European politicians, already drowning in multiple crises of their own, were left shell-shocked and aghast at Joe Bidenâs meandering performance in Thursdayâs presidential debate, aware that a second Trump term had drawn that much nearer â with all that this implies for the rise of populism in the continent, the future of Nato, and for Ukraine and the Middle East.
The voices of despair came from across the mainstream political spectrum, interspersed with the odd call for Europe to prepare even more intensively for a Trump second coming.
âAmerican democracy killed before our eyes by gerontocracy,â Guy Verhofstadt, a member of the European parliament and a former prime minister of Belgium, posted on X.
The German CDU foreign policy specialist Norbert Röttgen said: âThis night will not be forgotten. The Democrats have to rethink their choices now. And Germany must prepare at full speed for an uncertain future. If we donât take responsibility for European security now, no one will.â
The Polish foreign minister, Radek Sikorski, issued the most delphic advice about the importance of planning succession. âMarcus Aurelius was a great emperor but he screwed up his succession by passing the baton to his feckless son Commodus (he from the Gladiator). Whose disastrous rule started Romeâs decline. Itâs important to manage oneâs ride into the sunset.â Whether Barack Obama or Biden was cast in the role of Aurelius was unclear.
Dr Leslie Vinjamuri, the director of the Americas programme at the Chatham House thinktank, who is deeply immersed in Democratic politics, struggled to make a case for Bidenâs defence, even though she said she regarded his policy performance as strong.
âIt is universally agreed this was a very challenging debate,â she said. âPresident Biden had a very slow start and struggled throughout â admittedly in a very difficult format. To be in a room for 90 minutes without any audience is gruelling and not what President Biden was able to meet.â
Although she accused Trump of engaging in fact-free debate on pretty much every issue, she felt the debate âwill leave most Americans despairingâ.
In a tweet she was more blunt, saying: âAmerica and Americans are best when they see a problem, seize on it, find a solution. Make it happen.â
Carl Bildt, a co-chair of the European Council on Foreign Relations thinktank and a former Swedish prime minister, said Bidenâs performance was so bad that the ECFRâs six published warnings about Trumpâs foreign policy was ânow required readingâ.
One of the warnings is that a deep nightmare lurks beneath the potential foreign policy shocks that Trump would cause. Bildt said an international coalition âcould emerge as a framework for populists in Europe to establish special ties with Trumpâs Washington. Trumpâs re-election might well embolden the populist right in Europe to obstruct common EU policies and initiatives more forcefully.â
Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann, of Germanyâs liberal FDP, told the Rheinische Post: âThe fact that a man like Trump could become president again because the Democrats are unable to put up a strong candidate against him would be a historic tragedy that the whole world would feel.â
Indeed, one of the messages being conveyed directly to the White House was that this was about not just America but the world.
In Italy, the former prime minister Matteo Renzi said simply: âJoe Biden canât do it.â He wrote on X that Biden had served the US with honour, adding: âHe doesnât deserve an inglorious ending, he doesnât deserve one. Changing horses is a duty for everyone.â
Ukraineâs foreign ministry gave no response to Trumpâs ominous remarks during the debate that Kyiv had taken too much military aid from the US, and his reference to Volodymyr Zelenskiy as a âsalesmanâ.
Trump repeated his claim that had he been president in 2022, Russia would not have launched the full-scale invasion, and he said a peace settlement would be agreed between his election in November and inauguration in January. Moscow affected indifference, saying Vladimir Putin had not woken up specially to watch the debate.
The Russian official press was less merciful. âBiden unexpectedly misspoke multiple times and stammered. Democrats have already called his performance a failure,â the state news agency RIA concluded while leaving Trump free of criticism.
In the UK, Rishi Sunak said the only debate he was interested in was the one he was holding with Keir Starmer about Labourâs plans to raise taxes.
Silence emanated from David Lammy, the shadow foreign secretary, whose imminent period in office is destined to be defined by Americaâs choice in November. He has made strenuous efforts to meet all shades of Republicanism, and even argued that Trump may not be as bad as some predictions.
But one of Lammyâs closest allies, Ben Rhodes, who was among Barack Obamaâs most senior aides, posted: âJust think about what that debate looked like to people and leaders around the world ⦠Telling people they didnât see what they saw is not the way to respond to this.â