[The essential point that emerges is that the US uunder Trump stands badly
divided, as never before, between two warring camps.
The pivotal asset of Trump is the capability to foment hatred of the
(weaker) "other", stiired up xenophobia - talking of (cooked up) "invasion"
from the south.
So very similar, at least, in that respect, from our own very 56".

Hopefully, as the result suggests, he's, on the whole losing ground, while
consolidating further in patches.
We'll have to wait, as is the case with India as well.
In the meanwhile, as long as he stays, he inflicts great damage to the
"system".
The same here.

《Voters turned out in record numbers to render a verdict on Trump after two
years in which he has monopolized the media, polarized the electorate and
dominated American political life like no president since Franklin
Roosevelt — or arguably ever.
As the last ballots trickled in, it became clear that America’s verdict
wasn’t so much mixed as divided. The red, rural parts of the country voted
heavily Republican. The blue, urban parts voted heavily Democrat. And the
purple, suburban areas leaned left — far enough to flip dozens of suburban
GOP House districts, but not far enough to save moderate Democratic
senators such as Claire McCaskill and Joe Donnelly in conservative
strongholds such as Missouri and Indiana.
...
A Democratic win in the House will provide a crucial check on GOP rule and
usher in a class of lawmakers in both Washington, D.C., and state capitals
across America that will be younger, more female, more diverse and more
progressive than any in U.S. history. Their ranks include the first two
Muslim women in Congress, Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Ilhan Omar of
Minnesota; Jared Polis of Colorado, the first openly gay man to be elected
governor of any state; and Sharice David of Kansas, the first Native
American woman in Congress and the Sunflower State’s first openly gay
representative.
...
Yet in some ways, the bitter polarization of the results reinforced Trump’s
view of the country and validated the blunt-force messaging that he imposed
on the campaign during its final days.
Trump brought prophecies of the apocalypse to red America, passing up the
opportunity to run on positive economic news or appeals to a positive
vision of the country.
...
He held 30 rallies over the final five weeks and 14 over the final two
weeks, in large arenas and on airport tarmacs, where he talked about a
migrant caravan passing from Central American countries into Mexico as if
it were massed on the U.S. border — despite a U.S. military assessment that
only 20 percent of the 7,000 or so people in the caravan are expected to
reach the U.S.-Mexico border, and not for a few weeks from now.
...
But Trump’s appeal to his core supporters has always been centered on an
“us vs. them” mentality, and his message built on that narrative.
The theory here was that many of those who voted for Trump in 2016 were
nontraditional voters who might have rarely, if ever, voted in a midterm
election. They resembled the “low propensity” and “low information” voters
that so often bolstered Democratic candidates in presidential elections but
failed to show up for midterms.
...
The question was whether Trump’s inflammatory approach would alienate
middle-of-the road voters who lean conservative but don’t like him.
The answer was that in key Senate races like those in Indiana and
Tennessee, enough voters craved red meat. But in the rest of America,
Trump’s rhetoric drove Democrats to the polls — and Republicans to defeat.》]

https://www.yahoo.com/news/trump-voters-carry-republicans-victory-senate-house-teeters-edge-041422472.html?soc_src=community&soc_trk=fb&fbclid=IwAR2yw1vRLyep4MwPHTFwJktS-oi8oONvwXBcUmJ4B8fxz4EuZLJ1uARPc9E

Democrats take control of the House, but Trump voters bolster Republicans
in the Senate

Andrew Romano and Jon WardStaff,Yahoo News•

November 7, 2018

Scroll back up to restore default view.


Propelled by an unprecedented surge of rank-and-file enthusiasm and
widespread urban and suburban dissatisfaction with President Trump,
Democrats took control of the House of Representatives for the first time
since 2011.

The party was even projected to gain more seats than in 2006, the year they
delivered what then-President George W. Bush described as a “thumping.”

“Thanks to you, we owned the ground,” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi —
likely the next House speaker — said Tuesday night. “Thanks to you,
tomorrow will be a new day in America.”

Yet with victories in Tennessee, Indiana, North Dakota, Missouri, Florida
and Texas, Donald Trump’s Republican Party extended its majority in the
U.S. Senate, capitalizing on a lopsided battlefield that forced Democrats
to defend 10 seats in states Trump won in 2016.

The divergent outcome is largely a repudiation of Trump — who told
supporters at a rally last month in Mississippi to “pretend I’m on the
ballot” — as well as a partial vindication.

It all depends which side of the widening gap between Red America and Blue
America you stand on.

Voters turned out in record numbers to render a verdict on Trump after two
years in which he has monopolized the media, polarized the electorate and
dominated American political life like no president since Franklin
Roosevelt — or arguably ever.

As the last ballots trickled in, it became clear that America’s verdict
wasn’t so much mixed as divided. The red, rural parts of the country voted
heavily Republican. The blue, urban parts voted heavily Democrat. And the
purple, suburban areas leaned left — far enough to flip dozens of suburban
GOP House districts, but not far enough to save moderate Democratic
senators such as Claire McCaskill and Joe Donnelly in conservative
strongholds such as Missouri and Indiana.


GOP Senate victors Mike Braun of Indiana, Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee and
Ted Cruz of Texas. (Photos: Jim Young/Getty Images, Alex Wong/Getty Images,
Cathal Mcnaughton/Reuters)
More
Winning the Senate was always a long shot. Still, the party was depending
on Donnelly, McCaskill and Florida’s Bill Nelson to hold their seats, and
hoping that Phil Bredesen, a popular and moderate former governor, could
eke out a win against GOP Rep. Marsha Blackburn. In Texas, Democrat Beto
O’Rourke became a folk hero for liberals who thought he might defy gravity
and defeat Sen. Ted Cruz, the Republican incumbent.

It was not to be.

Democrats faced serious hurdles this cycle. Republicans largely oversaw the
last round of redistricting, redrawing the congressional map in ways that
force Democrats to win the national popular vote by seven or more
percentage points just to secure a bare House majority. On the Senate side,
Democrats were defending 26 seats to the GOP’s nine — by far the most
difficult map either party has faced in decades. Republicans in some red
states passed a set of restrictive voting laws that disproportionately
handicap Democratic constituencies. Finally, the economy is humming and
unemployment has fallen to a 48-year low — factors that traditionally boost
the party in power.

None of that prevented Democrats from flipping the House, however.
Democrats performed well in suburban, GOP-held districts that voted for
Clinton in 2016: Republican Rep. Carlos Curbelo of Miami, a moderate who
co-founded the House climate change caucus, lost to his Democratic
challenger, as did Northern Virginia’s Barbara Comstock, New Jersey’s
Leonard Lance, Dallas’s Pete Sessions, Minnesota’s Erik Paulsen and
Colorado’s Mike Coffman. And strong showings in Richmond, Va., and Oklahoma
City, where GOP incumbents Dave Brat and Steve Russell, respectively, went
down in defeat, suggested that Democrats could continue to pick off Trump
districts and cushion their victory.


Democrat Abigail Spanberger, victorious candidate for the 7th Congressional
District seat, at her election night party in Richmond, Va.(Photo: Bob
Brown/Richmond Times-Dispatch/AP ).
More
A Democratic win in the House will provide a crucial check on GOP rule and
usher in a class of lawmakers in both Washington, D.C., and state capitals
across America that will be younger, more female, more diverse and more
progressive than any in U.S. history. Their ranks include the first two
Muslim women in Congress, Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Ilhan Omar of
Minnesota; Jared Polis of Colorado, the first openly gay man to be elected
governor of any state; and Sharice David of Kansas, the first Native
American woman in Congress and the Sunflower State’s first openly gay
representative.

The contours of a Democratic House victory took shape early on.

In previous cycles, Democrats had failed to field challengers in many
politically promising districts, conceding hundreds of seats up and down
the ballot to uncontested GOP incumbents. But 2017 and 2018 attracted
droves of diverse, often rookie candidates appalled by Trump and itching to
“resist.” By Dec. 31, 2017, more than 2,100 people had filed paperwork to
run for the House or Senate, the most since the Federal Election Commission
started keeping track in 1977. At that point, 510 Democratic House
challengers had raised $50,000 or more, just shy of the GOP’s
record-setting total (522) from 2010 — the year Republicans wound up
flipping 63 seats and retaking control. By the end of primary season,
Democrats were challenging all but 10 Republican representatives — an
unprecedented feat that positioned the party to capitalize on Election Day.

Women played a key part in this recruitment boom. Amid the backdrop of the
broader #MeToo movement, more women launched campaigns this cycle for the
U.S Senate (53), U.S. House (476), governor’s mansion (61) and state
legislature (3,388) than ever before. Many were first-time candidates; most
were Democrats. Activism among women skyrocketed as well.

Money was also on the Democrats’ side. Overall, 65 percent of House
donations this election cycle have gone to Democratic candidates. In the
past 20 years, Democrats have topped the 50 percent mark only once before
(in 2008), and neither party has ever raked in more than 57 percent. Over
the past three months, more than 90 percent of House Democratic candidates
in competitive races outraised their Republican rivals.


Georgia’s Democratic gubernatorial candidate, Stacey Abrams, addresses
supporters at an election watch party in Atlanta. (Photo: Jessica
McGowan/Getty Images)
More
At the same time, the statewide returns were not as dire for Democrats as
their Senate losses made it seem. While Democrats lost marquee governor’s
races in Florida and Ohio — and trailed in Georgia, where breakout star
Stacey Abrams refused to concede to Republican Brian Kemp — they picked up
at least seven governor’s mansions overall and one hotly contested Senate
seat in Nevada, where Rep. Jacky Rosen edged out incumbent Republican Sen.
Dean Heller. And four Democratic senators — Sherrod Brown of Ohio, Tammy
Baldwin of Wisconsin, Debbie Stabenow of Michigan and Bob Casey of
Pennsylvania — cruised to reelection in the Rust Belt states that sent
Trump to the White House.

Yet in some ways, the bitter polarization of the results reinforced Trump’s
view of the country and validated the blunt-force messaging that he imposed
on the campaign during its final days.

Trump brought prophecies of the apocalypse to red America, passing up the
opportunity to run on positive economic news or appeals to a positive
vision of the country.

The president did talk about GDP growth and low unemployment at campaign
events, but he has always said he never gets credit for anything, and so he
campaigned as if that were true. He was reportedly angered by an ad
produced by his reelection campaign that touted the economy and showed a
mother watching her daughter grow up, preferring a commercial that
demonized immigrants by portraying them as violent criminals. That ad was
deemed so racist that every TV network — even Fox News — rejected it.

He held 30 rallies over the final five weeks and 14 over the final two
weeks, in large arenas and on airport tarmacs, where he talked about a
migrant caravan passing from Central American countries into Mexico as if
it were massed on the U.S. border — despite a U.S. military assessment that
only 20 percent of the 7,000 or so people in the caravan are expected to
reach the U.S.-Mexico border, and not for a few weeks from now.

Trump called the refugees an “invasion.” He floated conspiracy theories
about Democrats and billionaire George Soros having something to do with
the caravan, but offered no proof. He described those in the caravan as
dangerous criminals, and speculated that some might be terrorists from
Middle Eastern countries, which also contradicted the intelligence findings
of the U.S. military.

The unsubstantiated claims and accusations were so many, and so wild, that
Trump overloaded the circuits of anyone trying to keep track of whether any
of it was actually true.

But Trump’s appeal to his core supporters has always been centered on an
“us vs. them” mentality, and his message built on that narrative.


President Trump waves to supporters after being introduced at a campaign
rally in Cape Girardeau, Mo., on Nov. 5, 2018. (Photo: Jeff Roberson/AP)
More
The theory here was that many of those who voted for Trump in 2016 were
nontraditional voters who might have rarely, if ever, voted in a midterm
election. They resembled the “low propensity” and “low information” voters
that so often bolstered Democratic candidates in presidential elections but
failed to show up for midterms.

A top Republican source with knowledge of voter data held by the Republican
National Committee told Yahoo News that the number of Trump voters who were
nontraditional midterm voters had become an “obsession” for key GOP
operatives, and that this voting bloc had become key in many contests
Republicans hoped to win.

So Trump’s fear-mongering message was a tool meant to activate voters who
cared little for the intricacies of policy or governance and sometimes even
facts, but who would be eager to continue the movement that Trump started
in 2016.

The bottom line for many of Trump’s supporters was that the president —
stymied in their view by Congress as he sought to build a wall across the
entire southern border — was doing something, anything — rather than
nothing.

Trump ordered 7,000 U.S. military troops to portions of the border in
Texas, and said that number could double. He also floated the idea of
revoking birthright citizenship through executive order, something he has
no power to do.

The question was whether Trump’s inflammatory approach would alienate
middle-of-the road voters who lean conservative but don’t like him.

The answer was that in key Senate races like those in Indiana and
Tennessee, enough voters craved red meat. But in the rest of America,
Trump’s rhetoric drove Democrats to the polls — and Republicans to defeat.

Even Trump seemed conflicted on the eve of the election.

“I would like to have a much softer tone,” Trump told the conservative
Sinclair Broadcasting Group on Monday.

But, he added, “I feel, to a certain extent, I have no choice.”



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Peace Is Doable

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