African policymakers are bracing themselves for the return of Donald Trump. Having swept the Republican primaries, polls consistently put the former US leader neck-and-neck with incumbent Joe Biden in a presidential rematch.
Yet, a Trump victory could end up guaranteeing climate disaster for Africa and the world, and Europe must take note.Of course, at the forefront of most African leaders’ minds is Trump’s undisguised racism, embodied in his expletive-filled rant denigrating African nations back in 2018.He had also gutted practically all climate funding for dedicated USAID programmes in Africa — programmes initiated under Barack Obama that were crucial to promoting climate resilience by arming African governments with tech, funds and support to fight climate change.The programme’s departure — although it has shown signs of a recent revival under Biden — marked years lost and contributed directly to the deepening humanitarian and environmental crisis that today impacts more than 110 million Africans.But what happens in Africa will not stay in Africa.
Climate change will intensify, not weaken, migration. For US patriots who want to see secure borders, they would do well to recognise that the only way to do so is to support African nations in dealing with climate change.That’s why Europeans should equally recognise that Trump’s comeback is a warning signal.
He represents a new and dangerous trans-Atlantic far-right movement exploiting mounting grievances due to economic challenges which are, ultimately, linked to our chronic dependence on fossil fuels — which has locked us into an inflationary economic crisis.Trumpist tactics are designed to deflect public attention from this reality, but they are being used across the EU