History experts explain what Trumps new win means for Americas future

Two top historians compare todays political situation with key moments from Americas past. They discuss how founding fathers would view modern politics and what historical patterns tell us about whats ahead

November 8 2024 , 05:14 PM  •  740 views

History experts explain what Trumps new win means for Americas future

In a surprising turn-of-events‚ Donald Trump has won back the White-House about four years after his defeat. This win brings up many history-related questions; lets see what experts think

The first expert Julian Zelizer from Princeton thinks Bidens term might be just a break in-between. He points out that Trumps ideas didnt come from nowhere but grew from long-term changes in US politics. “The election looks similar to what happened in 84“ he notes comparing it to past political shifts

The founders might say ʼI told you soʼ about demagogues being the biggest danger to any republic

says Joanne Freeman from Yale

Both historians point out that Trump uses history in non-standard ways: he talks about tariffs (which were first made in late 1700s) and thinks about executive power differently than intended. His plans include:

  • More strict border rules
  • Going after political rivals
  • Changes in foreign policy
  • New economic ideas with tariffs

The experts say modern political division isnt new - the late 60s had similar deep splits in society. However todays situation is different because:
- People dont trust main institutions
- Social media makes things worse
- Only few states decide elections nowadays

Freeman thinks violence might still be an issue; even though history shows its not unusual in US politics. She points to times like 1850s when power shifts led to problems. Zelizer adds that small changes now have big effects because elections are so close - its different from past times when presidents won by large margins

The discussion ends with an interesting note about founding fathers views. Jefferson believed in keeping to basic rules even during hard times; while Adams warned against thinking past times were perfect