TED Talks Daily - Tariffs, China and Trump’s first 100 days in office | Ian Bremmer
Episode Date: April 30, 2025It’s been an eventful first 100 days for the second Trump administration, which has featured tariff turmoil, shifting foreign policy and the upheaval of prior geopolitical relationships. In this dis...cussion, political scientist Ian Bremmer separates signal from noise in the biggest stories of the day, evaluating the global economy, US-China relations, the future of Ukraine and Europe, immigration and more. (This interview, hosted by TED’s Helen Walters, was recorded on April 29, 2025.) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You're listening to Ted Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity
every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hugh. April 29th, 2025, marked U.S. President Donald Trump's
100th day in office since he began his second term.
To reflect on the recent past and to look towards the future,
we're bringing you a special conversation from our series
Ted Explains the World.
Political scientist Ian Bremmer, president and founder
of Eurasia Group and GZERO Media,
sits down with Ted's head of media and curation,
Helen Walters, to discuss everything that's happened
since January 20th and to consider what's to come.
Hello everyone, welcome and thank you for joining. I am Helen Walters. I am head of
media and curation at TED. I am so happy to be here on April the 29th, 2025, the 100th
day of the Trump presidency. Now, the White House is touting this as the most productive
and consequential start to any presidency. Others have a different take with a series of new polls
indicating that the president's approval rating
has dropped precipitously.
Conflicting interpretations have varied 2025.
So who else but Ian Bremer to help us make sense of it all.
He's the founder and president of Eurasia Group.
Ian helps us to process signal from noise.
Ian, thank you so much for being here and hello. Helen, wonderful to be with you. All right,
so we're going to think of this as some form of evaluation of the first 100 days of this
administration and a look forward to what we should be expecting next. Now, we asked our
community to share their burning questions that they want you to make sense of and far and away the topic that they want to understand better is about the economy.
So Trump's so-called liberation day happened on April the 2nd.
The president described it as one of the most important days in American history.
What's your verdict?
What are we watching?
What should we be looking for?
Let's first go back to your introduction for one second.
When you said that Trump is saying that this is the most consequential first hundred days
of any president in modern history. Fair enough. Enormously consequential.
And his policies are by and large popular, but the implementation of those policies has been shambolic. And nowhere
is that more true than in the economy, where Trump was elected, expected to do better on the economy
than Kamala Harris. He was polling well on that issue consistently. The U.S. economy was performing
pretty well, but a lot of Americans didn't think it was going well for them.
And a big piece of that was free trade.
Didn't support free trade.
Democrats didn't, Republicans didn't,
because they saw cheap goods from all over the world,
but they also saw a hollowing out
of the middle and working class in the US.
And fair trade was Trump's willingness
to try to address that.
So wants to ensure that if the United States
is getting high tariffs from other countries,
that US is going to put equivalent tariffs
on those countries,
or the US is gonna use a stronger position economically
and in terms of power more broadly to get other countries
to capitulate to open their markets more to the United States.
That was the theory.
That has not been the implementation.
Hasn't been the implementation because they're picking fights with literally everyone, whether
the US is in trade surplus with those countries or running a trade deficit,
irrespective of the reason for the trade deficit. For many countries, it's because they're very poor
and they can't afford American goods, and Americans want to buy a lot of cheap commodities, for example,
from those countries. Also picking a massive fight with China and the Chinese have been willing to hit the Americans
back hard.
And of course, that's leading to very significant costs that are only beginning to be born by
the average American and by the global economy.
So as a consequence, Helen, we're 100 days in, we're only a few weeks in to post-liberation day, but the markets have
taken a hit and consumer confidence has taken an even bigger hit and Trump's approval ratings
have taken a big hit too.
I think it's fascinating to think about the rollout of the tariffs, which indeed seem
to be kind of arbitrary and a little strange, at least to a lay person
watching it.
We just saw that Jeff Bezos or Amazon are going to put a little tag on products on Amazon
to denote how much of the cost is coming from tariffs.
Trump is not in favor of this plan.
What should we be expecting with consumer goods as we move forward over the next 100
days?
Well, first, since it's breaking news when you and I are discussing it,
Amazon is not going to do that.
They were thinking about doing that.
And then Trump immediately got on the phone with Jeff Bezos,
who is not the Amazon CEO, but still has a lot of influence over there.
And I am sure I haven't gotten a read out of the call, but read him the riot act.
This is after Trump's spokeswoman had come out and said that this was considered a hostile
act, Amazon engaging in putting out what the tariffs would actually be in terms of consumer
costs. Because of course, Trump has been saying the tariffs aren actually be in terms of consumer costs, because of
course Trump has been saying the tariffs aren't a cost that's going to be borne by consumers.
It's going to be paid by the Chinese. It's going to be paid by other countries, and the
U.S. is going to get all that revenue. Well, that's not the way it actually works. And
Trump doesn't want anyone gainsaying him on that issue. So Amazon very quickly backed down. And if
they hadn't, I expect they would have seen the kind of behavior that Harvard and Columbia have seen
or that a lot of law firms have seen, which is Amazon gets a lot of business from the US government,
from the Trump administration and from the bureaucracy. And he would have said, okay,
no more of that. And that would have had a massive impact on Amazon's share. So that's the
Amazon story. More broadly, the story is that there are too many cooks, all of whom have different
ideas of what a tariff rollout should look like, but all of whom are loyal to the president and are going to do their damnedest to give him whatever he wants at the moment.
And so there was internal fighting of the best way to implement tariffs, and that went
on for a while.
You had sort of the Scott Besson, the Treasury Secretary saying should only be 19 countries with a defined tariff that's meant to
get to reciprocity. You had Peter Navarro saying you got to hit everyone and especially the Chinese
really hard. You had Howard Lutnick, the Secretary of Commerce in between. And Trump got sick of the
debate, not really a detail policy guy. And so ultimately, after some days of this,
said, I'm just gonna put tariffs on everyone.
Doesn't matter if we've been negotiating with them,
doesn't matter how close they are with us,
don't care about the surpluses,
everyone's getting a tariff, I want one formula,
that's what we're gonna do.
Navarro had that formula at the ready.
That was what was announced on Liberation Day.
And predictably
the markets and everyone else threw up all over that policy.
So given that the markets and everyone else threw up all over that policy,
what is the future for that then? How is Trump going to get himself out of this and actually towards a policy that does pay attention to the detail given that they do
matter. So there are a couple of different answers to that question Helen. One answer
is that he's going to blink and so you know you saw that there was almost immediately
almost immediately this 90-day suspension on a lot of these tariffs to give time to negotiate and also so that you didn't have even greater costs that were going to be imposed
on the American economy, not just other economies.
So part of it is Trump showing more flexibility and backing away from a more maximalist announcement
that he made on Liberation Day.
And let's face it, he declared essentially a national holiday around these tariffs.
So you knew they were going to be big and historic, but turned out that they were a
little too big and historic for him to swallow.
That's one thing.
Second thing is he's gonna actually cut deals.
There will be a number of countries
that are very, very concerned about having a fight
with a much larger US economy.
I've spoken, for example,
with high level Japanese officials,
and they worry that their government will fall if they don't get a deal quickly with the Trump administration.
The prime minister is not popular.
The July snapback after the 90 days of high tariffs against Japan is right before their upper house election.
So they urgently want to do a bunch of stuff that will make Trump happy, like buy more American LNG and promise more investments
into the United States in semiconductors and automotive and other sectors. They
even want to find a way to get their currency, the Japanese yen, down to about
120 from the present 140 plus. So they want to get to a deal and there
are other countries like that, a bunch of really small countries
across the global south, India, the United Kingdom, there are a lot of countries like
that. And even though you won't have fully fledged deals that can be inked, there can
be framework agreements with letters that are submitted to the Trump administration, saying, here is what we're prepared to do.
Trump will say, great, we'll work this out.
And that will calm the markets.
That's the second thing he can do.
Remember, first was capitulate a bit.
Second is cut a bunch of deals.
But then there's the third,
which is that even with number one and two,
we are still going to be in by far
the highest tariff environment that we have experienced
since the 30s, without a deal with the European Union,
certainly without a deal with the Chinese,
where right now the sides aren't even talking to each other
irrespective of what Trump is saying.
And also without a deal with Mexico and Canada, which requires a renegotiation of the US-Mexico-Canada
agreement, the trade agreement that came after NAFTA from the first Trump administration,
which is complex and will take time to do.
And what that means, and the China piece is particularly important, I'm sure we'll get into it, but broadly what that means is massive costs,
like much bigger than the shock that came from the pandemic
that will lead to higher inflation for American consumers,
will lead to lots of bankruptcies
and massive pressure on corporates.
And that is going to play out over time because you've already imposed a bunch of those costs.
You're already seeing the shipments get hit and the goods not being in the containers.
And it takes a while for that to flow through into the global economy.
But as it does,
the impact is gonna be massive.
And here's the biggest problem,
is that back in the first Trump administration,
when Trump made mistakes,
he had a lot of people around him
that weren't loyal to him.
They were loyal to the Republican Party
and they were loyal to the country.
And they would also tell him when they thought he was making
significant mistakes.
That is not true in this administration.
I don't believe you have cabinet officials that are loyal to the country
before they're loyal to Trump.
I think they're loyal to Trump first and they are unwilling to tell Trump
when they disagree.
We saw that play out with Signalgate,
this extraordinary look into an actual real-time
conversation between Trump's top national security advisors
on matters of war and peace, on whether or not
there was going to be a military,
a series of military strikes against the Houthis in Yemen.
And you saw the vice president,
the most important, most powerful person on that call,
on that text chain saying,
I don't think Trump understands what he's approving here.
This is a bad idea.
Maybe we should tell him and getting shut down.
And no one ending up telling Trump and going ahead, idea, maybe we should tell him and getting shut down.
And no one ending up telling Trump and going ahead, they went ahead and they decided to
go to proceed with those strikes.
Point is that same thing is happening on trade.
So even as the economy takes a hit, even as the markets take a hit, even as his numbers
go down, he is going to have people, particularly Howard Lutnick,
who is sort of the ultimate hype guy around Trump
on the economy, but he's gonna have a bunch of advisors
around him that are saying, sir, you are so brilliant.
You are doing such a magnificent job.
Don't listen to the haters.
Don't pay attention to what you're seeing
in the New York Times and the failing fake news.
You're brilliant.
And that plus Trump's own far greater confidence
in himself this time around compared to the first term
means that the impact, the negative impact
of these trade policies is going to go a lot further
before Trump is willing to make a significant change
in what he is convinced is an utterly brilliant policy.
So you're quite right. I do want to talk a bit more about China. You allude to the fact that
Trump seems to think that the conversations are ongoing
with the Chinese officials.
I want to quote yesterday the Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi,
who was speaking to a group of foreign ministers of BRICS countries,
and he warned them with some pretty severe rhetoric or severe language.
He said, and I quote,
If one chooses to remain silent, compromise or cower,
it will only make the bully want to push his luck more.
So America is obviously playing the role
of the bully in this moment.
What should we make of what is happening with China?
Obviously we're hearing one thing,
but you know what is happening behind the scenes.
Tell us what we should be paying attention to,
tell us what's going on and tell us what's to come.
So there was just a large Chinese delegation in Washington
for the IMF World Bank spring meetings.
They did not meet bilaterally with the Americans,
but they were in a number of multilateral meetings
that the Americans attended, and there were discussions
that included both.
So it's not as if there's overt hostility
that prevents them from engaging in a way that,
we've seen over the Biden administration
between the Americans and Russians, for example,
that's not where we are right now.
But there isn't any ongoing negotiations on trade.
And the Chinese position as of right now
is that the tariffs are a joke.
They amount to a full embargo on goods
between the US and China.
And that Xi Jinping is not prepared
to authorize negotiations unless and until
the Trump administration unilaterally takes those
tariffs down.
Now what that number means doesn't mean the whole 145 percent, maybe they need to get
to 50 or 60 or whatever, but something that feels like a real start to negotiations.
And that's going to be a tough thing for Trump to do in the near term.
Furthermore, the Chinese expect that they are going to have a hit of about 2.5% to their GDP this year
because of the lack of export trade with the Americans. They expect that lots of their own firms will
go bankrupt, that they're going to have to put massive stimulus in place, targeted stimulus
to keep those companies afloat and also to hit 4% GDP growth at a minimum, which is a huge stretch from what their present numbers
are looking like.
What that means is that the Chinese are completely convinced that they can take more pain politically
than the Americans can.
They can outlast the Americans, kind of the way the Russians feel about the war in Ukraine. And as a consequence, they don't need to blink. They're angry at the
Americans. They're surprised at the Americans. And if the Americans aren't going to change
their position, their view is that long-term China will benefit because it's the United States which is unwinding its leadership role
in multilateral institutions and architecture,
whether it's broad free trade
or whether it's the World Health Organization
or the Paris Climate Accord,
all of which the Chinese presently stand
as the second most powerful country.
So if the Americans leave,
they become the most powerful country. So if the Americans leave, they become the most powerful country,
helping to set the standards and rules
and appoint the people that are in key positions.
Ditto when the Americans pull out of USAID
and they contract the Peace Corps
and they're no longer interested in the global South,
while the Chinese of course,
are already the dominant trade partner in the global south, while the Chinese of course are already
the dominant trade partner in the global south.
So they have a greater advantage there.
If the Americans alienate their top allies, the Europeans,
they alienate their allies, the Japanese, the South Koreans,
those countries will not decouple from China.
They will de-risk, but they will also look to hedge. So longer term,
the Chinese see themselves as the principal beneficiary of Trump's unilateralism and his
desire to return to the rule of the jungle. The Chinese think they will end up in a stronger position.
So I'm curious if you agree, because the way that you describe it there, it sounds very plausible,
it sounds very convincing. What is in it for the United States if they are backing away from all of this
lengthy, years-long diplomacy that has been executed over the years? Like, what do they get from that?
Are they not, in fact, just handing a giant gift to the Chinese? Well, I mean, in the near term,
the Chinese are going to experience an awful lot of pain.
And the Americans are making a bet that the US
with a larger economy and with the global reserve currency
and with a lot of really dominant global firms,
including banks, so the US really controls
the global financial architecture, that that's going to force other countries to align with
the Americans, not the Chinese.
The Chinese get the global south, but the global south is underperforming.
They've got a lot poorer governance.
They have more internal radicalism. They're facing a real uphill struggle because of climate change, where the economic impact
is being felt most on the poorest countries.
So if China ends up with a dominant position with all of these really poor countries, that's
going to be a weight around China's feet as opposed to an advantage for them.
That's what you hear from the Trump administration.
My view is different.
I think that while it is true that the United States is the most powerful country, you should
not try to pick fights with everyone simultaneously.
I mean, that's like the king of the jungle, the mighty lion is going after
an entire herd of wildebeests simultaneously.
You will get trampled that way.
There will be nothing left of you.
So what you instead do is you look to pick off, you know, a couple that are lame, you
know, or some juveniles, or even, you know, one or two full adults,
but that are by themselves.
You don't go after the entire herd.
So I think that part of the problem is that Trump
has decided that he's going to do everything everywhere
all at once, right?
As the movie says, and he's not gonna win, you know,
any Academy Awards, any Oscars for that.
And at the same time, the United States is not a dictatorship. So I've heard from many Trump
advisors, senior Trump advisors, about this idea that they want to pull off a reverse Nixon, that
they're hitting the Chinese hard, but they want to cut a deal with the Russians, that they want to pull off a reverse Nixon, that they're hitting the Chinese hard,
but they want to cut a deal with the Russians
and they want to somehow pry the Russians away from China.
Now, you know, Trump, even if Trump were seen to be
the most extraordinary genius politician
that knew how to implement policy well,
and wasn't 78 years old, even if that were true,
and it's not, you would still have the reality
that the United States is not a dictatorship.
It has checks and balances.
It has a reasonably independent judiciary.
It is a federal system.
And in 2028, you can buy as many hats as you want, but Trump is not going to be up
to be president again. And Putin knows that. And Xi Jinping leads, he has, first of all, he's
essentially ruler for life. And he also leads a country with a multi-generational communist party
that runs the place. So if you're Russia, you can count on the Chinese
as your long-term friend
in a way that you can't count on the Americans.
And so the idea that the Americans
are gonna execute long-term,
and I mean, the reason why rule of law
has worked for the United States
in part is because the US itself cannot implement
consistently on policies from one to the next administration. And when you tie yourself into
treaties, you tie yourself into multilateral institutions and architecture and the norms
and standards that are aligned with your system broadly.
Yes, sometimes it's uncomfortable.
Sometimes it makes you do things
that you would otherwise not wanna do,
but it also means that the next person that gets elected
that you don't like very much
also has to stick with those things.
And since you're the most powerful country,
other countries have to align with it.
I think that Trump breaking that is much worse for the Europeans than the Americans, but
it's actually better for the Chinese.
So Trump is essentially trying to align the United States with a set of policies that
actually work better for China long term than they work for the Americans
or than they work for America's allies.
And I think that is a fundamental strategic mistake.
So you and I actually talked when President Biden met
with President Xi in a historical meeting
back in November, 2023.
And that was the first time that President Xi
had been to the US in six years.
This is maybe a really stupid question,
but is there any chance that officials might somehow
engineer a meeting between President Trump
and President Xi anytime soon?
I've certainly been saying to officials on both sides
that they would be wise to facilitate a meeting
between the two heads of state as fast as possible.
Because absent any conversations between the two, the potential that we get an inadvertent
crisis that escalates into something really dangerous is higher than we want it to be.
So I'd like to see that happen, but right now I don't see it.
Right now we've got 145% tariffs
from the United States on China
and the Chinese essentially reciprocating.
So there's no goods trade between the two countries
with some exceptions is basically being cut off.
You see Apple, one of the top companies in the world,
nevermind the United
States, now moving their iPhone production for the US all out of China into India. That's a
permanent move. That's not going to go back. That's a real hit to the Chinese. You see an effort by
the United States to contain China and to reduce, get their trans shipments out of third countries into the US.
So through Mexico, through India,
through Southeast Asia like Vietnam,
these are all long-term decisions.
And in that environment, we seem to be very far
from trying to reconstruct a strategic and economic dialogue
that Biden and Jake Sullivan and others
had been trying to put together,
not to recreate a relationship of trust, which wasn't happening, but to improve mutual understanding
of the two most powerful countries in the world, of what each other was up to, what they wanted,
what they were doing to reduce risk. Risk has increased in the global system dramatically
as a consequence of what the Trump administration
has been doing over the last 100 days,
but perhaps nowhere more significantly
than in the US-China relationship.
So what is the next milestone
that we should be looking for here?
Is it July when the tariffs come up for re-examination?
Or what is the next, especially with China, what is the next milestone that we should
be looking at?
Now with China, it's not actually July.
With China, it is kind of every day, every week, every month, as we start to see the implications
of these goods not getting to the United States,
playing through the US economy.
So that was what Amazon was, you know, a shoot a drop.
And Amazon backed off because they were threatened
by the Trump administration.
But I mean, why did they say they wanted to do that?
Because if you are an American who shops on Amazon,
which means if you are an American, right,
you are going to notice in very short order
that a lot of the things that you buy
are gonna be a lot more expensive.
And a lot of the things that you wanna buy
aren't going to be available, right?
I mean, when 99% of like the alarm clocks that Americans
consume come from China, maybe you're not going to buy an alarm clock.
That's not such a disaster.
But when you add that with every other good that comes from China or is
affected or has inputs that come from China, suddenly
this is going to be a massive problem.
And we had a lot of that that happened in the teeth of the pandemic.
And yes, the pandemic likely originated from China and very plausibly from a lab in China in Wuhan,
but still people didn't see that as an overt political
decision to ruin their lives economically.
This is gonna be a series of costs on people
that was absolutely self-imposed.
And one way you know that is because Trump decided
to do liberation day to day after you had those
special elections in Florida and in Wisconsin,
he understood that this was not gonna be popular.
He understood that in the near term,
there were gonna be major economic costs.
And that is what the Americans are now going to see.
But what's so interesting is that we've already seen the polls going down.
The favorability rating for Trump is already going down.
And that is before these costs have really impacted the voters.
The voters are really having the sense or are about to have this sense of, wait,
this is impacting me.
If they're a Trump voter, maybe they really like some of his policies.
But people are having that, wait, the leopards eating my face moment of, wait,
this is actually really negatively impacting my life.
So it seems to me that those polls are going to plummet yet further.
And we know that Trump really likes polls and he really likes to do well in them.
So again, sorry for like stupid questions, but what is he doing? Why
is he prepared to tolerate this negative opinion?
Well, we also know that he likes markets and he talks a lot about how the markets are doing.
And he took huge amounts of credit for when the market was doing well under Trump and
when the market wasn't doing as well under Biden, he blamed Biden. I mean, you probably
noticed that Fox News stopped running the markets, Chiron, streaming underneath their coverage when
the markets were taking a dump because it wasn't helping sort of a lean in favor of Trump. Trump
certainly doesn't want to talk as much about that. And he is clearly more willing to accept
impact, negative impact on the markets,
at least for a period of time,
because he's decided it's necessary.
He's not running again.
He's 78.
He's much more confident that his views are correct.
And he is being told by the people around him
how brilliant he is.
Well, I think that plays
with his polling as well. Maybe not as well, but of course, a solid 90% of Republicans still support
Trump. His base still supports Trump. Now, what's going to be interesting to watch, Helen, is for
the last several years, voters, American voters view of the economy
had less to do with how the economy was doing
and more to do with their political alignment
with the president that was running the country,
which is weird and shocking, but nonetheless is true.
And so the question will be, does that break
when Americans see that suddenly prices of goods have gone way
up, that they are not able to live with the same standard that they were before Liberation
Day?
Is that going to make Republicans say, I know that this is my guy and I know that I'm supposed
to support everything he does,
but actually he really just messed my life up.
And that's gonna change how I think.
That is completely contrary to the way American politics
have been working for the last few cycles increasingly,
but this is a major piece of cognitive dissonance
that'll have to be swallowed.
So far, the negative trend in
Trump's numbers has been overwhelmingly driven by Trump-oriented Dems or Trump-curious Dems
and independents, not by Republicans. I expect that is going to change significantly as these costs start hitting
Americans because the scale is going to be so massive. But I might be wrong. I mean,
we'll get to see this play out in real time over the next few months.
Indeed, we will. All right. Let's get back to international affairs and in particular
Ukraine. We saw President Zelensky came to the US, had a very fractious meeting in the Oval Office.
We just saw President Zelensky and President Trump meeting at the Pope's funeral.
So
what do you think? What's happening? What should we be looking for over the next 100 days and beyond?
That was of course a much better meeting.
And it was a meeting that was attended only by
course a much better meeting. And it was a meeting that was attended only by Zelensky and Trump, even though French President Macron tried to wangle his way in there. That was not happening.
Trump said no on that. And I'm glad they had that meeting. And it does show that, you know, even
though everyone was really concerned about Trump cutting off the Ukrainians. And remember, after that disastrous meeting in
the White House, the United States actually suspended intelligence and defense support for Ukraine.
And I will tell you that had a huge impact on the Ukrainian leadership. They didn't think that was
possible. They suddenly realized it was. The US is their principal backer.
And they can't continue to fight the war
and defend themselves against the invading Russians
if the Americans continue that suspension.
So that showed the Ukrainian leadership
that they needed to take Trump more seriously.
They needed to sign a letter of intent
for a critical minerals deal that they will implement going
forward.
So that's a win for Trump.
And they also accepted Trump's demand for a ceasefire with no preconditions.
So Trump hit the Ukrainians pretty hard.
The Ukrainians have now accepted Trump's terms to get to a ceasefire, to get to a ceasefire.
Trump has not been willing to hit the Russians' heart.
And it's funny, there's been a lot of effort to try to convince Trump that the Russians
aren't taking you seriously, they're walking all over you.
And we have now seen over the last week
that Trump is inching towards an understanding
of that reality.
He has now mentioned that,
well, I'm losing my patience.
I'm angry that the Russians are continuing the bomb,
including in Kiev and killed a bunch of civilians
when I told them not to.
I'm angry they're not coming to the table.
Privately Trump keeps telling people, I want the Russians to come to the table. They won't come to
the table. What do I need to do to get them to come to the table? And that was behind this decision
for Trump to post that maybe I need secondary sanctions on companies and financial institutions.
And what he is hoping and what he has been told by advisors and by some foreign leaders
that have met with him in the last week from Europe is that if you're willing to go after a couple of the top Russian companies,
companies like Rosneft, for example,
Luke oil, for example, specific examples, that you won't even need to implement.
Putin just needs to believe that you're serious, and then he's gonna back down,
and he's gonna come to the table.
And Trump's view is, well, if that's what I need to do,
okay, I'll do that.
Is that enough?
I don't think that's enough.
I think that Putin still believes
that at the end of the day,
Trump does not want to get into a fight with Russia.
Trump doesn't want, he wants to wash his hands of Ukraine.
And if he walks away from this conflict, it will be walking away from both sides and not
blaming Putin alone, but instead blaming Putin and Zelensky together.
So that I think that's the bet that Putin is making as of right now, which means we're
not going to have a ceasefire.
Now if Trump changes his mind and actually shows
that he's willing to not just throw some threats,
but really implement on an or else,
then maybe Putin's mind can be changed.
And maybe then Putin will sit at the table,
especially because that move by Trump
would empower the Europeans who are willing
to do a lot more to support Ukraine.
And again, Trump has moved the Ukrainians to support Trump's position. He's also moved the
Europeans to spend a lot more money on defense and do a lot more to support Ukrainian reconstruction.
So if Trump were to pivot against Putin at this point, which he hasn't done yet, he could
plausibly show, look how much I've managed to get in service of peace.
Look how much I've managed to get in reducing America's obligations for this country that
really should principally be Europe's obligation, not the United States.
But I haven't yet seen Trump willing to do that.
In fact, what I've seen is Trump focusing more on Iran, talking about Africa and maybe
needing to do some peace there, even privately musing about North Korea.
In other words, getting bored of Russia-Ukraine,
and instead washing his hands of it and moving on to other places where maybe he should get his
Nobel Peace Prize. That's where I fear we are heading as opposed to the more constructive tech.
Interesting. And I want to talk a little bit more about Europe. As you say, the Europeans have
really stepped up.
I think they were in Munich when JD Vance went there
and had his conversation with them and jaws dropped.
And people were very, very confused and surprised
and upset by what he had to say.
And yet it is also true that the Europeans have indeed
stepped up and have committed more towards their defense
budget.
So how is Europe kind of calibrating in this post first 100 days moment and how are they
going to be approaching the US and also Ukraine and everything else going forward?
Well, you know, in the first 100 days, some of the biggest impact of Trump globally has
been a unifying tendency. We've seen that in Europe,
the Europeans coming together and saying, we have to provide for our own defense independent
of the United States long term. We have to support Ukraine independent of the US long
term because we can't trust them, that they're not going to be there. They're going to walk away. And that has created
a stronger support for the European Union and for EU competencies on the economy, on trade,
and building a competency and defense. And by the way, we've also seen that in Canada,
that unifying tendency is why my friend Mark Carney got elected. The liberals were dead in the water before Trump was inaugurated.
And then once he started beating up on the Canadians on the 51st state nonsense and on
tariffs, suddenly, you know, the conservative candidate who wanted to be Canada first and
was aligned with a lot of Trumpist policies looked much more vulnerable and Carney won.
Mexico, same thing, Claudia Scheinbaum has 86% approval right now. That's gone way up
because of Trump. So in the near term, Europe is stronger and more unified. But long term,
even if they spend more on defense,
even if they reduce their red tape,
they create more productivity.
They try to align on this new competitiveness report
that is really a blueprint for things that Europe needs to do,
should have done 10, 20, 30 years ago, is it enough?
Because ultimately Europe doesn't have the growth, they don't have the productivity,
they don't have the fiscal space.
Germany does, but most of Europe does not.
They don't have the defense capacity, so they have to build it.
They have to do an awful lot simultaneously on the back of European citizens that aren't
going to be comfortable with that strain at all.
So do we believe that Europe can be successful long-term?
As I said earlier, if the Chinese can take the pain
economically, if they can get through that
with political stability, they will be
in a better position long-term.
The Europeans, I don't think the Europeans have the political capacity,
the will to outlast the Americans. And so I fear that even as the Europeans unify in the near term,
they are not going to succeed in doing the things they need to to maintain a unified block that becomes more vibrant,
that is able to defend itself, that is able to drive new technologies, that will attract
investment and capital, and that can compete with the United States long term. I don't actually
think that's a very good bet. It's a better bet than it was a few weeks ago, but it's not yet a
good bet in my view.
It's interesting.
Obviously, yesterday we saw the rolling blackouts occurring across Portugal.
And I was, this is a really horrible joke that someone made, but someone I was talking
to was just like, well, we'll see the report on what actually happened in about six years'
time.
I'm wondering if you wouldn't make that bet right now, what is the alternative?
If Europe doesn't make that shift, what happens?
Well, look, the advantage that Europe has is that they are committed to rule of law.
They are committed to consistent tax codes. They don't have structural corruption in the
EU in the way that we increasingly do in the United States
and that China, of course, its entire system
is kind of aligned around.
And that is attractive.
But to make that work,
you still wanna return on your investment.
And let's face it, I mean, there are very few companies, Western multinationals,
that are out there saying, I want to go and invest a lot of money in Europe and hire a
lot of Europeans when I know it's almost impossible to fire them, and when I don't think I'm going
to make a lot of money, and when my input costs are much more expensive, and I have
to deal with a lot of political long-term instability geopolitically, with migrant pressure from Africa and the Middle East,
with national security pressure from Russia
that's a much bigger threat to Europe
than it is to the United States.
So there are just lots of externalities around Europe
that are very, very hard to fix.
So what does that mean?
If they don't succeed
and they aren't able to become truly competitive,
they only get it half right or a quarter right, well, that means that over the next five years,
10 years, that a whole bunch of individual European countries are going to vote to get rid of the
elites. They're going to vote to get rid of the political establishment and they will, so Germany, the AFD and the far left,
which have had historically successful elections in a country that has really a very strong center,
suddenly it's the outsiders that will start winning and that will start to unwind the
European Union because they're not committed with the EU.
That in France, the far left and the far right
will start outperforming.
In the UK, the Reform Party under Nigel Farage will win
and the Conservative Party will split.
And so you can imagine that if the Europeans don't get it
right, that they will start to fragment.
They certainly will no longer unify.
And the reason for that, Helen, is fairly simple.
It's that in a world where the United States drives
this model that is incredibly state and private sector
driven, so you have industrial policy and you have huge market forces
and they capture one another.
And in China, and you have this system
that is massively state directed
and enormous amounts of capital to national champions.
Well, I mean, in the US and China,
the citizens don't have as much of a voice,
but the growth is there.
Well, in Europe, the citizens have more of a voice,
but the growth isn't there.
And if the Americans and the Chinese are doubling down
on a non-rule of law system, on a system that is about,
we just care how powerful you are,
you get the outcomes you want,
then the Europeans will not have any space.
And that system will increasingly fail.
That's the danger of what this...
Now, by the way, Helen, in that system,
there are others that are equally worried to Europe.
Canada is equally worried as Europe in that system.
Japan and South Korea are equally worried.
Frankly, the G6, so the G7 minus the United States,
plus a bunch of other advanced industrial economies
and maybe some medium income democracies,
all are gonna be very unhappy, very uncomfortable
with a world that is being increasingly driven by the US and China. And so the question will be,
is there going to be a third way? And right now the momentum is against that,
but it's an open question. It's a really important one.
Really, really important.
All right, so you mentioned both Mexico and Canada,
and obviously Mark Carney was just elected.
I wanna talk about immigration.
That is a banner topic that Trump had campaigned on.
It is also true to say that boarding crossings
between Mexico and the US have plummeted since he took office, yet it's also true to say that fewer migrants
have been removed by Trump and this administration than were removed by Biden in the previous
12 months. There's also been some, I think it's safe to say, legally questionable deportation
tactics being used.
A judge in Milwaukee County was just arrested for obstruction of justice by allegedly protecting
a migrant in her court.
What's going on with immigration?
What's happening with the rule of law in the United States?
And what should we be watching here? Well, Trump not only defeated Biden on his economic policy, which he is now
at serious risk of unwinding, and I think is very likely to unwind. I think some of the steps he's
taken have already are impossible to put back in the box. But Trump was also very successful
to put back in the box. But Trump was also very successful in his willingness
to address long unaddressed illegal migration
into the United States.
And there I would say his policies are on much safer ground
for him, for his base,
and for many Trump curious non-Republicans.
And the fact that the border is much more secure and the willingness to make that border
secure is also having a chilling impact on those that might come try to come into the
United States is an unmitigated win for Trump.
And that's a popular policy.
Now that's different from dealing with illegal migrants that are already
in the United States. That's harder to do. And it requires more resources that he hasn't
yet applied and will be difficult to raise. Also requires going after some moneyed interests,
like the big corporations that are very comfortable
benefiting from very productive, low cost labor in the US
that Trump hasn't yet been willing to go after directly
with, Iverify for example,
e-verify and other policies that would make it hard
for them to continue to benefit from those illegal workers.
The biggest negative so far
has been Trump's willingness to flout the rulings of justices, including a 9-0 vote by the Supreme
Court. And this is a fight he wants precisely because it is popular. I mean, when you deport someone that is illegal,
illegally in the United States, and would clearly be deportable, and Trump just decides to deport
this guy to El Salvador, which is the one country that it was illegal to deport him to, and then refuses to facilitate his return
as demanded by the Supreme Court,
that is Trump flouting a narrow ruling
against a person that is very unsympathetic
to most American voters.
And he loves the idea of having a fight
against the Maryland Senator that went down to El
Salvador on taxpayer funds to defend someone that shouldn't be in the United States to
begin with and who Biden didn't do anything about when the average American doesn't feel
like anyone's looking out for them. So that's a fight he wants even though
that person has not had due process.
That's a fight he wants even though that means
he is fighting against a Supreme Court ruling
including the six Supreme Court conservative justices,
including the justices that Trump himself appointed.
They all ruled against him on this. He doesn't care, right? the conservative justices, including the justices that Trump himself appointed.
They all ruled against him on this.
He doesn't care, right?
So this is an area that he wants to have more fights and
he thinks that they will work well for him.
He's probably right.
Ian, it turns out that we are running out of time, which is outrageous.
So I wanna finish with one last question,
which is you're obviously tracking this incredibly closely.
What should
we be paying attention to over the next 100 days?
The single biggest thing is going to be the blowback from the economy. Trump has shown
that when he's hitting the face hard, he's capable of pivoting, even in his second term,
not just in the first. And the one thing that happened in the first 100 days that forced that was when he started
talking about removing the Fed chair that he appointed in his first term, Jerome Powell.
And everyone threw up all over that, especially the so-called bond vigilantes when the idea
that US treasuries were suddenly not going to be as attractive because the US wouldn't have an independent Fed and therefore would be more like an emerging market.
He backed off from that fast. That was a hot stove that he touched. He didn't like getting burned by that hot stove. And he said, oh, I'm not going to fire him. I just would like him to move a little faster on reducing interest rates.
So the question in the next 100 days,
the most important question will be
as the American economy takes a major hit
and as average American voters and businesses,
small and medium businesses especially,
start feeling that pain and expressing themselves loudly, how does Trump
respond? How do Republicans in Congress respond? That's the first thing we should watch. The second
thing we should watch more broadly is what kind of reaction do we see inside the U.S. as there are further efforts made to erode the checks
and balances of a democracy, of the world's most powerful country that happens to be a
dysfunctional democracy.
As Trump continues to go after law firms and universities and the mass media
and political opponents and you name it,
opens investigations, opens audits,
extorts them, threatens them,
who is willing to stand up and who capitulates.
And we've seen a fair amount of capitulation
from a lot of multinational corporations
because they're comfortable
in a more kleptocratic environment
that the US has become for decades.
We've seen much less capitulation
from American institutions of higher learning
and from law firms that are standing
on some foundational principles
that they think are core to who they are.
Courage, Helen, is contagious. And the more you see of the latter, I think the more broadly the response
against Trump will be, who looks a lot weaker on the domestic and international stage today
than he did 100 days ago. So that's, I think, what we want to watch most closely.
100 days ago. So that's, I think, what we want to watch most closely. Well, Ian, we are so grateful to you for continuing to watch everything closely, and we will indeed
be asking you to come back to share your insights and your thoughts with us at some point soon,
maybe in another 100 days. For now, thank you so much for being here and thank you to
everybody for watching. We'll see you soon. See you. That was Ian Bremmer and Helen Walters for our series, Ted Explains the World.
This conversation took place on April 29th, 2025.
If you're curious about Ted's curation, find out more at ted.com slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today's show.
Ted Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective.
This episode was produced and edited by our team,
Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green,
Lucy Little, Alejandra Salazar, and Tonsika Sarmarnivon.
It was mixed by Christopher Fazy-Bogan,
additional support from Emma Taubner and Daniela Balorizo.
I'm Elise Hu.
I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed.
Thanks for listening.
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