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Europeans Hate Trump: Does It Matter?

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Europe hates Trump. Does it matter?


Katty Kay Presenter, BBC World News


Invoking global opinion in the context of US elections is a fool's errand. Perfectly understandably, voters in Paris, Pennsylvania, really don't give a damn what voters in Paris, France, think about their political choices. And why should they?

This is America's choice, not anyone else's. How would British voters feel if Texans weighed in on Brexit? This time, however, the international reaction to Donald Trump is so forceful and so unanimous in its condemnation that it is worth drawing attention to. I do so well aware that recent history is replete with examples where the world's opinion of a US presidential candidate backfired against those same critics.

Back in 2004, Europeans assumed that their own well-publicised opposition to President Bush's Iraq war would make it harder for him to get re-elected. In fact, anti-Americanism had the opposite effect. It drove people to the president. "If those squishy Europeans hate him so much," the thinking seemed to go, "then he must be doing something right."

That same year, Britain's left-leaning Guardian newspaper ran a public campaign targeting a critical county in Ohio with a letter-writing blitz, urging people there to vote for John Kerry.

It was a bid to give foreigners a say in the US presidential election. Clark County was a swing district in a swing state; in 2000 Al Gore won the area by a narrow margin. But the Guardian's Operation Clark County backfired. It did indeed galvanise local voters, but it did so for Bush not Kerry. On election night, George Bush carried the county with 51% of the vote.

At the time, a local newspaper editor told the BBC that it was the well-publicised letter campaign that lost it for the Democrats. It will go down in history as one of the biggest fiascos in foreign meddling.

In 2008 of course the world rallied firmly behind Barack Obama. Two hundred thousand people turned out to see the candidate in Berlin before the election. Italian trattorias started a roaring trade in Obama pizzas, a curious, un-Italian mix of ham and pineapple toppings.

We began to joke that France was so invested in the election it felt it should have a Paris primary. That time around, world opinion was on the side of the winner and American voters seemed to enjoy the rehabilitation of their global reputation.

So, what does the world make of Donald Trump?

Mr Trump has some admirers in Europe. A few on the extreme end of the political spectrum like his tough line on immigration. Jean-Marie Le Pen, the founder of the French National Front, said if he were American he'd vote Trump.

There are echoes of Trumpism in the nationalist parties of Britain, Denmark, Netherlands, Greece as well as France. The dissatisfaction with the status quo, the sense that middle-class and working-class people have been neglected by the existing political establishment, a feeling that politicians aren't honest with voters - you can find all that in the appeal of Europe's populists.

While the politics of Jeremy Corbyn, the socialist leader of the Labour Party, are the opposite of those of Donald Trump, the disillusionment that drives his supporters is not so different.

But the voices of support are drowned out by almost universal condemnation. When it comes to Trump, Europe is apoplectic. Fascinated, but appalled.

I'm sometimes asked by Americans what Brits make of Trump and the best analogy I can come up with is this.

Imagine if your much-respected but slightly annoying older sibling (the US) came home with a fantastically unsuitable date (Trump). Part of you is titillated but part of you is appalled, thinking, "Oh my God, this could go horribly wrong." After Super Tuesday, Europe is fast moving from the former to the latter.

Here's a sample of the public disapproval. Germany's Der Spiegel has called Trump the most dangerous man in the world. Britain's David Cameron says his plan to ban Muslims is divisive and unhelpful.

The French liberal newspaper Liberation has described him as a nightmare turned reality. JK Rowling tweeted that he's worse than Voldemort. A recent Economist cover has a picture of Trump dressed as Uncle Sam with just one word, "Really?" That pretty much sums up the mood of global elites.

Will the international reaction make a shred of difference to Trump's chances of getting nominated and then elected? 2004 would suggest not. Indeed you can easily imagine a scenario in which Trump's American supporters rally round their candidate even more closely because the world is against him, just as they did with President Bush.

If you like Trump, you're likely to shrug off French disdain - who cares what a bunch of cheese-eating surrender monkeys think? And if you don't like Trump, you're likely to see the criticism as a source of embarrassment - God, what does the world think of us?

What really matters is whether the 6-10% of voters in the middle of the American political spectrum, the people who actually decide elections here, are swayed by global opinion. And they may be, for two reasons.

This is a different time from 2004. For a start, Donald Trump is not yet president. As a candidate, he doesn't command the automatic respect imbued by the Oval Office.

Although America still feels under siege from Islamic extremism, American troops are not being killed in large numbers in Iraq and Afghanistan. Supporting Bush was in some ways a proxy for supporting those soldiers.

America rallies round the flag when its men and women are serving in combat in foreign countries. In a time of war, US voters didn't like their leader being criticised by foreigners.

What's more, that small percentage of American voters who sway elections tend to be more moderate. They often classify themselves as independents. So they may look at the way foreign allies view Donald Trump and feel it would damage America's standing in the world if he were president.

It's hard to know at this stage what impact foreign opinion will have in this race, but it's fairly clear the world is not going to suddenly fall in love with the man Republicans are rapidly choosing to be their candidate for the White House.

Europe hates Trump. Does it matter? - BBC News

@Falcon29 @C130 @boomslang @Steve781 @Vauban @vostok @Hamartia Antidote @mike2000 is back @flamer84
 
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they hate Trump :rofl: so what.

they should be hating Obama and their own leaders for toppling Muammar Gaddafi and then trying to remove Assad from power.
 
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European leftists/liberal's are crying and whining about Trump for his intentions to secure America's borders and looking out for America's interests, meanwhile they have screwed their own continent to hell by leaving their borders wide open and taking in millions of people of alien beliefs who refuse to integrate and are busy wrecking havoc in the streets of European cities.
 
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I don't think it matters. What matters is how weak and feckless a leader in foreign affairs we have in Mr. Obama. Both President Bush & President Obama have been disasters for America foreign policy and our relations with other countries.
 
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European leftists/liberal's are crying and whining about Trump for his intentions to secure America's borders and looking out for America's interests, meanwhile they have screwed their own continent to hell by leaving their borders wide open and taking in millions of people of alien beliefs who refuse to integrate and are busy wrecking havoc in the streets of European cities.
So true

I don't like Trump. But the European Papers,Leftists & Liberals should mind their business & not go on attacking,abusing & demonising an American Candidate who is yet to get the Republican nomination.
& What makes them think they have any right to interfere & lecture Americans on their Domestic/Immigration Policy??

Let them deal with their own nations first & the startling growth of the Right in their nations.

If they had any sense, they would realise that their current campaign may actually help trump more than hurt him.
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No, because they don't have a vote.
LOL


I don't think it matters. What matters is how weak and feckless a leader in foreign affairs we have in Mr. Obama. Both President Bush & President Obama have been disasters for America foreign policy and our relations with other countries.
Do u think Clinton,Sanders & Trump will also be Foreign Policy disasters if they became President??
 
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Europe hates Trump. Does it matter?


Katty Kay Presenter, BBC World News


Invoking global opinion in the context of US elections is a fool's errand. Perfectly understandably, voters in Paris, Pennsylvania, really don't give a damn what voters in Paris, France, think about their political choices. And why should they?

This is America's choice, not anyone else's. How would British voters feel if Texans weighed in on Brexit? This time, however, the international reaction to Donald Trump is so forceful and so unanimous in its condemnation that it is worth drawing attention to. I do so well aware that recent history is replete with examples where the world's opinion of a US presidential candidate backfired against those same critics.

Back in 2004, Europeans assumed that their own well-publicised opposition to President Bush's Iraq war would make it harder for him to get re-elected. In fact, anti-Americanism had the opposite effect. It drove people to the president. "If those squishy Europeans hate him so much," the thinking seemed to go, "then he must be doing something right."

That same year, Britain's left-leaning Guardian newspaper ran a public campaign targeting a critical county in Ohio with a letter-writing blitz, urging people there to vote for John Kerry.

It was a bid to give foreigners a say in the US presidential election. Clark County was a swing district in a swing state; in 2000 Al Gore won the area by a narrow margin. But the Guardian's Operation Clark County backfired. It did indeed galvanise local voters, but it did so for Bush not Kerry. On election night, George Bush carried the county with 51% of the vote.

At the time, a local newspaper editor told the BBC that it was the well-publicised letter campaign that lost it for the Democrats. It will go down in history as one of the biggest fiascos in foreign meddling.

In 2008 of course the world rallied firmly behind Barack Obama. Two hundred thousand people turned out to see the candidate in Berlin before the election. Italian trattorias started a roaring trade in Obama pizzas, a curious, un-Italian mix of ham and pineapple toppings.

We began to joke that France was so invested in the election it felt it should have a Paris primary. That time around, world opinion was on the side of the winner and American voters seemed to enjoy the rehabilitation of their global reputation.

So, what does the world make of Donald Trump?

Mr Trump has some admirers in Europe. A few on the extreme end of the political spectrum like his tough line on immigration. Jean-Marie Le Pen, the founder of the French National Front, said if he were American he'd vote Trump.

There are echoes of Trumpism in the nationalist parties of Britain, Denmark, Netherlands, Greece as well as France. The dissatisfaction with the status quo, the sense that middle-class and working-class people have been neglected by the existing political establishment, a feeling that politicians aren't honest with voters - you can find all that in the appeal of Europe's populists.

While the politics of Jeremy Corbyn, the socialist leader of the Labour Party, are the opposite of those of Donald Trump, the disillusionment that drives his supporters is not so different.

But the voices of support are drowned out by almost universal condemnation. When it comes to Trump, Europe is apoplectic. Fascinated, but appalled.

I'm sometimes asked by Americans what Brits make of Trump and the best analogy I can come up with is this.

Imagine if your much-respected but slightly annoying older sibling (the US) came home with a fantastically unsuitable date (Trump). Part of you is titillated but part of you is appalled, thinking, "Oh my God, this could go horribly wrong." After Super Tuesday, Europe is fast moving from the former to the latter.

Here's a sample of the public disapproval. Germany's Der Spiegel has called Trump the most dangerous man in the world. Britain's David Cameron says his plan to ban Muslims is divisive and unhelpful.

The French liberal newspaper Liberation has described him as a nightmare turned reality. JK Rowling tweeted that he's worse than Voldemort. A recent Economist cover has a picture of Trump dressed as Uncle Sam with just one word, "Really?" That pretty much sums up the mood of global elites.

Will the international reaction make a shred of difference to Trump's chances of getting nominated and then elected? 2004 would suggest not. Indeed you can easily imagine a scenario in which Trump's American supporters rally round their candidate even more closely because the world is against him, just as they did with President Bush.

If you like Trump, you're likely to shrug off French disdain - who cares what a bunch of cheese-eating surrender monkeys think? And if you don't like Trump, you're likely to see the criticism as a source of embarrassment - God, what does the world think of us?

What really matters is whether the 6-10% of voters in the middle of the American political spectrum, the people who actually decide elections here, are swayed by global opinion. And they may be, for two reasons.

This is a different time from 2004. For a start, Donald Trump is not yet president. As a candidate, he doesn't command the automatic respect imbued by the Oval Office.

Although America still feels under siege from Islamic extremism, American troops are not being killed in large numbers in Iraq and Afghanistan. Supporting Bush was in some ways a proxy for supporting those soldiers.

America rallies round the flag when its men and women are serving in combat in foreign countries. In a time of war, US voters didn't like their leader being criticised by foreigners.

What's more, that small percentage of American voters who sway elections tend to be more moderate. They often classify themselves as independents. So they may look at the way foreign allies view Donald Trump and feel it would damage America's standing in the world if he were president.

It's hard to know at this stage what impact foreign opinion will have in this race, but it's fairly clear the world is not going to suddenly fall in love with the man Republicans are rapidly choosing to be their candidate for the White House.

Europe hates Trump. Does it matter? - BBC News

@Falcon29 @C130 @boomslang @Steve781 @Vauban @vostok @Hamartia Antidote @mike2000 is back @flamer84
they hate Trump :rofl: so what.

they should be hating Obama and their own leaders for toppling Muammar Gaddafi and then trying to remove Assad from power.
I don't think it matters. What matters is how weak and feckless a leader in foreign affairs we have in Mr. Obama. Both President Bush & President Obama have been disasters for America foreign policy and our relations with other countries.
It only matters to skinny jeans wearing man-bunned hipsters in vegan restaurants and downtown coffeehouses.

If the Americans choose Trump,if they vote for him,that is their choice,and our leftists medias and peace and lovists have no say in this. We have to respect other's choices.
 
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Do u think Clinton,Sanders & Trump will also be Foreign Policy disasters if they became President??

Good grief, how does one choose between those three!?! :hitwall: I really don't know but out of the three, I would actually trust Sanders the most, even though I voted for John Kasich in my state's primary.

I only have two basic things I want to see the next president do in terms of defence and foreign policy...

1. Maintain the most modern, capable, professional armed forces we can have.

2. Stop meddling in other countries where there is not a clear regional or international consensus to do so. So joining in a multinational coalition to fight ISIS/IS; yes. Destabilizing regimes like Assad's or Gaddafi's; no. Go back to supporting our traditional allies, as we should have with Mubarak in Egypt; yes.
 
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Wow, I think it'd be more beneficial for them if they create/expand their own power base in world affairs. It's high time considering how bad things have gotten in the middle east.
 
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they hate Trump :rofl: so what.

After all the leftist, America hating leaders Europeans have elected ? F*ck 'em !:usflag:

If the Americans choose Trump,if they vote for him,that is their choice,and our leftists medias and peace and lovists have no say in this. We have to respect other's choices.

At the end of the day, it doesn't matter who the Europeans like or dislike, with the rise of their own fascists right wing parties across the EU. Greece, Germany, France, Austria, Poland, Denmark, I know i'm missing a few. Even Sweden!

These right wing parties have been identified as threats to the State by the State's own intelligence agencies.

They've set an agenda stroking nationalist fears of barbarian foreigners looking to rape and pillage innocent white European women.

While failing to realize that they themselves are the reason for the mass migration because of their support for anything/ anybody other than Assad to rule Syria. There are more Syrian refugees in Lebanese towns than the entire Syrians refugees that went to Europe.

They have much less to bitch about, because up until now, Americans have only elected a few right-wing, and then kicked them out in 2014.

Americans aren't voting for Trump out right. He's winning Republican primaries which only registered Republicans vote for who they want to get the nomination. He's got barely more than 15% of the entire Republican and Democrat votes.

Kasich has no chance, while he's the only moderate nominee left, the GOP is going to screw over their rank and file just like they did for Ron Paul in 2012.

If the Republican convention has to go to the 2nd round, i'm expecting him to pick a vice-president right then and there. Potentially a Trump-Cruz combination. :rofl:
 
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