The United States scores
somewhat lower on freedom in 2020 than it did when Donald Trump took office in
2017 with his promise to make America great again, according to Freedom House.
Trump has undermined “democratic norms and standards within the United States,”
the report states, and in the process also
“undermine[d] the country’s ability to persuade other governments to defend
core human rights and freedoms . . . .”
Freedom House scores 195 countries and 15 territories around the world on political and civil liberties with a maximum score of 100. Under Trump, the United States has slipped from 90, a low A grade, to 86, a mid-range B. The report provides an uncomfortable refutation of American exceptionalism by listing 50 countries with higher grades, including virtually all of Western Europe and even some former Soviet bloc countries: the Czech Republic, Estonia, and Lithuania.
Freedom House scores 195 countries and 15 territories around the world on political and civil liberties with a maximum score of 100. Under Trump, the United States has slipped from 90, a low A grade, to 86, a mid-range B. The report provides an uncomfortable refutation of American exceptionalism by listing 50 countries with higher grades, including virtually all of Western Europe and even some former Soviet bloc countries: the Czech Republic, Estonia, and Lithuania.
The report cites as
domestic setbacks for U.S. democracy such Trumpian practices as “pressure on
electoral integrity, judicial independence, and safeguards against corruption,”
along with “fierce rhetorical attacks on the press, the rule of law, and other
pillars of democracy.” The impact of Trump’s attacks on the media was also
highlighted this week [April 16] in a report
by the Committee for Protection of Journalists that underscored the resulting
loss of public confidence in the media as a particular danger “in the midst of
a public health emergency.”
Overall, the Freedom House
report paints a grim picture of declines in freedom and democracy for the
fourteenth consecutive year. The number of countries with declining grades has
exceeded the number of countries with gains ever since 2006: most recently, 64
countries with declines in 2019 and 37 with gains. The report, titled
“Leaderless Struggle for Democracy,” blames that trend in part on the United
States’ retreat under Trump from its traditional role of leading the free world
by inspiring and supporting democracy worldwide.
The Trump administration
“has failed to exhibit consistent commitment to a foreign policy based on the
principles of democracy and human rights,” the report states bluntly. Trump has
been “outspoken in denouncing authoritarian abuses by U.S. adversaries,” such
as Venezuela and Iran, the report acknowledges. But he has “excused” violations
by “traditional security partners, such as Turkey and Egypt,” and “has also
given a pass to tyrannical leaders whom he hopes to woo diplomatically,”
including Russia’s Vladimir Putin and North Korea’s Kim Jong-un.
Trump’s cozy relationship
with autocrats was on display again last week [April 14] as he assured two of
the world’s major oil suppliers, Russia and Saudi Arabia, that the United
States would limit oil production in tandem with the two petrostates to help
maintain oil prices. In effect, as critics noted, U.S. consumers will be paying
higher prices for gasoline to help support two autocracies as well as the
Republican-oriented domestic oil and gas industry.
Pluralism and democracy are
“under assault,” Freedom House reports, not only from dictators but also from
popularly elected leaders, including the Hindu nationalist prime minister of
the world’s largest democracy, India’s Narendra Modi. The report links Trump
and Modi together as elected leaders “increasingly willing to break down
institutional safeguards and disregard the rights of critics and minorities as
they pursue their populist agendas.”
Overall, Freedom House
counts 83 countries as free along with 49 classified as partly free and 63
countries described as not free. With those classifications, Freedom House
calculates that 39 percent of the world’s 7.7 billion people live in freedom
and another 25 percent in partial freedom, with more than one-third of the
world’s population in “not free” countries or territories.
The decline before Trump’s
famous escalator ride to start his path to the White House, but his
authoritarian tendencies have made the decade-long anti-democratic pandemic
that much worse. To reverse the decline, the report lists several
recommendations for “established democracies.” Without singling out the United
States, the recommendations seem especially global democracy began long before
Trump rode down the Trump Tower applicable to Trump, even if he has less than a
year to try to counteract the ill effects of his administration’s policies so
far.
The report calls for
respecting human ri and democracy at home after making explicit the intuitive
assumption that attacks on democratic institutions, including the press, the
judiciary, and anticorruption agencies, “undermine faith in democracy around
the world.” Trump’s rhetorical attacks on the press and the judiciary have
stung with only limited impact, but his
dismissals of several inspectors general over the past few weeks pose a
real and present danger to the watchdog roles that Congress envisioned in
creating those offices.
The report also calls for
increased support for and attention to civic education about democratic
principles. Far from helping in that regard, Trump is himself a source of gross
misinformation, as in his claim for “total authority” over the states during
the public health emergency and his earlier claim of presidential power to do
“whatever I want to do as president.” Even some Trump apologists have spoken
out against these constitutional misstatements, but his political base may be
misled nevertheless.
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