MOORE: Trumpism is going global

Now is the hour of the entire world’s discontent

Germany's Chancellor Olaf Scholz speaks with the media as he arrives for an EU-Western Balkans summit at the European Council building in Brussels on Wednesday. (Harry Nakos / AP Photo)

Buckle your seatbelts because President-elect Donald Trump has ignited a worldwide revolt against the arrogance of global elites.

We are entering a brand-new era of rebellion — man against the self-serving, out-of-touch political machines that ignore the will of the governed.

Everywhere.

Look around.

The world is a mess. Entrenched political leaders and parties are being tumultuously evicted in Europe, South America, the Middle East and Asia. In Britain, the Conservative Party grew government, lost its moorings and was chased from office, only to be replaced by an economically incompetent Labour Party that came into office, raised taxes on everything and everyone, and plunged the economy into recession. France just ousted its prime minister for the first time in decades, thrusting the “country into chaos,” as CNN put it.

Germany’s government is also on the verge of collapse. Chancellor Olaf Scholz has been forced to request a vote of confidence later this month.

Good luck with that. The Associated Press reports that “his three-party coalition” government collapsed last month.

In South Korea, the president invoked martial law, and now the citizens are demanding his impeachment.

In Japan, “the party (that) has ruled the country almost continuously” since 1955, according to BBC, was voted out in October.

Mexico and Canada have elected leftist boobs who are losing support by the day.

Way ahead of the pack is Argentina, where the “shock capitalist” President Javier Milei, who says, “I despise the state government,” won election a year ago and is an overnight international hero for his chainsaw approach to shrinking big government.

Now is the hour of the entire world’s discontent.

Why are the dominoes of government tumbling so suddenly?

One word: Trump. The whole world has watched with fascination and even admiration the peaceful citizen uprising in America. The masses around the world are screaming, “We want Trumpism in our country.” They seem to be saying, “Make Britain great again. Make Germany, Japan, Korea, and Canada great again.”

The politicians, bureaucrats and elite academics are horrified. They should be.

The anger at the political class is boiling over with scalding resentment against government incompetence, fiscal mismanagement and statist directives that snatch away basic freedoms.

They have commanded us that you can’t have a gas stove, a gas car, a lawnmower or an air conditioner. Parents can’t send their kids to good schools.

My, how the tables have turned. The politicians who profess to care so much about the working classes are now despised by the voters.

The masses around the world are seeing the bounce in America’s step in the wake of the Trump election. The Trumpian message is prosperity, efficiency, fairness, home rule, and love of country.

It’s a virtual certainty that voters everywhere are going to demand common-sense Trumpian policies in their towns and countries. As Trump has said, every leader should put their own country first. Global government is dead for now.

It’s a grassroots power-to-the-people movement — something the left once believed in.

I wouldn’t want to be Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping, French President Emmanuel Macron, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau or Scholz right now. The Trumpians are coming for you.

Good riddance.

Stephen Moore is a visiting fellow at the Heritage Foundation. He is also an economic advisor to the Trump campaign. His new book, coauthored with Arthur Laffer, is “The Trump Economic Miracle.”