Two years and 20 candidates later: how the 2016 campaign tore up the rulebook

Two years and 20 candidates later: how the 2016 campaign tore up the rulebook


America goes to the polls to choose between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton Tuesday, after a long and unprecedented election how did we get here?

The election the world thought would never end at least began predictably an hour and 50 minutes after the last one was over.

This was how long it took one presidential hopeful, Kentucky senator Rand Paul, to first start campaigning against Hillary Clinton when polling closed two years ago in the midterm elections. It was to prove almost the only thing that went to script. What happened next would change the certainties of American politics forever.

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That a woman might become a major party nominee and then president of the United States was seen as a historic enough opportunity: a moment to prove once and for all that no job should be a male preserve and no woman need curb her ambition. Yet almost everyone assumed Clinton would be squaring off against one of a pack of Republican politicians.

It was hard to conceive that she might stumble on her way to this feminist showdown thanks to Bernie Sanders, a self-described socialist who nearly upended the Democratic party primary. Even more implausibly, Donald Trump, a television reality show host and property developer who was neither a politician nor, arguably, a Republican, would sweep all of his primary election rivals aside in a landslide. No scriptwriter could have imagined how close this would lead America toward what many critics came to fear was a form of fascism.

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Trump was labelled with other isms too racist, sexist, nationalist some of them even by his own supporters; all of them disputed by him. But it was his fondness for authoritarianism and flair for demagoguery that led most to unflattering comparisons with the political landscape of the 1930s. Who could have guessed that with some deft mutations for the media age, this virus would come so close to overwhelming the worlds most powerful democracy in the 21st century? Or how grateful many Democrats would be that the American strain arrived wrapped up in a candidate with such obvious flaws?

Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/nov/08/election-day-2016-donald-trump-hillary-clinton

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