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Opinion | US election chaos would be one more gift to China from Trump

  • Trump’s incompetent management of the pandemic has already made America an object of pity around the world
  • If he follows through on his threats to defy the will of US voters, the appeal of American democracy would be eviscerated – to Beijing’s delight

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Supporters of President Donald Trump listen to his speech during a campaign rally at Capital Region International Airport in Lansing, Michigan, on October 27. Trump has repeatedly refused to commit to accepting the outcome of a vote that opinion polls forecast he is likely to lose. Photo: AP
For China, at least, US President Donald Trump is the gift that keeps on giving. His calamitous response to the Covid-19 pandemic has made China, whose government mishandled the initial outbreak in January, look like an exemplar of effective governance.
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Moreover, Trump’s “America first” foreign policy has alienated traditional US allies, making it difficult to build a broad coalition to counter China.
To be sure, Trump has delivered painful blows to Chinese President Xi Jinping. His trade and technology wars are demolishing US-China commercial relations, and his administration’s support for Taiwan has infuriated Chinese leaders. But as American voters prepare to head to the polls on November 3, Trump seemingly has one more gift to give to Xi: an election meltdown.
In the run-up to this referendum on his presidency, Trump has repeatedly refused to commit unequivocally to accepting its outcome. He has used his presidential bully pulpit to try to delegitimise voting by mail, and even hinted that the US Supreme Court, which now has a 6-3 conservative majority following the Senate’s October 26 confirmation of Trump’s recent nominee, Amy Coney Barrett, would intervene and presumably deliver him a second term.
President Donald Trump and Amy Coney Barrett stand on the Blue Room Balcony of the White House, after she was sworn in as a Supreme Court justice on October 26. Photo: AP
President Donald Trump and Amy Coney Barrett stand on the Blue Room Balcony of the White House, after she was sworn in as a Supreme Court justice on October 26. Photo: AP
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Recent opinion polls point to a clear victory for Trump’s Democratic challenger, former vice-president Joe Biden. But the presidential race is likely to tighten, and – even if Trump trails Biden in the overall popular vote – the outcome in the battleground states that will determine the winner in the Electoral College could be too close to call on election night.
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