The US election has lastly come to an finish with Republican nominee Donald Trump clinching a decisive victory. Trump captured a transparent majority of votes within the Electoral School and, for the primary time, additionally gained the favored vote. Vice President Kamala Harris, a shock entrant within the race after President Joe Biden’s determination to withdraw, misplaced a intently contested election, marking the second time in three elections {that a} feminine Democratic presidential nominee didn’t topple Trump.
Final week on Grand Tamasha, a weekly podcast on Indian politics and coverage coproduced by HT and the Carnegie Endowment for Worldwide Peace, Sadanand Dhume of the Wall Road Journal and the American Enterprise Institute and Tanvi Madan of the Brookings Establishment joined host Milan Vaishnav to debate the implications of the election for Indian People, for India, and for US-India relations.
Some of the attention-grabbing traits this, based on Dhume, was “racial depolarization” — or the concept that ethnic or racial teams in America are not polarized within the course of both the Democrats or the Republicans. As an alternative, exit ballot information counsel that minorities are voting for Republicans in way more vital numbers than lately.
Citing latest survey information from the Indian American Attitudes Survey, Dhume remarked that of respondents who expressed enthusiasm for Kamala Harris, solely 7% mentioned it was for due to her id. “So, it both signifies that Indian People have grow to be very enlightened and are not paying loads of consideration to id, or they felt that Kamala Harris perhaps actually didn’t play up her Indian id as a lot as they’d have appreciated or they didn’t really feel the sense of identification they could have felt with one other candidate,” he mentioned. “I don’t have the reply, however I believe it’s a very attention-grabbing query.”
In the case of coverage, Dhume argued that Trump 2.0 can be about finishing the unfinished enterprise of the primary time period. “Should you take a look at his first picks, for instance, when it comes to issues like immigration — Stephen Miller (as deputy chief of employees for coverage), Tom Homan (as “border czar”), Kristi Noem (as homeland safety secretary) — it’s clear that staunching the circulate throughout the southern border goes to be his primary precedence,” mentioned Dhume. “I believe we’re going to see one thing that’s comparable in a coverage course however is stylistically completely different.”
In the case of the US-India relationship, Madan posited that India is in a a lot better place than different nations. For starters, the Indian aspect has vital expertise with Trump. They know they must be extra versatile and extra adaptable. Second, as a result of India just isn’t an ally, it doesn’t need to take care of Trump’s sturdy emotions towards “freeloading allies”. Based on Madan, India will body its place as a rustic trying to “burden-share” with america. “They are going to body asks about know-how sharing or defense-industrial collaboration as ‘assist us show you how to’,” she remarked. Lastly, although there is perhaps problematic factors of friction with Trump — commerce and immigration, as an illustration — India just isn’t a “downside nation” from Trump’s perspective, defined Madan.