January 19, 2025
What Trump’s return means for Europe

Hundreds of millions of Americans will have a new president tomorrow. Depending on where you land on America’s increasingly hyper-partisan political spectrum, January 20 will either be a day of dread or joy, a return to the good old times or a step back into rough, unpredictable waters.
The same could be said for policymakers across the Atlantic Ocean. Most of Europe’s political heavyweights, the majority of whom are still content to live in the 1990s as if the geopolitical changes of the last two decades didn’t occur, are dreading Trump’s return.
It doesn’t take a doctorate in international relations to understand why. Europe, and in particular Germany, is one of Trump’s favorite punching bags and will remain so over the next four years. The man who once threatened to leave Nato if the Europeans didn’t stop penny-pinching on their own defense budgets is re-entering the White House with a belief system that has only been reinforced since he left it in January 2021: Europe is led by deadbeats who are perfectly happy taking advantage of the American taxpayer as much as they possibly can. Whether or not the description is accurate is largely immaterial; what matters is that Trump firmly believes it.
Author

Daniel
DePetris
Fellow
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