Can the US Democrats beat Trump by becoming more like him? A Chinese academic weighs in

The US Democrats have pursued “selective Trumpification” since losing power in 2024, but their strategy of borrowing from the president’s agenda and mimicking his abrasive style risks undermining their branding as guardians of American institutions, according to a Chinese academic. Two years ago, th

South China Morning Post
75
1 min read
0 views
Can the US Democrats beat Trump by becoming more like him? A Chinese academic weighs in

The US Democrats have pursued “selective Trumpification” since losing power in 2024, but their strategy of borrowing from the president’s agenda and mimicking his abrasive style risks undermining their branding as guardians of American institutions, according to a Chinese academic.

Two years ago, the Democrats lost the presidency to Donald Trump, along with control of the Senate. That shut them out of power in Washington and left them struggling to regain momentum and political direction.

According to Gao Hailong, a professor at the University of Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), the party has sought to rebuild its platform by strategically adopting elements of the Republicans’ populist playbook while retaining its core liberal democratic values.

Democrats were increasingly borrowing their opponents’ style and tactics, including strongman-style governance and economic nationalism, Gao argued in the CASS-sponsored journal Contemporary American Review.

Gao argued that this recalibration had been part of a broader effort to respond to the rise of right-wing populism.

The shift marked a break from the Democrats’ response to the 2016 election, which he described as “surface-level policy corrections”.

Share this article

Related Articles

Fuelling a continent: how China’s engineering prowess built Africa’s biggest oil refinery
🇨🇳🇹🇼China vs Taiwan
South China Morning Post

Fuelling a continent: how China’s engineering prowess built Africa’s biggest oil refinery

As the energy shock unleashed by tensions in the Middle East rippled through Africa, a massive oil refinery in Nigeria’s biggest city of Lagos, owned by Africa’s wealthiest man, came to the rescue. Running at its full capacity of 650,000 barrels per day, the world’s biggest single-train refinery sup

há aproximadamente 4 horas2 min
Why does China portray India as an elephant? Decoding the politics of animal analogy
🇨🇳🇹🇼China vs Taiwan
South China Morning Post

Why does China portray India as an elephant? Decoding the politics of animal analogy

In December 2010, on the final day of his three-day India visit, Chinese premier Wen Jiabao offered a metaphorical vision for bilateral ties, suggesting that “the dragon and the elephant should tango”. The analogy – dragon for China, elephant for India – had already circulated in Western academic an

há aproximadamente 8 horas2 min
Faith, hope and ancestry: William Lai’s clan village in Beijing’s push for cross-strait ties
🇨🇳🇹🇼China vs Taiwan
South China Morning Post

Faith, hope and ancestry: William Lai’s clan village in Beijing’s push for cross-strait ties

As the closest mainland Chinese province to Taiwan, Fujian is a key site for Beijing’s messaging towards the island. In the second of a two-part series, Xinlu Liang looks at how the ancestral home village of William Lai Ching-te has become a focus for efforts to promote closer ties based on kinship

há aproximadamente 14 horas2 min
Beyond subsidies: what’s really driving China’s industrial climb
🇨🇳🇹🇼China vs Taiwan
South China Morning Post

Beyond subsidies: what’s really driving China’s industrial climb

Driven by intensifying competition in advanced manufacturing, the world is waking up to “China shock 2.0”. The first “shock”, associated with China’s accession to the World Trade Organization in 2001, focused on low-tech manufacturing. Of course, this latest “shock” isn’t framed as such by Chinese p

há aproximadamente 14 horas2 min