Imperial Valley Press

Nations long targeted by US chide Trump’s claims of fraud

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BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Demands to stop the vote count. Baseless accusation­s of fraud. Claims that the opposition is trying to “steal” the election.

Across the world, many were scratching their heads Friday — especially in countries that have long been advised by Washington on how to run elections — wondering if those assertions could truly be coming from the president of the United States, the nation considered one of the world’s most emblematic democracie­s.

“Who’s the banana republic now?” Colombian daily newspaper Publimetro chided on the front page with a photo of a man in a U.S. flag print mask.

The irony of seeing U. S. President Donald Trump cut o by major media networks Thursday as he launched unsubstant­iated claims lambasting the U.S. electoral system was not lost on many. The U.S. has long been a vocal critic of strongman tactics around the world. Now, some of those same targets are turning around the finger.

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro laughed as the vote dragged on past Tuesday, briefly breaking into the hymn of his nation’s annual beauty contest on state TV, singing, “On a night like to night, any of them could win.”

In Africa — long the target of U.S. election guidance — one Kenyan commentato­r spun out satiric tweets, drawing freely from clichés that long have described troubled elections and questionin­g the

strength of democracy in the U.S.

Kenyan cartoonist Patrick Gathara tweeted that Trump “has barricaded himself inside the presidenti­al palace vowing not to leave unless he is declared the winner,” with a mediator “currently trying to coax him out with promises of fast food.”

Along with the mockery comes dismay. Many people in Africa see the U.S. as a bellwether for democracy and, after trou

bled votes in Tanzania and Ivory Coast in recent days, they looked to what Washington might say.

“We are asking ourselves, why is the U.S. democratic process appearing so fragile when it is meant to be held up to us in the rest of the world as a beacon of perfect democracy?” said Samir Kiango, a Tanzanian out in his country’s commercial capital Friday.

For decades, the U.S. has been an advocate for democracy abroad, using diplomatic pressure and even direct military interventi­on in the name of spreading the principles of a pluralisti­c system with a free and fair vote for political leaders. These tactics have generated both allies and enemies, and this year’s presidenti­al vote perhaps more than any other is testing the strength of the values it promotes around the world.

And the world is paying close attention. Few places on Earth have been on the receiving end of U.S. election advice as the African continent, where the U.S. has encouraged nations to have independen­t electoral commission­s, a uniform voters’ roll and other standards aimed at ensuring an equitable vote.

“The U.S. electoral system has none of these. Not a single one,” Sithembile Mbete, a commentato­r and senior lecturer on political science at the University of Pretoria, said at an online event last month.

“Some African elections are actually better-run,” added Nic Cheeseman, professor and author of a book on democracy in Africa.

Denis Kadima, executive director of the Electoral Institute for Sustainabl­e Democracy in Africa, said he sees Trump’s approach to democracy as an exception, but “we should not use that as a way of allowing our own government­s to do bad things.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/MATIAS DELACROIX ?? In this Nov. 4 a man reads the Diario 2001 newspaper that carries the Spanish headline: “Agony is prolonged for the White House” at a newspaper stand in Caracas, Venezuela, the day after U.S. elections.
AP PHOTO/MATIAS DELACROIX In this Nov. 4 a man reads the Diario 2001 newspaper that carries the Spanish headline: “Agony is prolonged for the White House” at a newspaper stand in Caracas, Venezuela, the day after U.S. elections.

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