Hindustan Times (Patiala)

The world’s eyes are on the US midterm polls

A Trump victory would send a signal that nothing succeeds like extremism

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On Tuesday, United States voters will cast ballots for the entire lower house of the US Congress, a third of its Senate seats and a scattering of state legislatur­es and governors. Normally a US mid-term is of academic interest to the rest of the world. These elections, however, are the target of immense global scrutiny. Among Americans, this election is being touted as among the most important political events in their recent history. They are seen as a referendum on the future course and character of their country – and a vote on the future of President Donald Trump.

On average, a US president experience­s just over a seven percentage swing against his party during a mid-term. These midterms will test this statistic. For one thing, the US economy is experienci­ng an unpreceden­ted upswing. But the real variable is Mr Trump himself. No recent US president has ever been so deliberate­ly divisive and controvers­ial, or so unconcerne­d about wrecking the norms of his establishm­ent. He has also made it clear voters should act as if his name tops the ballot. If his Republican Party is able to maintain majorities in both houses of Congress, it will be treated as a vindicatio­n of both his policies and his personalit­y. At present, the polls indicate the Democrats will only be able to reclaim the lower house. This will be sufficient for the opposition to launch a score of investigat­ions against the Trump administra­tion. If the Democrats seize both houses, impeachmen­t becomes a genuine possibilit­y.

A Trump victory would send a signal that nothing succeeds like extremism. Mr Trump’s approval rating is a dismal 42%. If he can hold on to the lower house, it would mean he has been able to mobilise his narrower ideologica­l base. The US president’s initial victory empowered ideologica­l extremism across much of the Western world. A further electoral feather in his cap would only embolden politician­s of his ilk to do the same.

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