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Trump’s foreign policy wins will be his ticket to re-election success at home

Niall Ferguson says Donald Trump might capitalise on his success on North Korea and negotiations with European allies and China to better his chances of re-election, regardless of his failures on the domestic front

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A fan holds up cutouts of US President Donald Trump and Mr Bean, played by British actor Rowan Atkinson, during the HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series 2018 finals on April 29 in Singapore. Trump’s “madman” diplomacy might just secure him enough foreign policy wins to shore up his reputation at home. Photo: AP
Some teams – generally the ones I support – tend to win at home and lose away. The same is true of some American presidents. Lyndon Johnson's most enduring victories were legislative (civil rights and the Great Society), yet his presidency was destroyed abroad, in Vietnam
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Woodrow Wilson won abroad – ending the first world war and establishing the League of Nations – but lost at home, failing to get the league ratified by the Senate and suffering a debilitating stroke in the process. 

A year and a half since his election victory, Donald Trump seems destined for domestic disaster. True, he had a prominent supporter of his cause last week in rapper Kanye West. “You don't have to agree with trump,” West tweeted, “But the mob can't make me not love him. We are both dragon energy. He is my brother.” 
Singer Kanye West and then president-elect Donald Trump talk at Trump Tower, New York, after a meeting in December 2016. Photo: AFP
Singer Kanye West and then president-elect Donald Trump talk at Trump Tower, New York, after a meeting in December 2016. Photo: AFP 
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