Waterloo Region Record

Trump’s ‘rigged’ rhetoric unsettles immigrants

- Diana Mehta

Donald Trump’s suggestion he may challenge the results of the upcoming U.S. presidenti­al election is striking a chord with some Canadians who know just what can happen when the outcome of a political race isn’t accepted by the losing parties.

Trump has stunned observers by saying he’ll challenge the results of the Nov. 8 election if there’s a “questionab­le result,” though he has teasingly promised to embrace the outcome if he wins.

The Republican presidenti­al nominee said Thursday he was reserving his right to “contest or file a legal challenge” if he loses. That came after he suggested in Wednesday’s presidenti­al debate that he might not accept the results of what he has repeatedly alleged is a “rigged” election.

For Genc Tirana, Trump’s words brought back memories of living in Albania, a small country in eastern Europe that spent decades under communist rule.

“It is surprising because we don’t expect there to be a rigged system in the United States. In our mind, the United States has the best democracy in the world,” said Tirana, who immigrated to Canada about 15 years ago.

Albania held its first free and democratic elections in 1991, but the handover of power in one of Europe’s poorest countries has since been often marred by violence and political unrest, with losing parties refusing to accept defeat. The fallout from such events, Tirana said, was very real.

“When this happened back home it was a collapse, at least for that moment,” said the Toronto resident. “When the party didn’t accept the election, they didn’t go to parliament at all. They didn’t fill the seats.”

Having lived through those years of political turmoil in his native country, Tirana says he finds Trump’s rhetoric unsettling.

“People like us, coming to North America, expect democracy in the United States. We don’t expect people to denounce the election,” he said.

Tirana likely isn’t alone in his reaction.

“Anybody who has come from a society where elections are fraught or unfair ... for those people who are in Canada, I think the whole thing just brings back some horrible memories of a system that was completely flawed and led to permanent instabilit­y,” said Robert Austin, an associate professor at the Munk School of Global Affairs at the University of Toronto.

Austin, a specialist on East Central and Southeaste­rn Europe, said Trump’s comments on potentiall­y not accepting the election results immediatel­y reminded him of his days as a journalist in the Balkans where “elections had no losers.”

“They had only the winner and the guy who said the elections had been rigged,” he recalled. “It also meant that politician­s had extraordin­ary longevity because if you never really lost an election you didn’t have to quit and move on.”

Problemati­c elections and political behaviour in countries with emerging democracie­s, however, are different from Trump questionin­g the integrity of the U.S. election system, Austin said.

“There’s no tradition in the United States of one single candidate announcing ahead of time that the election is rigged.”

 ?? MIKE STEWART, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A sign displays advance voting hours at a voting site in Marietta, Ga., as a Cobb County Sheriff deputy sits in his vehicle.
MIKE STEWART, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A sign displays advance voting hours at a voting site in Marietta, Ga., as a Cobb County Sheriff deputy sits in his vehicle.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada