At a time when there is a pressing need for the world’s leading democracies to demonstrate a shared sense of purpose, the dramatic collapse of the French government will only add to the perception that they are ill-equipped to confront future challenges.
The growing challenge of powerful autocratic regimes in Moscow and Beijing presents a new and significant threat to the pre-eminence in world affairs that leading democracies have enjoyed since the end of the Cold War.
Yet, rather than demonstrating the resolve required to maintain the established world order, recent political developments suggest that many democratic governments are too consumed by domestic events to present a unified front against the challenges that lie ahead.
In the US, Donald Trump’s impending return to the White House has raised concerns that Washington will become more isolationist, especially in terms of its dealings with its Western allies. There is even talk of Trump withdrawing the US from the NATO alliance—a move that could have profound implications for Europe’s ability to defend itself against future threats.
Inward shift
Trump’s return to the White House, moreover, comes at a time when Europe’s major powers are experiencing severe bouts of political instability themselves, meaning that their focus is more directed towards domestic issues than the broader challenge of European security.
The collapse of Germany’s coalition government last month means that, rather than concentrating its efforts on the Ukraine crisis, Berlin’s focus will now be on next year’s general election, with expectations that Germany’s far-right AfD party will make strong gains.