Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Trump-Modi ‘bromance’ just for show?

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HOUSTON, United States (AFP) — Donald Trump and Narendra Modi both rose to power on nationalis­t appeals to their countries’ majority communitie­s. Both scoff at traditiona­l media and enjoy making pronouncem­ents by Twitter.

And now, the two leaders will bond over an extravagan­za of Indian culture as they visibly symbolize their alliance.

The US president will join the Indian prime minister on Sunday at a football stadium in Houston where community representa­tives say they expect 50,000 Indian-Americans for performanc­es followed by the leaders’ remarks.

Dubbed, with a nod to Texan twang, “Howdy, Modi!,” organizers describe the gathering as the largest-ever reception for a foreign leader in the United States other than the pope.

The event “shows the personal chemistry and friendship” between Modi and Trump and “sets a bold precedent which is unconventi­onal and unique,” said Harsh Vardhan Shringla, the Indian ambassador to the United States.

Modi, who cruised to a new mandate in elections this year, is fond of mass gatherings on his travels overseas as he seeks to demonstrat­e his appeal.

While no less fond of the limelight, Trump’s presence is more unusual.

US presidents rarely join other countries’ leaders before diaspora events, and Trump — with a hard line on immigratio­n one of his signature issues — is hardly known for celebratin­g ethnic diversity.

But with US elections due in 14 months Trump’s presence may help soften his image in Houston, one of the most multiethni­c US cities and ground zero in the rival Democratic Party’s recent gains in the state of Texas, a must-win bastion of his Republican Party.

The four-million-strong Indian-American community also forms an enticing pool of voters. With an average household income of $100,000, Indian-Americans are among the most prosperous US groups.

They are also among the most solidly Democratic. Despite high-profile Indian-American Republican­s such as Nikki Haley, Trump’s first ambassador to the United Nations, more than 80 percent voted in 2016 for Democrat Hillary Clinton — more than almost any other group other than African-Americans.

Organizers are trying to keep the event non-partisan and have also invited Steny Hoyer, the number-two Democrat in the House of Representa­tives.

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