President Biden’s meeting with President Putin has brought
the issue of election interference back into the spotlight. Although this is a genuine issue, it is not
as serious or one-sided as the Democrats claim it is. Democrats are obsessed with it because they
need someone to blame for Hillary Clinton’s loss to Donald Trump in the 2016
election. They cannot accept that they
lost the election because they ran a bad campaign on issues that did not appeal
to the American people. The Democrats
failed to understand that there are millions of Americans who are very unhappy
with the policies pursued by Democrats.
To me, one of the main failures of the Democrats was their
policy on immigration. When I served as
a US vice consul in Sao Paulo, Brazil, I felt that one of my main duties in
issuing tourist or immigrant visas was to avoid giving visas to people who were
going to be a drain on the United States.
Under US law, the US was open to people who could support themselves and
make a contribution to the success of the country, but it was not open to
people who were going to become a “public charge”
by going on welfare after their arrival.
Immigrants also had to have a job or skill that would not displace an American
worker. Many of the people currently
being admitted to the US will be public charges, at least for several
years. Adults will have no jobs at
first. Unaccompanied children will have
no one to support them for years. They
are unskilled and the jobs they eventually get will probably not be very
productive. Many Americans support generous
immigration laws, but current Democratic policies ignore the existing laws and
just let people in. If the US wants more
generous immigration laws the Congress should pass them, and the administration
should enforce them. Currently there are
restrictive laws and no enforcement.
Trump recognized that the Democrats had alienated a large
part of the electorate by promoting free immigration. Economically, he wanted to reduce many restrictions
on American business, such as taxes and regulations. Hillary’s main appeal was to intellectuals on
the one hand, and to Hispanics and blacks on the other. She and the Democrats ignored the great
American middle, which ended up electing Trump.
Putin or his henchmen did not do anything that American
political players have not done. Dirty
tricks are part of electoral politics. So,
would it be okay if the Republicans did the same thing to the Democrats that
Putin did? What the Russians did may
have been somewhat illegal, but it was not egregious. It was sad that so many silly Americans were
influenced by it, but that’s the fault of the American education system, not
Putin. So, the main offence was
“foreign” interference. But Putin over
the years he has been in power has certainly seen what he would interpret as
American interference in Russian elections and in his other efforts to retain
power. We say we only want fair
elections, but Putin sees it as a direct attack on his leadership. He maintains power by undemocratic means, but
he does not share Americans’ attachment to free and fair elections. There have been very few free and fair
elections in the thousand years of Russia’s existence. We say we are spreading democracy; Putin says
we are interfering in his government. Should
the CIA inspire Russian citizens to rise up and assassinate Putin, and if not,
where do we draw the line on what is proper or improper in interfering in
Russian politics?
In an ideal world, Putin would mind his own business, but this
is not an ideal world. The US is not
perfect. Black and brown Americans shout
their condemnation of America from the housetops. Putin quoted American protesters in his
meeting with Biden. In theory, American
democracy is strong enough to withstand criticism from Putin and from domestic protesters. Let’s hope that it is.