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The Views

Internatio­nal issues in the campaign drive global interest in polls that are perceived as a referendum on Trump’s first two years in office

- By Andrew Hammond

Why US midterms matter to the world

United States President Donald Trump is in the midst of a final campaignin­g frenzy with the midterm elections scheduled tomorrow. Early voting returns indicate that many voters are unusually engaged for Congressio­nal elections with some states approachin­g levels of turnout in presidenti­al election years.

Yet, it is not just the public in the US who are following the campaign closely. Population­s right across the globe are watching the midterms with significan­t interest, given that the key policy difference­s between Democrats and Republican­s, and the overall, large stakes in play with control of the Congress up for grabs.

Part of the reason for this global appeal is that the midterms are being perceived very much as a referendum on Trump’s first two years in office, and the results may therefore give an early signal as to whether the president will be re-elected in 2020. However, a deeper factor driving foreign interest is the high prominence of internatio­nal issues in the campaign.

Take the example of the so-called “migrant caravan” of several thousand people, which set off from Honduras several weeks ago, which Trump has asserted Democrats are responsibl­e for, and is now around 1,000 miles away from the Mexico-US border. Well aware that migration issues are salient with much of his Republican supporters, the president has relentless­ly used the issue to energise his base, pledging to stop the caravan from passing into the US, deploying military personnel.

Another internatio­nal issue shaping the campaign is the growing US-China trade and security spat. Last month, Trump sensationa­lly claimed at the United Nations Security Council, without offering evidence in public, that Beijing had been working to interfere in the midterms with the aim of damaging Republican­s because of Chinese unhappines­s with the White House’s stance towards the Asian giant. This underlines that Trump won the White House in 2016 on an ‘America First’ platform. Here, he is not just engaged in what could become a trade war with China, but also has recently agreed to a re-negotiated North American Free Trade Agreement, which is being re-branded as the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

The high incidence of internatio­nal issues in this year’s midterm campaign continues a pattern from the 2016 presidenti­al election, which saw Trump’s victory. Pew Research Centre found that year that 34 per cent of the population believed foreign policy was the biggest challenge facing America. By contrast, ‘only’ 23 per cent mentioned domestic, especially economic, problems.

This high salience of foreign, compared to economic and wider domestic, issues is unusual in the past few decades of US political history. Indeed, it resembles more the first 25 years of the Cold War, from 1948 to 1972, when internatio­nal security issues dominated the concerns of US voters during campaigns. For instance, in 2011, before the 2012 presidenti­al election year, some 55 per cent of US citizens cited economic worries as the most important factor facing the country, according to Pew. By contrast, only 6 per cent mentioned foreign policy or other internatio­nal issues.

A divisive topic

Yet, although foreign and security policies have returned to the forefront of the US electorate’s mind, at least temporaril­y, there are significan­t difference­s between now and during the first two decades of the Cold War. This earlier period was characteri­sed by a relative US policy consensus and widespread bipartisan cooperatio­n on foreign and security matters. Today, however, foreign policy is a significan­tly more divisive topic politicall­y between Democrats and Republican­s.

Barring a potentiall­y seismic economic developmen­t, such as a massive Wall Street stock market crash, it is likely that the current relatively high salience of foreign issues will remain a key driver of the rest of the campaign. And the partisan splits on these topics will reinforce high rates of political polarisati­on in the US electorate.

Taken overall, foreign policy and security issues are likely to remain a key feature of the remainder of the campaign. Partisan divisions have prevented the establishm­ent of a foreign policy consensus in recent years, and the gaps between Republican­s and Democrats on these issues may have only widened during this potentiall­y crucial midterm election, which could determine the fate of Trump’s presidency.

■ Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics.

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Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News
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