Global Networks
2019

The transnationalist US foreign-policy elite in exile? A comparative network analysis of the Trump administration (Article) (Open Access)

De Graaff N.* , Van Apeldoorn B.
  • a VU University, Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • b VU University, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Abstract

The presidency of Donald Trump – often framed as a result of a populist revolt against the elites of Washington and Wall Street – and his apparent break with the postwar liberal internationalist foreign-policy elite consensus, has raised fundamental questions about the future of elite power in the USA and the implications for its global role. As established by previous research, America's foreign-policy elite has in the past decades been closely connected to transnationally oriented corporate elite networks, the theme of this special issue. In this article, we address to what extent the Trump presidency represents a real rupture with these extant power structures in the American political system and its foreign-policy establishment. We present the first systematic mapping and social network analysis of Trump, his cabinet and his White House advisers, which, based on a novel biographical data set, compares earlier findings on the elite networks of the Clinton, Bush and Obama administrations. While finding some strong continuities, the Trumpian foreign-policy elite is shown to display some very distinctive characteristics, particularly with respect to a lack of previous political affiliations, ties with a different kind of corporate elite, and a disconnect with the policy-planning networks that have been so central to the previous administrations. © 2019 The Authors. Global Networks published by Global Networks Partnership and John Wiley & Sons Ltd

Author Keywords

Populism foreign policy TRANSNATIONAL ELITES CORPORATE ELITE NETWORKS TRUMP ADMINISTRATION USA

Index Keywords

TRANSNATIONAL ELITES Elite networks Political Systems populism Social aspects Social Sciences foreign policy US foreign policy Systematic mapping Computer networks Power structures

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85074966801&doi=10.1111%2fglob.12265&partnerID=40&md5=cc9aeb984e8fd8313d8acdb18f5ef104

DOI: 10.1111/glob.12265
ISSN: 14702266
Original Language: English