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 The Brexit referendum and the U.S. presidential election have offered clear examples of how emotion and affect increasingly drive political behavior. 
 
				In both cases, resentment and anger 
				over unaddressed grievances, combined with fear and anxiety over 
				radical disruptions to the economy and national identity, won 
				out over reasoned arguments in favor of the status quo. 
 The nature of President-elect Donald Trump's insurgent candidacy and his upset victory magnify both reactions. 
 
				The election outcome calls into 
				question not only fundamental aspects of both of America's 
				political party coalitions but also, given the uncertainty 
				regarding Trump's foreign policy declarations during the 
				campaign, America's role in the world and, by extension, the 
				global order built upon it. 
 
				The euphoria of victory often leads 
				to overreach, making short shrift of the political capital 
				gained at the ballot box. And as most incumbents in Western 
				democracies can attest, the victor's popularity, which usually 
				spikes after the election, is often painfully short-lived.  
 Even if Trump walks back some of his more iconoclastic positions or fails to successfully implement them, the grievances that fueled his victory, and Brexit before it, represent a significant challenge to the global order - and they will not disappear. 
 To the contrary, Trump's victory is a boon for like-minded politicians in France, the Netherlands and across Europe. The impossible has now become possible, and the inconceivable plausible. 
 
				Were either country to elect a 
				government led by populist nationalists, it would almost 
				certainly
				
				spell the end of the European Union, 
				removing not only another pillar of the international order, but 
				the one most fundamentally aligned with the core American values 
				of democracy, pluralism and the rule of law. 
 Certainly, part of its current unpopularity is due to the fact that it is an easy target to blame for complicated phenomena. 
 
				Productivity gains and global labor 
				competitiveness, for instance, are more directly responsible for 
				job losses in developed industrial economies than is trade. And 
				some of the more spectacular successes of liberal 
				internationalism, such as
				
				the dramatic reduction in global poverty, 
				have occurred far from the view of American and European 
				electorates.  
 Politics is certainly about explaining complicated phenomena, but the events of this year should make clear that it is also about telling compelling stories. And for now, liberalism's opponents are telling the more compelling story. 
 To change that, liberal internationalists would do well to craft a new narrative, beginning with discarding the neoliberal ideology that coupled market-driven prosperity with the inevitable triumph of political liberalism. 
 
				After all, as cases from Russia and 
				China to Turkey and across Latin America and Asia have shown, 
				there is no law of nature that precludes market-driven 
				prosperity from going hand in hand with authoritarianism. 
 Now that the shock ofTrump's victory has worn off,resolve, and not despair,must be the order of the dayfor those who would seekto shore up the liberal international order.
 
 A new narrative justifying liberal internationalism is needed, one based on a bottom-up approach that begins by identifying the trends on the ground that are shaping grievances and driving political behavior, and then works backward to identify the changes necessary to effectively respond to them. 
 
				This narrative would take into 
				account feelings as well as facts, propose projects as well as 
				policies, and offer purpose as well as process. 
 Some of the resentment on display today is simply nostalgia based on the misreading of a temporary moment of history - namely the postwar period of prosperity - as a permanent condition of a bygone golden era. 
 
				But clearly the costs of 
				globalization's disruption have begun to outweigh the advantages 
				of its openness to a sizable enough population of voters that 
				new balances must now be found. 
 But it will also require seriously tackling the challenges presented by mass immigration, whose benefits for too have long blinded many advocates to the cultural impact that massive influxes of immigrant populations can cause. In some ways this horse has already left the barn, particularly in Europe. 
 
				But ignoring the issue or 
				clinging to outdated ideological dogmas only plays into the 
				hands of populists who exploit it for electoral advantage.  
 Clearly some issues require an approach that transcends borders: 
 
				Indeed, how effectively these 
				challenges are handled is directly related to the current rise 
				of nationalism, because unless people feel fundamentally secure 
				within their own borders, they will look with hostility on 
				arrangements that require ceding sovereignty to unaccountable 
				global bodies.  
 Should both pull back from the lead on these and other issues, as now seems likely, thought must be given to how to fill the gap so that diplomacy, and not military force, remains the default position for deciding on the rules and norms of global governance. 
 
				This will be particularly 
				salient for guaranteeing human security in areas where it is 
				under threat and regulating the use of force in international 
				affairs to prevent a return to limited wars.  
 That means treating questions of national identity with more respect, without ceding ground on the potential dangers that nationalism can present. 
 
				On some issues there can be no 
				compromise; bigotry and intolerance in all their forms can never 
				be countenanced. But so long as the discourse over national 
				identity is dominated by nostalgia for an imagined past, rather 
				than the opportunities of a shared present and future, the issue 
				will continue to benefit populists. 
 Defending liberalism and political pluralism, human rights and dignity, and economic development to better meet the needs of the planet's growing population all make for a compelling narrative. 
 As a platform, it fits awkwardly into the landscape of realist power politics most likely to characterize a world given over to populist nationalism. 
 
				But it is one that liberal 
				internationalism remains well-suited to advance.  
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