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Tim Marshall

ByTim Marshall, Tim Marshall

Analysis

Goodbye America First — and say hello again to multilateralism

Tim Marshall assesses how US president-elect Joe Biden's foreign policy will differ from President Trump's

November 12, 2020 09:48
Joe biden GettyImages-1284976368
4 min read

There’s personality and there’s policy - and just because Joe Biden’s personality is so different from Donald Trumps’, it doesn’t follow that all of his foreign policies will be. Some, notably Iran and climate change, will see Biden attempting to reverse Trump’s decisions. A few, such as the moving of the US Embassy to Jerusalem, he will quietly let lie. And others he will continue. What will be different in all cases, though, is tone - and tone matters.

So goodbye ‘America First’, welcome back ‘American Multilateralism’.

First, the changes, most of which dovetail with the return to multilateralism. The president-elect is on record as saying he will rejoin the Paris Climate Accord on “day one” of taking office. That is in his gift but his ability to meet a target of reducing US emissions to net zero by 2050 could be hampered by his own Democratic party. Some Senators will block measures they fear are unpopular in their own states. Still, Biden means business, he’s said, “we’re not just going to tinker around the edges. We’re going to make historic investments that will seize the opportunity, meet this moment in history.”

That’s music to the ears of Boris Johnson, who is hoping to welcome the new president to the major climate change conference he’s hosting in Glasgow next November. He, and most other western leaders, are also hoping that Biden can breathe renewed confidence into NATO after four bruising years in which Donald Trump first cast doubt on its future and was then, at best, lukewarm in his support. Joe Biden, like Mr Trump, will demand the Europeans spend more on defence but he’s unlikely to undermine the alliance.