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Vavreck’s analysis point to not only how important personality is for Americans—and other people around the world—but also the sensationalism that dominates American media.

      Several contributors to this volume note how, in their respective countries, people were interested in the personality of the presidential contenders. They were shocked by the personality and character of the 2016 aspirants to the White House, but at the same time were entertained by the constant scandals. Some equated the contenders’ character or lack thereof with the moral decline of the United States. Seo and colleagues argue that the “drama of American presidential elections” has always “fascinated voters in [South] Korea.” Zhang Guoxi maintains that Chinese people were following the elections because of the drama presented by two “unconventional candidates and their never-ending scandals.” Many Chinese, he reports, considered the 2016 election more “intriguing, stirring, and even horrifying” than House of Cards. Luis Maira’s chapter describes former Chilean president Ricardo Lagos’s reaction to Trump’s election: “We never thought that anyone who spoke such barbarities [as Trump] could have the nomination of an American political party.” François Vergniolle de Chantal asserts that the controversial personality of Donald Trump provoked serious criticism of the United States in France. He describes the ways that Trump was ridiculed in a variety of media outlets and popular culture. Finally, Clive Webb sustains that for all of “its global significance, the election is also a political circus like no other and the British media offers audiences and readers the closest they can get to a front row seat.” He quotes Boris Johnson, former British foreign secretary, who averred that Trump’s “quite stupefying ignorance” rendered him “unfit for the office.” This was a position that Johnson was forced to qualify after the election.

      For decades, American elections have often seemed to be as much about contenders as about politics and policies. In 2016, the candidates proved once again that sensationalism and outrageous statements attract voters. People around the world watch US presidential campaigns with curiosity and a sense of morbidity. Scandals, accusations, vulgar language, lies, insults, aggressions, sexual innuendos, unsubstantiated statements, ignorance, and intolerance became the lingua franca of the election. People offend each other, threaten each other, denigrate each other, and the media happily report it all. The 2016 presidential contest was, undoubtedly, the Jerry Springer show of American politics.

       THE DECLINE OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY: A VIEW FROM ABROAD

      Many observers saw the 2015–2016 election cycle as evidence of the decline of American democracy. In their view, the deterioration of American democracy manifested itself in the growth of income inequality in the United States; the prominent role of the commercial and sensationalistic media in the political campaigns; the growing salience of social problems such as racism and xenophobia; and the apparent erosion of key institutions of the American political system. Many other topics were addressed during the presidential campaign—including international terrorism, drug consumption in America—but these four themes captured sustained public attention in a wide range of countries.

      As several authors in this volume argue, many foreigners held views of the United States and the 2016 presidential election that were far more critical than views held when Barack Obama was elected in 2008. This reflects a general pessimism about the route the United State has taken a sense of the impending collapse of the American political system, and a hope that their own countries will not follow the same path. This critical perspective is often associated more with Donald Trump than with Hillary Clinton (although she garnered her fair share of criticism). For many, Trump embodies the decay of the American system.

       Income Inequality and Money in Elections

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