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October 29, 2008

silly americans, this is the world's election

Gabio

From my observation perch in Stanford, California, an English European turned 24/7-cablenews-Webcast junkie, I notice that many Americans still suffer from a touching delusion that this is their election. How curious. Don't they understand? This is our election. The world's election. Our future depends on it, and we live it as intensely as Americans do. All we lack is the vote.

The world may not have a vote, but it has a candidate. A BBC World Service poll, conducted across twenty-two countries this summer, found Barack Obama was preferred to John McCain by a margin of four to one. Nearly half those asked said an Obama victory would "fundamentally change" their perception of the United States. And it certainly needs changing. Over the two terms of President George W. Bush, the Pew Global Attitudes Project, a series of worldwide public opinion surveys, has documented what anyone who travels around the world knows: a substantial fall in the standing, credibility, attractiveness, and therefore power of the United States.

more from NYRB commentators on the election here.

Posted by Morgan Meis at 11:43 AM | Permalink

Comments

Any discussion of the US election should note that the US does NOT have a single national election, despite appearances, but instead has fifty small State elections.

Each state has its own election, its own election laws, and its own electoral votes.

That is how the US Constitution set up the election process.

There is no “majority of the popular vote” winner.

Posted by: Henry Barth | Oct 29, 2008 1:43:04 PM

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