
presidential election on Nov. 3 be close, incumbent Donald Trump could declare
himself the winner when polls close, even if he is behind in the vote count. He
could prematurely and unlawfully claim the presidency.
What would happen then?
One could imagine a scenario in
which Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro rushes to congratulate the
"re-elected" U.S. president on election night, followed by Saudi
crown prince Mohammed bin Salman, North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un and maybe
even Russian President Vladimir Putin. Soon, though, the first congratulations
from Europe might find their way to the White House, from Hungarian Prime
Minister Viktor Orbán, for example, or his Polish counterpart Mateusz
Morawiecki.
Should a constitutional crisis in
fact develop in the United States following the election, there are widespread
concerns in Europe that the EU could once again be deeply divided.
DER SPIEGEL 43/2020
The article you are reading originally
appeared in German in issue 43/2020 (October 17, 2020) of DER SPIEGEL.
Presidential elections in the U.S.
are always tense times for foreign policy experts in European capitals. Foreign
Ministry staffers run through various scenarios for what the election result
might mean for their country and for the European Union as a whole. The
platforms of the two candidates are examined for commonalities and potential
pitfalls, for areas of convergence and places where discussion might be
fruitful. It is all quite routine.
Usually. This time, it's different.
It is about more than just the
normal shift in U.S. foreign policy that happens when somebody new moves into
the White House. It’s also about more than the risk that four more years of
Trump could fatally damage the trans-Atlantic relationship.
The upcoming U.S. election is unique
because in addition to the two possible outcomes, a third has also crept into
the discussion: What happens if Donald Trump simply refuses to leave the White
House even if he loses the election? Should that happen, the stability of
democracy in the United States would be put to the test. It could even call
into question the future of democracy as a form of government.
Behind-the-Scenes Planning
How can Europe prepare itself for
such a scenario? Officials in Berlin and Brussels are wary of speculating
publicly. They don't, after all, want to give Trump even more ammunition should
he emerge victorious on Nov. 3.
But in background discussions,
politicians and diplomats have made it clear that they see such a third
scenario as a very real possibility.
Some politicians have even been open
about their concerns. "I am aware of the danger that, should the results
of the election be close, Trump could declare victory prematurely and the U.S.
could find itself in a constitutional crisis," says Peter Beyer, a
parliamentarian with Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU) and
the German government's trans-Atlantic coordinator. Everybody must consider
such a scenario, he says: "Years ago, such a thing was inconceivable."
In Brussels, a senior EU diplomat
recently sent a confidential report -- which DER SPIEGEL has seen -- from
Washington, in which he warned that such a scenario cannot be discounted. The
report notes that the U.S. is at risk of stumbling into such a crisis, which
could last for several months and have significant negative consequences for
the rest of the world.
Trump campaign event in Florida
Foto: Jonathan
Ernst / REUTERS
A senior official in Germany's
Foreign Ministry is a bit more circumspect in his formulation: "It cannot
be excluded that, if the results are close, the situation might be uncertain
immediately afterwards, as was the case in 2000, for example." That year, a
lack of clarity about who had won the election led to a recount. The Supreme
Court then stopped this process in Florida, handing the election to George W.
Bush.
Still, as one European commissioner
pointed out in a background interview, more than two months separate the
election in the U.S. and the inauguration of the winner on Jan. 20 - enough
time, the commissioner hopes, for the U.S. to clarify the results. Reinhard
Bütikofer, a Green Party lawmaker in the European Parliament, adds: "If
we're smart here in the EU, we'll keep our mouths shut and hope that U.S.
democracy is strong enough to solve the problem."
But not everybody wants to sit back
and wait. "We in Germany and Europe have to prepare," warns Beyer,
the trans-Atlantic coordinator. In Berlin, he says, too many people are content
to simply hope for the best. "But we can't afford the luxury of biding our
time."
Split in the EU?
Some diplomats are concerned that if
a constitutional crisis does develop in the U.S., the EU wouldn't even be able
to agree on a common position. "If the result of the U.S. election isn't
completely clear, European admirers of Donald Trump could rush to his side and
drive the EU apart," warns Franziska Brantner, the German Green Party's
leading parliamentarian on European affairs. "That is a real danger."
Brantner warns that, as the current
holder of the rotating presidency of the Council of the EU, Germany carries the
responsibility for "preventing the EU from drifting apart after the U.S.
election." She adds: "My impression is that Berlin isn't doing enough
to address this scenario, particularly when it comes to other EU
capitals."
There are, however, competing
interests within the EU. The majority of the bloc's 27 member states is hoping
for a victory for Democrat Joe Biden, who they hope will steer the U.S. back to
its traditional multilateral approach as a reliable alliance partner. But
countries like Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic prefer a Trump victory.
Thomas Kleine-Brockhoff, deputy head
of the German Marshall Fund and leader of the think tank's representation in
Berlin, sees three European camps. "That of the French, who want strategic
autonomy, that of the Eastern Europeans, who engage in strategic embrace, and
that of the Germans, whose commitment to strategic patience sometimes leads to
strategic inertia."
France is convinced that, because of
structural changes in the world, the relationship between Europe and the U.S.
is changing so fundamentally that the election result will not have a decisive
influence. Leaders in Poland are hoping for Trump's re-election, but they could
also live with Biden, who hasn't been shy about reiterating his critical
approach to Russia.
"The approaching U.S. election
isn’t as important for any other European government as it is for the German
government," says Kleine-Brockhoff. "Germany believes that the world
order is at stake in this election."
Push to Send Election Observers
It seems likely that the EU
heavyweights will initially remain silent, should the results in the U.S. be
unclear. But that would become more difficult if Trump were to ignore a clear
Biden victory. Would the EU then dare to declare Trump's presence in the White
House illegitimate, as it did most recently following Alexander Lukashenko's
claim to power in Belarus? "If it is blatant, the EU would have to quickly
take a position," says Elmar Brok, a former long-time European Parliament
member with the CDU. "It couldn't act differently than it does in other
instances."
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán in
Brussels
Foto: Thierry
Monasse / Polaris / laif
It is seen as a virtual certainty
that the European Parliament would pass a sharply worded resolution should
Trump attempt to illegally cling to power. But that's not enough for Martin
Schirdewan, floor leader for the Left Party parliamentary group. If the EU
wants to be a leading defender of democracy, that ambition has to apply to the
U.S. just as it does to places like Belarus, he says.
As such, Schirdewan is calling for
the EU to send election observers to the U.S., just as the bloc most recently
did for the vote in Nigeria. "The EU must push the U.S. government and
also state governments to allow neutral EU election observers," Schirdewan
wrote in a letter sent to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen
and European Parliament President David Sassoli.
"There are many indications
that Trump will try to manipulate the election results or won't recognize a
loss," the Left Party politician continues. "If the EU is serious
about its appeals for democracy and multilateralism, then the only choice it
has is to send election observers." Such a thing, though, would only be
possible if they were invited by the U.S., which is extremely unlikely.
"Far Too Fixated" on U.S.
Election
The U.S. election has also begun to
affect political planning in the EU. One example is the trans-Atlantic dialogue
on China, which the EU foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, proposed in June
following a video conference with EU foreign ministers and U.S. Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo. Although both Borrell and Pompeo would like to launch the
talks, the project has gone nowhere.
With the election looming, it
doesn't seem like there will be anything more than a telephone call between the
two on the issue. Many EU member states, including Germany, are opposed to
launching a project with the Trump administration so close to Election Day,
particularly given the danger that it could provide Trump with last-minute
ammunition to declare himself a multilateralist who is valued as a partner
across the globe.
The EU is also holding back on trade
policy to avoid making any move that could help Trump. On Tuesday, for example,
the World Trade Organization (WTO) granted the EU permission to introduce
punitive tariffs on almost $4 billion worth of U.S. goods per year. The ruling
came after Washington imposed such tariffs on EU imports in response to
Brussels subsidies for Airbus. Now, the EU is allowed to respond in kind due to
U.S. government assistance provided to Boeing.
But some EU member states,
particularly Germany, are urging patience. They are concerned that Trump could
take advantage of such punitive tariffs in the final days of the campaign.
Diplomats say they want to avoid giving Trump such a gift at all costs.
The European Commission, which is
responsible for foreign trade issues, is also reserved. In all likelihood, say
Commission sources, Europe will refrain from levying sanctions ahead of the
U.S. election, particularly given that such a move could be interpreted as
political meddling. The hope is that a solution can be negotiated after the
election instead of immediately confronting a possible Biden administration
with a trade conflict.
At the same time, there are those
who warn against expecting too much from the November vote. "We are far
too fixated on the U.S. election," says Sigmar Gabriel, head of the
trans-Atlantic think tank Atlantik-Brücke and former German foreign minister.
"It's as if Europe's fate depended on this election."
Europe's problems, Gabriel says, have
nothing to do with the U.S. "We'll continue to have those problems no
matter who is sitting in the White House."
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