Independent Australia
21 Nov 2025, 02:30 GMT+10
Trump is an unpredictable force reshaping global politics and international behaviour, reframing diplomacy, institutions and public discourse in his wake, writesVince Hooper.
In these fractious times, when economies wobble, alliances creak and half the world seems powered entirely by outrage, the global community faces a profound and unmet need: a unifying force.
A lodestar. A man who can walk into a summit, mispronounce a country, threaten tariffs on its exports, charm its dictator and still leave the room strangely more stable than before.
That man, of course, isDonald J Trump.
Some say the world needs healing. Others say the world needs humility. These people are wrong. The world needs Trump not in a meek, metaphorical sense, but in the way a malfunctioning theme park needs a live electrician with a questionable attitude and a toolbox from the 1980s.
Trump is the geopolitical defibrillator of the modern age: loud, shocking, and much to the horror of experts occasionally effective.
Murder, child pornography, ballrooms and Trump's new Saudi bestieManaging editor Michelle Pini examines recent White House events and considers whether Americans are finally waking up to the MAGA cult.
Trump provides something that no committee, policy framework, or Brussels working group can: productive chaos. Traditional diplomacy is paralysed by politeness. Trump, however, strolls into negotiations with the raw subtlety of a leaf blower in a monastery.
Where others see instability, Trump sees opportunity preferably to put his name on something. The G7 becomes the T1. NATO becomes NAT-Oh! The UN renames itself the United Nodes of Trump Approval.
Yet, miraculously, the mans unpredictability sometimes forces adversaries to act predictably. China, Russia, Iran, even NATO allies may not like him, but they know exactly how deeply he values being liked. That, paradoxically, makes him transparent. Strategically transparent. Alarmingly transparent.
But transparency is better than opacity and Trump is the worlds first translucent statesman.
Where other leaders drown in nuance, Trump offers a welcome simplicity. He doesnt do grey zones he does great or disaster. There is no third option. Economists, historians and constitutional lawyers call this binary populist reductionism. The public calls it refreshing.
When Trump says something is the greatest achievement in human history, you may not believe him but you do know precisely where he stands. When he calls something a disgrace, a disaster, or very unfair, very sad, you know as a matter of scientific certainty that he has read at least the first half of the headline.
When Trump met Rudd: The strategy of silence and showmanshipIn the age of Trump, diplomacy has become the art of surviving the performance.
Under Trump, geopolitics becomes easier to follow, like a sporting event with clearer commentary:
World leaders may not relish the spectacle, but global publics do. Trump brings ratings. Ratings bring attention. Attention brings engagement. And engagement believe diplomats or not actually reduces the likelihood of war.
Thus, Trump may accidentally be the greatest peacekeeper since the invention of sanctions.
Every superhero requires a villain. Bureaucracies are no different. Brussels, the IMF, the World Bank and the UN all function better when they have someone to complain about. Trump completes them.
Without Trump, multilateral institutions risk becoming dull, procedural, quietly irrelevant bodies that nobody notices. With Trump, they become bastions of reason, guardians of the rules-based order, noble defenders of international principles simply because they are not him.
It is a symbiotic relationship.
They need him.
He needs them.
Global governance depends on this cosmic imbalance.
From the Acropolis to Mar-a-Lago: Trump and the ghost of AlcibiadesWhen democracies fall, its not always with a bang sometimes its with applause for the man who mirrors their worst selves.
No analysis of Trumps global importance is complete without examining his greatest cultural nemesis: the BBC. For decades, the BBC positioned itself as the gold standard of journalism calm, balanced, restrained and faintly patronising. Then Trump entered the chat like a wrecking ball wearing a red tie soaked in the tears of fact-checkers.
Trump vs the BBC is not merely a feud; it is theatre. Shakespeare would have written five acts about it. The Greeks would have declared it a tragedy. Netflix would have cancelled it after two seasons.
Every BBC correspondent assigned to a Trump press conference looks like a war correspondent landing in Fallujah. They clutch their microphones as if reciting a will. Trump, in turn, treats the BBC as though it were a rival real estate agency with suspiciously few hotels.
Their exchanges are legendary:
And yet, perversely, the relationship works. Like Holmes and Moriarty, they elevate each other. Trump thrives on enemies; the BBC thrives on things to tut at. It is the most productive British-American partnership sinceChurchillandRooseveltjust significantly funnier.
Of course, the zenith of the TrumpBBC saga is his current flirtation withsuing the corporationan event that sent BBC legal teams into a kind of genteel British panic, the type usually triggered by someone putting milk in the tea before hot water. Trumps legal threats may not be entirely clear, hinging somewhere between libel, general rudeness and the BBCs failure to recognise what he called his historic landslide that was stolen by arithmetic.
Lawyers on both sides prepare for battle: Trumps attorneys sharpen their press releases, while the BBC, in accordance with tradition, pluck their eyebrows. The case, of course, may never materialise, but the mere possibility of Trump v BBC electrifies both sides one seeking damages, the other seeking higher ratings.
In the end, both can achieve exactly what they want: publicity, indignation and a new chapter in the worlds most unintentionally hilarious geopolitical soap opera.
God's heavy hitters smack down Trump, the lying, criminal predatorProminent American religious leaders are joining protests against the manifest evils of the Trump Administration.
Economists hate volatility. Traders adore it. Trump is the only political figure who can single-handedly move markets using nothing more than capital letters on social media.
This is, from a liquidity perspective, magnificent.
From a risk management perspective, catastrophic.
From a comedic perspective, unparalleled.
Let us be honest: late-night comedians, meme creators, columnists, political cartoonists and half the global podcast industry owe their livelihoods to him. Without Trump, satire would return to its pre-2017 crisis, when nobody knew what to joke about and resorted to mocking quinoa.
Trump ensures constant cultural productivity.
He is the renewable energy of humour.
An infinite content generator.
A wind turbine made of spray tan and ego.
JEFF MCMULLEN: Trumps war within: How language became a weaponDonald Trumps incendiary rhetoric is fuelling a volatile political divide, turning words into weapons on Americas streets.
Above all, Trump reveals us to ourselves.
He is the worlds most powerful Rorschach test.
What people see in him says far more about them than him.
Do you see a threat? A saviour? A disruptor? A punchline?
Congratulations you are human.
Trump is the global unity project we deserve:unifying not by consensus, but by universal argument.
The world does not need Trump because he is wise.
The world does not need Trump because he is right.
The world needs Trump because he is Trump the only figure capable of making global politics simultaneously comprehensible, outrageous and entertaining.
In an age of algorithmic gloom, bureaucratic paralysis and leaders who speak exclusively in focus-grouped beige, Trump offers a rare, indispensable service.
He reminds us that democracy, geopolitics and global civilisation are not delicate museum pieces to be protected behind glass, but glorious, chaotic public spectacles, best observed with popcorn.
And for that, whether we like it or not,the world needs him. The future is bright orange!
Vince Hooperis a proud Australian/British citizen and professor of finance and discipline head at SP Jain School of Global Management with campuses in London, Dubai, Mumbai, Singapore and Sydney.
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