Sanctioning Russia increases prices of energy, fertilizers and food. This becomes like pouring gasoline on the inflation fire. People hate it. Most of the people hate leaders who are doing this.
"The relatively weak approval ratings for President Biden and
his Group of 7 partners highlight the fragility of free societies facing deep
political divides.
They come from far corners of the globe, speak different languages,
span the ideological spectrum and range in age from 43 to 80. But one thing
President Biden and the other leaders of the Group of 7 meeting in Japan this
weekend have in common? They’re not all that popular at home.
For Mr. Biden and his counterparts from the world’s leading
industrial powers, it is an age of democratic discontent when electorates seem
perpetually dissatisfied with the presidents and prime ministers they have
chosen. Each leader is in hot water for different reasons, but their shared
struggles highlight the fragility of free societies in a time of deep political
and cultural divisions.
That has made this year’s summit meeting in Hiroshima,
Japan, something of a “lonely hearts club,” in the phrase of one specialist,
where unloved leaders can commiserate over their domestic troubles and trade
ideas for how to get back into the good graces of their voters. A few days away
from home to engage peers on the world stage can be a welcome relief for
battered leaders, a chance to strut and posture and play the role of statesman
shaping the forces of history.
But their troubles have a way of following them and can
limit their options and influence. Mr. Biden started his morning on the opening
day of the three-day meeting on Friday not with an elevated discussion of
affairs of state but with a half-hour phone call back to Washington to check on
negotiations with Republicans over the more prosaic yet profoundly
consequential issues of spending and debt. He ended the day by skipping out
about 90 minutes early from the leaders’ gala dinner on Miyajima island to take
another call from home on the spending talks.
“The upshot,” said Suzanne Maloney, director of the foreign
policy program at the Brookings Institution, “is an environment in which the
leaders of the world’s most powerful democracies have to engage with an ever
more challenging world, even as they’re on shaky ground at home. This can fuel
doubts among our allies and overconfidence among our adversaries, and leave us
all more vulnerable as a result.”
Survey data compiled by Morning Consult in recent days
indicated that the leaders of only four out of 22 major countries studied had
approval ratings above 50 percent: Narendra Modi of India, Alain Berset of
Switzerland, Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico and Anthony Albanese of
Australia. Mr. Modi, who is in Hiroshima as an observer, is the envy of the
town with a 78 percent approval score, though this is in a country where
religious divisions are exploited for political gain and the prime minister’s
top political opponent was kicked out of Parliament for defamation.
No G7 leader, by contrast, could muster the support of a
majority. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni of Italy, elected just last fall, fared
best with a 49 percent approval rating, according to Morning Consult, followed
by Mr. Biden with 42 percent, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada with 39
percent, Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany with 34 percent, Prime Minister
Rishi Sunak of Britain with 33 percent and Prime Minister Fumio Kishida of
Japan with 31 percent. President Emmanuel Macron of France trailed the pack
with a dismal 25 percent.
Mr. Kishida managed to do better with the approval rating of
his cabinet, which hit 52 percent in a recent poll. That was the first time it
surpassed 50 percent in eight months, fueling speculation that he may call a
snap election to take advantage while he’s ahead. But it was unclear whether
the new poll was the beginning of a period of more sustained support, or just
an aberration.
“My instinct is the low polling numbers are more a
reflection of growing polarization in a number of these societies,” said
Michael Abramowitz, president of Freedom House, a Washington-based organization
that encourages democracy around the world. “Biden could be paving the streets
with gold and half the country would disapprove. Obviously, democracies need to
do a better job, but there’s little evidence that authoritarians can do a
better job.”
The disenchantment toward the current leadership is proving
to be a test of the staying power of democracy at a time when it has come under
pressure. Mr. Abramowitz’s group, which tracks democracy nation by nation, has
found that freedom has retreated around the world 17 years in a row, amid
rollbacks in places like Hungary and Poland. While former President Donald J.
Trump has called for “termination” of the U.S. Constitution to return him to
power, Mr. Biden often says that he sees his mission as defending democracy.
Amid the general sourness, each leader is confronting
distinct problems. Mr. Macron, who won re-election just last year with 58.5
percent of the vote, saw his support plummet when he pushed through an increase
in the retirement age to 64 from 62, touching off violent street protests. A
poll released this month found that Mr. Macron would lose a rematch to Marine
Le Pen, the far-right leader he defeated last year.
Likewise, if elections were held now, recent surveys show
that Mr. Sunak’s Conservative Party would lose to the Labour Party in Britain,
Mr. Trudeau’s Liberal Party would lose to the Conservative Party in Canada, and
Mr. Scholz’s Social Democratic Party would lose to the Christian Democratic
Union in Germany.
Some political veterans attribute the weakness of the G7
leaders to economic anxiety following the Covid-19 pandemic. “There seems to be
a wave of dissatisfaction sweeping our democracies,” said Carl Bildt, a former
prime minister of Sweden. “I think the return of inflation, long gone, might
have something to do with this.”
Inflation has certainly sapped support for Mr. Biden, along
with the crisis at the southwestern border, fear of urban crime, anger over
government spending and concerns over the president’s age as he asks voters to
give him a second term keeping him in power until he is 86.
The best thing Mr. Biden has going for him politically at
the moment is the likelihood that he might face Mr. Trump again next year, a
rematch that his strategists assume would galvanize Democrats and independents
who are not enthusiastic about the president but are inexorably opposed to the
former president.
Even so, according to polls, it is not a given that the
president can beat his predecessor a second time, and Mr. Biden’s peers in
Japan are deeply worried about a Trump return to power, remembering him as a
disruptive, even dangerous, force.
This is not the first time the Group of 7 has gathered with
its leaders underwater politically at home. But John J. Kirton, director of the
G7 Research Group at the University of Toronto and a longtime student of the
bloc, said such fallow periods typically happen when the leaders’ home
countries are afflicted by severe recessions or stagflation, which is not the
case now.
“At such low-in-the-polls times, the G7 summit becomes the
ultimate lonely hearts club, when the leaders share their political pain, bond
with one another because of it, and discuss what is working in each country to
get it and perhaps them back on track,” Mr. Kirton said. “This is one way that
the summit serves as the committee to re-elect the existing leaders back home.”
But Mr. Abramowitz argued that the political troubles of the
G7 leaders should be taken as proof that democracy works. “Unlike authoritarian
leaders, if democratic leaders don’t get the job done, they’ll be voted out,”
he said. “Accountability is a strength of democracies, not a weakness.”"
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