Tom Bacon Profile picture
Nov 6, 2024 22 tweets 4 min read Read on X
As a Brit, I've been watching the American election results with sorrow for my American friends. Some are comparing it to the Brexit vote here, imagining if we'd voted for Brexit twice. But here's the thing... in a sense, we did. And here are some lessons from it. 🧵
First, an explanation: The U.K. chose Brexit in a referendum in 2016. But Brexit did not become truly inevitable until 2019, when the country doubled down on this decision and gave Boris Johnson a massive 80+-seat parliamentary majority. /2
In context: our parliamentary system gives someone with an 80+-seat majority in parliament pretty much unlimited power. Their only real opposition comes from their own side. /3
But the Johnson government got almost nothing done. Why? Well, to be fair, partly it was due to unforeseen circumstances: a global pandemic. But it was also partly because of Johnson himself. /4
Johnson liked power in theory, but had no real interest in what to do with it other than serve his own interests. He ran Downing Street like an old Medieval court, where people vied for his patronage. /5
Policy agendas were pursued as long as one person was up, and then dropped as soon as they were down. Johnson's attention moved from one thing to another, lacking any real direction. /6
You can probably see the parallels here, and hopefully see why I'm drawing some of this out. Trump is Johnson multiplied by a factor of ten or more. Do NOT expect a coherent agenda. /7
I'm well aware of Project 2025 and the like. But here's the thing: Trump isn't interested in the Project 2025 agenda. He's interested in the Trump agenda. He doesn't want to be managed or controlled. /8
Did you see how the election changed tone over the last few weeks, when he got bored of being kept under control and in check. You really think he'll sign up to somebody else's agenda? Or at least... sign up to it for long? /9
Trump will run his White House like a Medieval court. He'll pursue an agenda for only so long, until he either loses focus... or somebody else catches his attention and he pursues their agenda instead. /10
Does this mean Trump's government will do no damage? No. But it does mean the damage it does will be scattershot, rather than the focused agenda seen in Project 2025. I don't know how far it'll get - I pray not far. /11
And there's a second factor to consider: events, dear boy, events. We have the misfortune of living in "interesting times." For Johnson, the unforeseen event was a global pandemic. What will Trump's events be? /12
And make no mistake: there WILL be events. There are people all over the world eager to take advantage of the opportunity they've been given now - a chance to cause yet more chaos. /13
Here in the UK, we saw what happens when a clown has turned government into a circus at a time when you need actual government. That, I'm afraid, is what America is about to experience too. /14
I don't know whether all this will give you relief or leave you even more stressed. But here's the thing to remember: Boris Johnson's government failed. It did so largely because of the character of the man in charge. /15
Likewise: My strong suspicion is that Donald Trump's government will fail. It will do so largely because of the character of the man in charge. /16
Don't expect to ever be able to say "I told you so" to Trump voters, incidentally. The goal isn't to be proved right; it's to win them over. "I told you so" causes people to dig in. So spend time listening and engaging. /17
Figure out how to WIN them, how to persuade them, how to play to their interests. Here in the U.K., Keir Starmer managed a remarkable feat in winning a strong majority through smart strategy. Do your own version. Engage. Persuade. Win. /18
In 2019, I was crushed. A British government with a parliamentary majority of 80+ should've been unassailable. The constitutional reforms the Tories were proposing should've cemented them in power for a decade more. /19
Likewise, right now, you feel crushed. Donald Trump and the Republican agenda seems unassailable. The constitutional reforms the Republicans are proposing have the potential to cement them in power for a long, long time. /20
But it's not over, because not all of it will happen. There will be a lot of damage, and it will take a very long time to repair the damage. Here, it'll probably take a decade or more. I'm afraid I suspect it'll take you longer still. /21
Don't give up. For now? My prayers are with America. I'm sorry for what you're about to go through, and I wish I could do something to help. Just know it's never too late - not in a democracy. /end

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More from @TomABacon

May 25, 2025
So, I'm going to wade into this one for a moment, because Trump's latest comments are very common, easy to understand... but also very, very wrong. Let me explain. 🧵
First, for the record: I'm a Geography graduate. My specialism is in the interaction between physical and human geography - which means energy and resource management was a major theme. /2
So let's start by asking a simple question: Why are energy prices so high in the UK? This is especially true given the energy mix, where - as you can see - gas is of diminishing importance. /3 The energy mix in the UK at time of posting.
Read 15 tweets
Apr 17, 2025
It occurs to me that there's something very clever, very cynical about the U.S. government's defense when it comes to Kilmar Abrego Garcia. Also something that is even more dangerous than it seems. 🧵
First: Note that the U.S. government has accepted that Garcia should not have been deported, that he was in fact deported due to an "administrative error." In truth, the whole debate should stop there; he shouldn't have been deported, end of. /2
Instead of accepting this, the U.S. government has turned the debate into an attack on "due process." Among other things, "due process" is - in this kind of case - how you determine whether a person should've been deported in the first place. /3
Read 7 tweets
Apr 3, 2025
If you're going to understand Donald Trump's economic and industrial policy, I think there's one word you have to get: Grievance. 🧵
Donald Trump has always been convinced he is a victim. Sure, he is a billionaire who became president of the United States, but he's convinced the game has always been rigged against him. /2
Grievance isn't just his character: it is his constituency, his electoral pitch. Because he also represents those who have grievances - both legitimate and imagined - against the way the world works. /3
Read 18 tweets
Feb 16, 2025
Forgive my adding to the chorus, but I can't resist a bit of analysis here. See, I think this is one of the most telling comments Trump has ever made - because it explains his whole ideology. 🧵 Image
First: Note the stakes. As far as Trump is concerned, the United States needs to be "saved." There is an existential crisis, one that is on the brink of destroying the country, and it needs a hero. /2
Secondly: Trump is himself the hero. He is the only salvation, and - crucially - everything he does is justified by the extreme circumstances he's dealing with. The law is irrelevant. Checks and balances are irrelevant. If he does something, it is right. /3
Read 10 tweets
Jan 28, 2025
As a Christian, one of the things I find hardest about this new incarnation of Twitter is that it seems to bring out the worst in us as Christians. A big reason for this is tied to the concept of "freedom of speech." 🧵
The problem, though, is that God's opinion on freedom of speech is very different to ours. Let me take you to the teachings of Jesus, specifically to Matthew 12. Here, Jesus declares that the words we speak flow from our hearts. /2 “Make a tree good and its fruit will be good, or make a tree bad and its fruit will be bad, for a tree is recognized by its fruit. You brood of vipers, how can you who are evil say anything good? For the mouth speaks what the heart is full of. A good man brings good things out of the good stored up in him, and an evil man brings evil things out of the evil stored up in him. But I tell you that everyone will have to give account on the day of judgment for every empty word they have spoken. For by your words you will be acquitted, and by your words you will be condemned.”
It's odd; we Christians say yes and amen to these verses, and yet I can't say how many times I've crossed paths with accounts that proclaim "Jesus is Lord" and yet throw out insults and slurs. /3
Read 23 tweets
Dec 15, 2024
We've recently passed the five-year anniversary of the 2019 General Election, in which Boris Johnson won a staggering 80+ seat majority in the Commons. I wanted to cast my mind back and explore the election's impact for a moment. 🧵
There were, fundamentally, two causes of Johnson's majority. The first was Boris Johnson's "Get Brexit Done," which I view simply as an appeal to "Make it all stop." Brexit had dominated British politics since 2016, and the country was fed up. /2
To my mind, Johnson's victory was - at last - a decisive vote for a specific model of Brexit. The 2019 GE was when Brexit became truly inevitable, and indeed when JOHNSON'S model of Brexit became inevitable. /3
Read 37 tweets

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