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What difference are tariffs going to make?

Part two of Rob Hoveman’s article about Trump’s tariffs.


20/04/2025

You can read part one of this article here.

There is a basic tension in the role that tariffs are supposed to play. On the one hand, Trump is claiming that a host of countries are placing unfair tariff and non-tariff blocks on American exports to those countries, giving them their trade surplus. This is somewhat inconsistent with the blanket 10% tariff imposed, whether or not the country has a trade surplus, and whether that trade surplus is the product of tariff barriers, or non-tariff ones. But this is where Trump’s claim that countries are willing to do a deal comes in. Some have claimed that the outcome of this deal-making process will end up being lower trade barriers worldwide, making the tariffs only temporary.

There are two more justification for tariffs, however, which suggest they will be more permanent. The first is that they are essential to encourage inward investment, and to discourage investment from leaving the U.S. This is bound up with propaganda about making America great again by restoring its manufacturing base, an idea that also appeals to former manufacturing areas, like the so-called Rust Belt. But it also has a strong national security angle. Tariffs are justified by claiming that the US cannot be dependent on raw materials or vital areas of manufacturing on potentially hostile countries — in particular China, which has been an obsession of Trump’s (and, indeed, of every U.S. administration since Obama).

On top of that, Trump wants tariffs to raise money to enable him to continue cutting taxes for the rich. He has claimed that tariffs are already bringing in two billion dollars a day. We can take this claim with a pinch of salt; in any case, the tax take from tariffs will decline if the tariffs do their job of choking off imports. But Trump certainly needs to increase his tax take from somewhere if he is to keep or extend the tax cuts for the rich. The federal deficit is currently running at $1.9 trillion a year, or some 6.4% of total annual gross domestic product (GDP). And that is adding to American national debt, now at a staggering $36 trillion, or 120% of GDP.

Tariffs are a tax on imports. The intention of a tariff is to raise the price of the good and reduce demand for it as a consequence. If it doesn’t raise the price and reduce demand, it isn’t doing its job except as a money-raiser for the government. In raising the price and reducing demand, tariffs are therefore both potentially inflationary, raising the general price level, a phenomenon that will be more likely the more widespread the tariffs are. And they are also potentially recessionary, or bad for economic growth — by reducing demand for the goods of the exporting country, but also for the country imposing the tariffs, as rising import price inflation spreads through the economy. In other words, Trump’s tariffs portend a combination of the two — “stagflation”, or even “slumpflation”.

It might be hoped that tariffs would encourage inward investment, and discourage outward investment, and by doing so would boost the domestic economy, which could then start producing goods to substitute for what are now much more expensive imports. The problem with this is that it takes time to relocate production. The current globalised supply lines have been in the making for the past 80 years, in particular over the past 40 years of neoliberalism. They cannot be undone overnight. Further, companies like Apple depend on a highly skilled workforce. Such skilled workers are abundant in China and increasingly in India but not in the United States.

Moreover, investors — i.e., the rich — are now wary of the uncertainty that has been injected into the economy, both by the tariffs themselves and by Trump’s volatility. The rich don’t like this kind of uncertainty, and will therefore be more likely to hold off ploughing funds into long-term projects. The wealthiest 10% now also account for 50% of consumer spending in the United States, up from 36% thirty years ago. This is indicative of the fact that the rich have gotten much richer over the past 30 years, whilst incomes for many in the U.S. have stagnated or declined. The rich feel much richer when the shares in which they have invested rise in value. This wealth effect encourages them to spend. But the opposite happens when share prices fall. The reverse wealth effect curtails their consumption spending — meaning, of course, less demand in the economy, and less economic growth.

Those tens of millions of far less well-off Americans — whose spending makes up the other 50% of consumer spending in the United States — now face huge price rises in the goods that they have been purchasing from China (if they’re able to obtain them at all), and a loss of confidence in economic prospects. Those who can afford to put money into a savings account for a future pension have also been spooked by the loss of value in their pension pots, which have been heavily invested in the stock market. Add to this the effects of the sacking of tens of thousands of government employees by Musk and his so-called Department of Government Efficiency, and the deportation of undocumented migrants who contribute to the US economy — which, if successful, would lead to massive economic contraction.

What irks Trump, and those amongst his advisors who see neoliberalism as having been a disaster, is the phenomenal Chinese growth over the past 25 years, since China’s admission to the World Trade Organisation. That economic growth now threatens US imperial hegemony. It is ironic that Communist China is now the most enthusiastic defender of the virtues of “free trade” — and Capitalist Trump the most opposed to it!

China is certainly going to take a hit from the swinging tariffs Trump has imposed, but it seems to hold perhaps more cards than Trump does. U.S. agriculture is dependent on exports to China, and Chinese tech and rare-earth minerals remain vital to the U.S. China can switch exports to other markets — it is now the biggest player in international trade, with the U.S. considerably smaller. U.S. exports account for only 14% of total Chinese exports. On the other hand, the United States has itself become more dependent upon international trade, which comprises 14% of the U.S. economy.

The likelihood of a recession in the United States has very substantially increased, as the investment bank Goldman Sachs confirms. In such circumstances, the state has two weapons to try to improve the economic situation. The first of these involves spending more and taxing less. This is a fiscal stimulus. The other involves the central bank lowering interest rates, thus reducing borrowing costs. This is a monetary stimulus.

There are two problems though in trying to mobilise these weapons to counter recession. The first is with a possible fiscal stimulus. The United States federal deficit stands at 6.4% of GDP and the total federal debt is 120% of GDP. This is twice the size of the fiscal deficit and national debt that was laid down as a European target in the EU Stability and Growth Pact, as long ago as 1997. It is also predicted to carry on rising, unless drastic action is taken. The danger is that if Trump decides to cut taxes and possibly increase spending, the financial markets may take fright again — bond prices may fall, and interest rates rise. That in itself may negate the effects of the fiscal stimulus. But it might also threaten a financial crash.

The safe haven status of US government bonds means a lower interest rate can still attract wealthy buyers. A loss of confidence in those bonds as a safe haven would almost certainly entail higher interest rates to the detriment of the US economy.Given the reaction of the bond markets to Trump’s Liberation Day tariffs, the Trump administration should be concerned that deciding to deliberately expand the fiscal deficit could lead to another bond rout — pushing up interest rates and exacerbating the recessionary forces.

That leaves the U.S. central bank — the Federal Reserve — as a potential source of monetary stimulus, through interest rate cuts. However, the Federal Reserve is committed to maintaining monetary stability. Jerome Powell, the chair of the Federal Reserve whom Trump appointed in his first term, is clearly currently very cautious about reducing interest rates, as he believes that the sheer scale of tariffs threatens a revival of inflation. Trump has now publicly demanded that interest rates be cut, and has said that Powell’s “termination” cannot come fast enough, exploring the possibility of sacking him. But any appearance that the Federal Reserve is coming under political control may yet again badly spook the financial markets. Central banks have generally acquired greater independence in the neoliberal era, precisely to reassure the markets that there is an unelected pro-banking authority at the heart of monetary policy.

The U.S. economy therefore seems caught between a rock and a hard place. There are both recessionary and inflationary pressures rising from Trump’s tariff fetish, and limited means with which the government or the Federal Reserve can avoid both recession and inflation.

The enormous U.S. fiscal deficit and accumulating national debt are themselves a symptom of a much wider debt problem in the world economy. The era of neoliberalism, with money free to chase profit wherever it could be obtained, and barriers to trade and the globalisation of production coming down, was supposed to produce higher levels of economic efficiency and growth. Debt was a crucial ingredient in promoting this globalisation, and can be benign, if growth is sufficient to ensure that debt obligations are met and repaid.

The problem was and is that growth has been inadequate to stop the burden of debt growing. There simply hasn’t been enough profit in the system, relative to investment, to generate the growth necessary to stabilise and manage the level of debt. Economic growth continued in the era of neoliberalism but only with ever increasing amounts of government, corporate and consumer debt. The overall level of debt across the world economy now stands at more than three times the total annual value of world production.

Not only has growth been too slow, but it has also been punctuated by serious financial crises — of which the worst so far was the Great Financial Crisis (GFC) of 2008, followed by the Covid crisis. After the GFC, central banks sought to introduce rules and regulations — for example on reserve requirements — to try to prevent another seizing up of the financial system, as after the collapse of Lehman Brothers. The regulated bank sector may be more secure as a result. But half of the money circulating in the financial markets is now handled by the so-called shadow banking sector, which lies outside the regulatory regime imposed upon registered banks.

Private equity companies, in particular, have been in the lead in growing the U.S. economy in the past few years, when it boasted significantly higher levels of growth than were being managed by the laggardly European Union. But that growth has been generated by a plethora of high-tech startups, and, it is suspected, loading companies with ultimately unsustainable debt, in order to make short-term profits for those private equity companies. As things stand, some 20% of companies in the United States have zombie status, barely able to cover their existing debts, but unable to take on new debt to expand their operations even if they wished to.

Trump will have been in office just 100 days as the 47th President of the United States on the 30th of April, the day before International Workers’ Day. In those hundred days, he has almost single-handedly delivered a series of profound shocks to an already fragile U.S. and world economy. Trump’s trade war with China is increasingly being posed as a military contest by the Trump administration. Tensions are likely to rise over access to rare earth minerals — for example in the Congo — and other areas such as Taiwan, which produces advanced semiconductor chip, with the possibility of trade war leading to real war.

We live in turbulent and dangerous times. Never has there been a greater need for a genuinely socialist alternative to this endemically crisis-ridden and exploitative capitalist world economy.

Trump, tariffs, trade wars and economic chaos

Part one: Has the United States been “ripped off”?


19/04/2025

It’s a topsy turvy world, or at least it is with Trump in the White House.

Wednesday 2nd April—a day designated by Donald Trump as “Liberation Day”, the day on which the United States would begin to get back its independence—he announced a basic 10% import tariff, a tax on all goods being imported into the United States. On top of that, additional tariffs were imposed on countries with a trade surplus with the US, calculated by a weird algorithm.

Paul Krugman, the Nobel prize-winning establishment economist, described Trump’s imposition of so-called “reciprocal tariffs” as the greatest shock to international trade in world history. The Economist, a right-wing British weekly magazine, admittedly with a long history of supporting “free trade”, dubbed liberation day “ruination day”. And billionaire, Trump-supporting hedge-fund trader Bill Ackman claimed that Trump’s tariffs portended an economic nuclear winter.

Over the next few days, stock markets in the U.S. and elsewhere across the world tanked. Big companies issue shares to raise money. The purchaser of a share is buying a part ownership of that company. A dividend will be paid on that share, usually annually, reflecting the profitability of the company. Shares can be traded in the secondary market, and if the company is doing well, or if there is general optimism about economic prospects, the price of the shares may rise. But shares will be sold, and share values tumble if the apparent prospects for that company (and the economy more generally) take a tumble. That’s what happened in the wake of the tariff announcement.

More than nine trillion dollars came off the value of companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), with the big seven tech companies some of the biggest losers. Trump’s new best friend Elon Musk saw the value of Tesla halved. But Trump was not for turning, contrary to the assumption of many Trump-watchers who had assumed he would change course if the stock markets appeared to be turning against him. If there’s no pain, there will be no gain, Trump opined, although he implied that the pain would be relatively short-lived.

However, a week later Trump blinked and suspended the additional tariffs on all countries except China for 90 days, since China had had the temerity to announce retaliatory tariffs. The reason was the rout in the bond market. Bonds are issued when money is lent to a company or government. They are certificates representing a debt rather than ownership. Typically, bonds have a maturation date when the debt represented by the bond is repaid. In the interim, typically, a certain rate of interest will be paid on the bond. This is why bonds are called a fixed income asset. 

But like shares, there is a secondary market in bonds. Bond prices can and do rise and fall in that secondary market, just as they can and do in the market for shares. If there is a rise in the price of bonds, the effective interest or yield being paid on the current value of the bond will be proportionately less, and if bond prices fall, then interest or yield will rise. The state of the bond market therefore has an effect on market interest rates more generally.

The U.S. bond market rout wasn’t supposed to happen. U.S. government bonds, currently worth some 36 trillion dollars, have been seen as a very safe asset. They have anchored the world’s financial system acting as safe collateral for loans across the world. When the U.S. and other stock markets are spooked, and there is a sell-off of shares, it would normally be expected that the money realised from those sales would be ploughed into U.S. government bonds, thus bringing interest rates down. This might even be seen as a self-correcting mechanism—if interest rates fall, lower borrowing costs should be a boost to a faltering economy.

However, instead of a flight to this traditional safe haven, it seems that there was a sell-off of bonds too, thus pushing up interest rates at the same time that the stock market was falling. There is some speculation as to why this happened. It seems that hedge funds found themselves over-borrowed, in the face of some panic that Trump’s tariffs would bring both inflation and recession. Overseas holders of bonds sold off some of their holdings. Japan is the biggest overseas U.S. bond holder. Alongside China, they hold about 25% of U.S. bonds. It is thought that Japanese bondholders, rather than Chinese, were the most likely to have sold bonds, both out of concern about the future value of those bonds, and potentially to pressure Trump to reverse course. China holds some $750 billion of U.S. bonds, which may be a problem for the U.S. further down the road if Trump persists with his desire to decouple from and isolate China.

If Trump could stomach a drop of more than 10% on the NYSE, he clearly couldn’t stomach that in combination with rising interest rates. So he partially reversed course, and suspended the additional reciprocal tariffs over the basic universal 10% tariff for 90 days.

In response, the stock market bounced back and the price of bonds recovered, but not fully—and both markets continue to show volatility. Worries remained that the U.S. economy—and much of the rest of the world with it—was headed for both higher inflation and economic stagnation, or worse—“stagflation”, as it was called back in the 1970s. And despite the 90-day suspension on the additional reciprocal tariffs produced by that arcane algorithm, there are still many tariffs in place, and more in the pipeline. There are punitive tariffs on Mexico for not doing enough to stop illegal migration across the Mexican/American border. Illegal migration across that border is of course born of desperation, given the economic circumstances in countries to the South—some of which are the direct result of U.S. policies. And if Trump were to succeed in expelling 11 million undocumented migrants, the U.S. economy is likely to shrink a staggering 7%—because (no surprises here surely) migrants work and produce and help grow the economy just as they do in Europe.

There are also punitive tariffs on Mexico and Canada for not doing enough to stop the flow of fentanyl constituents into the U.S., fuelling the opioid crisis. But that crisis is the product of the aggressive marketing of big U.S. pharmaceutical companies, not the people of either Mexico or Canada. There are also secondary tariffs on countries buying oil from Venezuela, because Trump and his far-right entourage don’t like the government of Venezuela. There are also 25% tariffs on steel, aluminium, cars and car parts. And there are the 145% tariffs on all exports coming from China. Calculations show that the effective overall U.S. tariff rate is a whopping 27%—even after the 90-day suspension.

Trump has since retreated further and fully exempted smartphones, computers and other personal electronics. Apple produces most of its smartphones in China, and was facing a devastating hit to its profits. But there are semiconductor tariffs coming down the track, which will once again raise the price of smartphones and computers. And, of course, there is no guarantee that higher reciprocal tariffs won’t be restored when the 90-day suspension lapses.

Rarely, if ever, have the actions of just one man had such a dramatic effect on financial markets, and economic sentiment more generally. What lies behind Trump’s decision to impose these unprecedented tariffs.

In Trump’s fantasy world, the United States has been ripped off by friend and foe alike for the past 50 years. His evidence for this alleged rip-off is that the United States has been running an enormous trade deficit in goods for many years. Of this, there is no doubt. The U.S. balance of payments current account deficit in 2024 was over $1.13 trillion, or 3.9% of the total annual value of goods and services produced in the United States (U.S. gross domestic product, or GDP).

But in what conceivable sense is this a rip-off? The idea that the United States, still the richest country in the world by a considerable measure, has been ripped off because it imports more goods than it exports, is ludicrous.

First, this entirely ignores the international trade in services (and particularly financial services) on which the U.S. runs a trade surplus. The EU is more or less in balance with the U.S. if payments for financial and other services are taken into account.

Secondly, insofar as the American manufacturing industry has been hollowed out, this is in large part because U.S.-based companies like Apple have located or relocated production to lower-cost countries, in order to make bigger profits for themselves. When they haven’t relocated to other countries, they have sometimes relocated (or used the threat of relocation) to non-trade union states, to overcome trade union resistance. It’s not that the United States that is being ripped off by other countries, it’s the workers in both the U.S. and lower-paid countries that are being ripped off, usually by U.S.-based companies.

Thirdly, according to conventional economic wisdom, if a country runs a systemic balance of payments deficit, then the rate of exchange between the currency of that country and the currencies of other countries with a trade surplus should decline. In other words, in the case of the dollar, it should have lost value relative to the yen and other currencies.

The devaluation of the dollar relative to other currencies (if it happens) makes imports to the U.S. more expensive and exports from the U.S. cheaper. Prior to the collapse of the fixed exchange-rate system in the early 1970s, currencies like the British pound sterling and the U.S. dollar could become overvalued. But currencies have floated freely against one another since the 1970s.

However, the dollar has an exceptional status in the world. It is the international reserve currency, with most of the world’s international trade priced in dollars. This has meant that the demand for—and therefore the price of—the dollar, relative to other currencies, has remained relatively high. Higher, in fact, than would be needed to adjust the balance of payments deficit. Some in the Trump administration add this overvaluation to their list of ills to rectify. There has even been talk of a Mar-a-Lago Accord to try and lower the value of the dollar.

But the reserve currency status of the dollar, in fact, gives the United States two huge advantages. First of all, it allows the United States to import vast amounts of goods simply by issuing paper. This, of course, has been increasingly to the benefit of the rich, who account for a very high proportion of consumer spending in the United States today. And it certainly refutes the idea that there has been a rip-off by other countries. If anything, they are the ones potentially being ripped off, if there is a significant devaluation of the dollars that have been used to pay for those exports to the United States.

Secondly, a strong dollar has in fact been a policy pursued by successive administrations. The strong dollar and its reserve currency status has enabled the United States to exercise imperialist power over other countries, by cutting them off from the international financial system. This politicisation of the use of the dollar has become increasingly popular with both Republican and Democrat presidents in recent years.

U.S. imperialism is yet another reason why the idea that they have been ripped off is just about the very opposite of the truth. U.S. imperialism hasn’t generally operated through the colonisation of other countries. It has operated instead through its economic, political and military dominance, over the course of which profits have been extracted—i.e. ripped off—from, in particular, poorer countries

The second part of this article will appear on theleftberlin.com tomorrow (Sunday, 20th April)

Latest Tourist Trap in the United States: ICE Detention Centers

Visitors held and detained at US borders due to increased anti-immigration enforcement overwhelming detention system


18/04/2025

In March, Rebecca Burke’s trip to the United States and Canada took a dark turn. The Welsh artist planned to travel in the northwest USA and Canada for less through Workaway, a site which pairs volunteers with organizations and private individuals offering lodging. When Burke arrived at the Canadian border with her tourism visa, officials determined that her volunteer activities constituted housing in exchange for labor. They sent her back to the US saying that she must apply for a working visa there. Back in the US, she was labelled an illegal alien and detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Burke had not been closely following US immigration politics before her trip, but since seeing the inside of a detention center, she is committed to sharing the stories of the many who are still detained. Human rights organizations have decried the mistreatment and living conditions of detainees since the inception of ICE in the 2000s. However, due to new detention and deportation enforcement goals set by the Trump administration, ICE has expanded their criteria for whom to detain. Instead of searching for and arresting individuals with criminal records or non-legal immigration status––which could require up to 6 officers to carry out––ICE is now detaining anyone without permanent US citizenship and asking questions later. Their methods include racially profiling potential immigrants on the street, denying visa renewals and immediately detaining the applicants, and questioning arriving travellers at airport customs. The result is a higher rate of detentions and packed detention centers.

This new process has consequences for many demographics, from asylum seekers to current green card and visa holders. It also seems to be affecting even those who have no intentions of staying: tourists. In the cases where reasons for detention were given, these reasons vary, although some emerging trends for why someone might be flagged as suspicious include political dissent, previous visa or legal problems (even those that have been resolved), crossing of the Mexican or Canadian border, and perceived intent to work on the wrong visa. In some cases the visitors were simply detained for 24 hours. Others, who were not so luckily, were imediately detained in ICE detention centers without opportunity to speak to a lawyer or buy a flight home

Further details on several prominent cases:

Case: Political dissent; time detained 24 hours. On March 9th, a french space researcher (who prefers to remain anonymous) arrived in Houston, Texas to attend a scientific conference. His personal phone and computer were searched and then confiscated at US customs. The scientist was critiqued for having messages “that convey hatred towards Trump and can be described as terrorism,” and even threatened with an FBI investigation, according to the l’Agence France-Presse (AFP). He was then banned from entering the United States and sent home the next day. The spokesperson for the US Department of Homeland Security denies that the researcher’s removal was related to political beliefs. According to her, the scientist had confidential information from Los Alamos National Laboratory on his device. The case has made international news and garnered strong critique from French government officials and educational insitutions. Several scientific institutions in France now recommend that researchers only travel to the US with devices that have been wiped of personal information.

Case: travel across Mexico border; time detained 16 days. Lucas Sielaff, a German tourist, was visiting his fiancée in California. The couple crossed the border to Mexico in order to treat their sick dog at a cheaper vet. Upon their return, a border guard became suspicious that Sielaff was intending to live illegally in the US despite him still being within the 30 days of his allowed stay. He was detained for almost 2 weeks in a detention cell with 128 other men before being allowed to buy a flight home.

Case: perceived intent to work; time detained 6 weeks. On January 15th, German tattoo artist Jessica Bröche was detained at the US-Mexico border because she mentioned that she would give her friend a tattoo upon arriving in California. The border guards interpreted this as intent to work on a tourist visa. Her friend maintains that it was meant to be an artistic exchange. Despite her case making international headlines she was not allowed to return to Germany until mid-March. Her detention included 8 days of solitary confinement.

These are only a few of the cases which made the news. Other stories of detentions and 24 hour holds include that of Fabian Schmidt, Celine Flad (Germany), Jasmine Mooney (Canada), and Rebecca Burke.

Both Burke and Mooney experienced unnanounced periods of waiting; stays in prison-style holding cells with more than 10 other detainees; questionable sanitation standards; and inadequate provisions for comfort, including lack of pillows and sheets, meager food, and constant fluorescent lighting. Neither was given the option to consult a lawyer, buy a flight, or receive answers as to how long they would stay in detainment.

Mooney emphasized at the end of her interview with the Guardian that she is against illegal immigration, but believes that the ICE detention system should be more fair to people who actually want to leave the country or to stay in the country lawfully. At the same time, Mooney points out the connection to the profit motives behind the detention centers. While ICE is a government agency, the detention centers used by ICE are in fact run by private companies, and receives government funding based on number of detainees. Thus, the companies lobby the government for harsher immigration laws. Not only does this reinforce a vicious cycle, but it would seem to also be overwhelming the system itself.

Even if ICE detention centers were not morally compromised by profit, is there a way that immigration detentions could be more “fair”––i.e., not affect legal immigrants and tourists? According to the ACLU, US citizens and permanent residents do not legally have to answer questions about religion or politics or provide passwords for personal devices in order to enter the country. However non-US citizens do not have this right. Thus, it is completely legal for ICE to detain anyone who is not a US citizen or permanent resident without giving a reason. In a system where any non-US citizen or permanent resident is potentially an illegal immigrant, illegal immigration could be immigration without the right papers, immigration with the wrong information on your phone, immigration with an unconventional itinerary, or even immigration while trans, nonbinary, or intersex.

Most of the tourists mentioned in this article are home now. Most were only detained a few weeks thanks to making national headlines in their home countries. The day after Burke’s father told her story on a news show in the UK, an ICE agent approached her to inform her that she was now being prioritized for being processed. She was released and sent home 4 days later. However, most detainees are not tourists and do not receive nationwide attention. Many could not afford a lawyer or do not qualify for the pro-bono lawyers who only represent asylum seekers. Some have been waiting for months or years in temporary holding facilities. The horrid conditions at ICE detention centers are old news in the US and around the world. But now, with renewed interest from the tourist cases, perhaps it will become more apparent that an injustice for some will sooner or later affect us all.

Further reading:

Irish citizen detained by Berliner Polizei outside Irish Embassy for speaking Irish

Statement by the Irish Bloc


17/04/2025

Irish Embassy Berlin, Jägerstraße 51, 10117 Berlin

On the morning of Wednesday the 16th of April, 2025, from 11:00 to 13:00, a group of protesters—primarily made up of Irish citizens living in Berlin—gathered outside the Embassy of Ireland, Berlin, to hold a registered protest.

The demonstration, titled ‘Ireland’s Complicit!’, was purposed to, among other things, demand the passing of the Occupied Territories Bill in Ireland and a stop to the use of Shannon Airport and Irish airspace for the transport of munitions to Israel for use in the genocide in Palestine, and to decry both the Irish state and the Embassy’s lack of support for the two Irish citizens being deported from Germany for their solidarity with Palestine.

The demonstration, attended by some 30 to 40 people, had been registered with the Berliner Polizei three days prior, as is standard practice for Berlin demonstrations. The organisers of the demonstration informed the Polizei that the demonstration would be held partially in Irish.

The Polizei have, over the past eighteen months of genocide, repeatedly banned the Arabic language, and other languages, from being spoken at demonstrations in Berlin, home to the largest Palestinian diaspora in Europe. Hence, it has become de facto necessary to confirm with Polizei which languages may be used at demonstrations. The Polizei instructed that a decision on the permissibility of the Irish language would be included within upcoming documentation.

On Tuesday the 15th of April, the demonstration’s official Auflage—a document describing the demonstration’s nature and any related restrictions—was issued to the person who registered the demonstration. No mention of the Irish language, or of other languages, was made—normally meaning Irish and other languages would be permitted.

On the day of the demonstration, at 10:45, just as the demonstration was about to begin, the Polizei verbally informed the demonstration organisers that the Irish language would be banned until the Polizei could find an interpreter of the language​​​​​​​.

Learning this, the demonstration organisers cancelled a planned Irish-language speech. The Polizei also later insisted that they needed to see the demonstration’s music playlist so to inspect their lyrics. It was verbally stated that Arabic music would not be allowed to be played. It was further stated that the lyrics of the songs would have to be inspected for references to bodies of water.

The demonstration began at 11:00. Throughout, casual and colloquial use of the Irish language was naturally present in the speech patterns of the attending Irish protesters, who nevertheless were still speaking in English. Members of the Polizei approached protesters on several occasions and informed the speakers that the Irish language was not allowed to be spoken during the demonstration.

At 12:00, with no interpreter having been found by the Polizei, the demonstration organisers requested written confirmation of the language ban, so that legal objections could be raised to the arbitrary ban. Written confirmation was denied to them. At 12:30, organisers spoke to the director of the unit present at the demonstration, who admitted that there was a failure in communication on the side of the Polizei. When organisers asked what they could have done differently, to avoid this from happening again, she replied that there was nothing they could have done differently. Regardless, the language ban was upheld.

Two of the protestors that had gathered signatures on a letter addressed to the Irish Ambassador to Germany, Maeve Collins, were initially denied entry to the Embassy by the Berliner Polizei. The letter detailed a list of demands to the Irish government, including the following:

  • Stop selling Israeli war bonds via the Central Bank of Ireland.
  • End dual-use military trade with Israel.
  • Stop the illegal use of Irish airspace and Shannon Airport as a waypoint for arms trafficking from the US and other allies of Israel, including Germany. This is in violation of EU laws, the Chicago Convention and Ireland’s own domestic laws.
  • Pass the Occupied Territories Bill immediately, in its full and original form.
  • Reject the IHRA definition of antisemitism, shamefully adopted by Ireland in January, in favour of the definition outlined in the Jerusalem Declaration on Anti-Semitism.
  • Stop the police brutality against protestors. Immediately conduct an investigation into An Garda Síochána for racialised, gendered and sexual abuse.
  • Intervene in Germany’s deportation of Irish citizens.

One of the Polizei agreed to ask the Embassy if they would send somebody outside to collect the letter. The Embassy refused.  

An organiser of the demonstration then made a phone call to the Embassy, and they, after some time, agreed that two protesters could enter and hand-deliver the letter. This prioritisation of the Berliner Polizei over the Irish Embassy’s own citizens is contrary to the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations. At 12:45, the two Irish citizens were escorted by two members of the Polizei to hand the letter to the receptionist of the Embassy.

Speeches, songs, and chants continued in English. Finally, at 13:00 just as the demonstration was ending, an Irish citizen leading English-language chants gave a coda with the phrases ‘Lámha as an Phalastín’ (Hands off Palestine) and ‘Saoirse don Phalastín’ (Freedom for Palestine).

At this, several police approached and arrested the individual. The individual was charged with “Verstoß Versammlungsgesetzwhich means “Violation of the assembly law”, in this case being the fact that the person spoke Irish.

This arrest was not an isolated or random incident. Later on in the afternoon, students occupied Humboldt University in protest of Germany’s increasing weaponisation of deportations, particularly against Palestinians and those who support Palestinian liberation, including the Berlin4. Some of the same members of the Polizei​​​​​​​ who were on duty at the protest at the​​​​​​​ Irish Embassy, and who had at the embassy taken a hands-off approach for once, could later be seen on video beating and brutalising the people standing outside the occupied lecture hall in support of those inside. Arabic was banned at this student protest.

The same afternoon, in Leipzig, the German Federal Administrative Court ruled against stopping deportations to Greece. This decision sets an extremely frightening precedent in Germany, which many expect will result in the mass deportation of asylum seekers and refugees. Deportations to Greece from Germany have been largely halted since 2011 due to inhumane living conditions there for deportees.

Last Friday, the Berlin administrative court granted interim relief to one of the Irish citizens that received a deportation order at the beginning of January. The other three people, another Irish citizen, a Polish citizen and a U.S. citizen, have not yet received the same word back, but they have received a court order which states that they can stay until a decision is made on the filed motion within the coming days or weeks.

The motion that the individuals filed was to be able to stay in Berlin for the duration of the appeal of their cases – which the Ministry for the Interior of Berlin originally wanted them to do from their respective home countries.

Le meas,

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Can You Simply Ban Fascism?

The Romanian election debacle shows why the judiciary cannot stop the rise of the far right


16/04/2025

In Europe and the US, courts have become the terrain where lost electoral battles are refought. Populist politicians and parties, more and more successful in the polls, find themselves on the defensive in lawsuits that aim to take them out of political and public life because of their misdeeds. Sometimes it works, as in the case of Marine Le Pen’s condemnation for misusing European funds. Sometimes it fails miserably, as in the case of Donald Trump, whose near absolute immunity was affirmed by the Supreme Court.

Either way, the issue in such cases is fairly straightforward: your local far-right lunatic is or is not guilty of breaking the law. Of course, there are political questions about the abuse of courts or the facile transformation of politicians into victims and martyrs, but the matter is ultimately one of legality. It gets thornier, however, when we turn to legal consequences based on political opinions. Can and should far-right politicians and parties be banned simply because they are far-right?

While Germans of all political shades fret over banning the Alternative for Germany (AfD), Romania has taken the lead and decided that yes—they can and they should. The Romanian Constitutional Court (CCR) annulled the December presidential elections won by a far-right dark horse candidate, causing an international commotion. Now that the initial winner, Călin Georgescu, has also been banned from running in the elections that will be re-run in May, we are witnessing a natural experiment that will answer a burning question: does banning a popular far-right politician work?

Judiciary militant democracy

To answer this question, we must first figure out what “working” means. The most grandiose interpretation is the protection of democracy. Georgescu, an ultranationalist, mystical fascist who ran an intransparent campaign allegedly financed by Russian money, is, undoubtedly, a threat to democracy. But is a court decision against him actually more democratic?

By engaging in “militant democracy,” the CCR chose to invalidate the votes of millions of Romanians who had already expressed their wish to have Georgescu as their president. That might indeed be justified if there was a clear case of fraud or external interference, but the decision was muddled at best. Allegations of external financing were vague, and the technical legality of the CCR taking ruling over the validity of the elections in the way it did is dubious. Nevertheless, this is still a question of facts and jurisprudence. What is more worrying is that the Court went beyond that and started judging politics as well.

The CCR had already started its political rulings in October 2024, when it banned Romanian MEP Diana Șoșoacă from running for president due to her anti-constitutional opinions. More specifically, according to the Court’s ruling, Șoșoacă’s “intentions to remove Romania from NATO and from the EU (RoExit)” were contrary to the letter and the spirit of the Constitution.

That we should not want Șoșoacă as president is made obvious by her reaction to the ban, in which she blamed Jews and Khazars. Nevertheless, the decision proved highly controversial, including among other politicians who vied for the presidency. Even if none of them would describe themselves as “pro-Russian,” certainly not to the explicit extent to which Șoșoacă has, the enshrinement of some constitutional issues as unquestionable struck many as a step too far.

It was, however, only the first step. Georgescu’s attempt to run again in the May elections was first refused by Romania’s Central Electoral Bureau (BEC), a decision then upheld by the CCR. Both rulings were justified based on the previous CCR decisions that annulled the elections and banned Șoșoacă. As the CCR had already established its capacity to ban candidates on political grounds, and as it had also already established Georgescu’s political misdeeds, the Court declared it obvious that he could not run for president (again).

The thicket of self-referential reasonings becomes difficult to follow at this point, but the CCR’s decision comes down to a simple line of thought. Georgescu, it had found in December, ran his campaign with the help of unnamed external (Russian) interferences – an allegation that is, to repeat, yet unproven. This shows that he does not respect constitutional democratic values and therefore does not fulfill the basic requirements for becoming Romanian President. This then allows BEC to disqualify him from participating in the 2025 elections due to the precedent set by the Șoșoacă decision.

This decision then is also, at best, muddled. The passing of the ball from the CCR to the BEC and back makes for an opaque institutional setting in which there is little accountability for momentous decisions. Perhaps even more worrying is the CCR’s overreach. As neither Georgescu nor Șoșoacă fell short of any of the formal requirements for the candidacy, the CCR took it upon itself to assess their political opinions, which they found to be contrary to Romania’s constitutional values even if they had not yet manifested in the form of any illegal act condemned by a court of law.

Now, it might make sense that candidates with fundamentally anti-democratic intentions, such as banning categories of citizens from voting, may not run. But the CCR went way beyond that, referring to the constitutional values of Romania’s orientation towards Europe and NATO and framing the elections’ stakes as a geopolitical choice. By using Russia as a foil and a scarecrow, the CCR virtually ruled that questioning the geopolitical status quo disqualifies you from being the country’s president. Democracy was strengthened by situating some issues outside of what can be legitimately debated and changed.

The far right is everywhere

Perhaps, however, the CCR’s ban worked in a different sense, and it successfully cut short the growth of the far right. It is true that the ban was followed by some infighting in the sovereigntist camp, infighting that still continues. It is also true that the reaction to Georgescu’s ban was violent, but ultimately minor, showing at least that the far-right’s electoral success cannot be transformed into an organized social basis. Not yet, at least.

But none of this means that the coming elections will not be won by someone with similar views. The leading sovereigntist politician before Georgescu’s meteoric apparition, George Simion, is still allowed to run and leading in all the polls. Even if Simion loses the election’s second round, the other choices are almost as abysmal. As we know from Germany, far-right success causes the center to imitate and follow, not to resist and move toward the left.

All other candidates who seem to stand a chance are newcomers who have not run in the annulled elections. That does not mean they are in any way breaths of fresh air in Romanian politics. Although the election is run on debates about who is and is not against the “system,” all candidates are deeply embedded in Romanian political and financial networks.

One of them is Victor Ponta, a former Prime Minister who resigned after a nightclub fire that ultimately killed 64 caused massive protests. Ponta chose to make his political comeback on the unsubtle platform: “Romania first.” His self-presentation as a sovereigntist alternative to Simion, however, suffered by his inexplicable recent admission that, as Prime Minister, he accepted the flooding of several Romanian villages on the Danube in order to save Belgrade, a deal that brought him honorary Serbian citizenship.

Another favorite is Crin Antonescu, a prominent politician in the early 2010s who has been lying low for the last 10 years. He made a comeback after Georgescu shook up the Romanian political scene and is the common candidate of the Social Democrats and the Liberals, the two largest parties of Romania, and also the biggest losers of the annulled elections. Both old and new, Antonescu stands a chance, but his win would certainly not be a loss for nationalists. His campaign banks on national identity and moral majorities, coming out strongly against LGBT rights and for traditional values, and explicitly taking Donald Trump as a positive model.

The last strong contender is Nicușor Dan, currently Mayor of Bucharest for the second consecutive term. Dan is the closest this race comes to a (liberal) left-wing candidate. He is one of the founders of the Save Romanian Union (USR), which originated in an anti-corruption activist group. But anti-corruption campaigns have never been critical of neoliberal capitalism in Romania, and both Dan and USR have since shed all traces of liberal progressivism they might have espoused.

Dan left USR when the party still stood for tolerance and individual rights because its members voted to boycott a referendum aimed at introducing a definition of marriage as between a man and a woman in the Romanian Constitution. This was just the highlight of a lifelong series of anti-LGBTQ declarations and measures, which he still embraces as a presidential candidate.

His controversial exit from the party did not stop him from seeking and accepting USR’s endorsement for the May election, in a coup against the party’s initial candidate, Elena Lasconi. Lasconi was the runner-up in the December elections but now barely registers on the polls, so it might make sense for USR to jump ship. But the BEC has already announced that the mid-campaign change is not legal, so the end result is simply more chaos. Together with his refusal to make known the identity of his most generous campaign donors, Dan’s politicking shows that even the most anti-system candidates are, at best, a conservative opportunist.

As one Romanian commentator wrote, the election is now just a “struggle between two forms of self-colonization.” Not only does the center cling onto a local variety of neoliberal Europeanism, but the far-right sovereigntists are part of a European, even global movement, with connections and models throughout the Western world. This intra-elite competition elides the needs of the working class, the needs of the poor in one of Europe’s most unequal countries. It tries to win their votes and loyalty only through scapegoating, conservatism, and crass nationalism. Rather than mitigating the rightward shift, the CCR’s ban was just a move within the political games that are accelerating it.

Who is an extremist?

But what if it had worked? What if Georgescu’s ban was the end of Romanian nationalism? Or what if, in another time and another place, another court banning another far-right candidate might actually stop their ascendancy?

Some positive examples of legal action against the far right do exist. It is, after all, an absolute good that someone doing a Nazi salute can go to prison in Germany. It is also an absolute good that the glorification of the most important Romanian interwar fascist movement, the Legion of the Archangel Michael, is similarly illegal. It would be even better if this was actually enforced. These concessions won from the state, however, are neither neutral instruments nor a political strategy.

Just look at what courts are doing right now. In the US, they are allowing the deportation of anti-genocide activists. In Germany, they might do the same. In states that are founded on capitalism and colonialism, courts and laws are bloody instruments for the protection of capitalist and colonialist interests.

Trying to redirect these instruments and make them work against the far right might be efficient if the conditions allow it – examples like US desegregation do exist. But the Romanian case is illustrative of why this strategy is not only inefficient but also self-defeating. Șoșoacă and Georgescu were banned from running for president because of their anti-EU, anti-NATO politics. The exact same criteria could be used to ban a radical socialist candidate.If the courts can decide that “extremist” political opinions threatening the status quo exclude one from the democratic process, then those decisions will inevitably also come against those who see the status quo as unequal, as unfair, as criminal. In the eyes of the law, the left and the right are both disruptive and illegitimate. Banning the far right can be a legislative victory. But if it is not accompanied by social and political victories, it only strengthens the force that will soon come down against the left.