American Presidential Elections in a Comparative Perspective. Группа авторов

American Presidential Elections in a Comparative Perspective - Группа авторов


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campaign and presidency, TV continues to be a main source of information for American voters. According to a survey conducted by Pew Research Center, from November 29 to December 12, 2016, 54 percent of the voters said that they obtained most of their election news from television. Of the Trump voters, 40 percent mainly relied on Fox News, while Clinton supporters relied on varied sources.52 For Thomas E. Patterson, news coverage was fundamentally “negative in tone and light in policy,” confirming a pattern first established in 1984. Trump received more coverage than Clinton did, maybe because of his sensationalist statements or because “his words and actions were ideally suited to journalists’ story needs.” The 2016 election confirmed the post-1970 tendency for “the horserace” to outweigh policy coverage: 42 percent of news reports were about the horserace; 17 percent about controversies; 24 percent other and only 10 percent about policy.53

       TEARS IN THE AMERICAN SOCIAL FABRIC

      Many inside and outside the United States believe that the United States has a longstanding, historically rooted, and fundamental problem: racism. From the early stages of the colonial period, the institution of chattel slavery became a central basis of the southern economy, securing labor to maintain the plantation-based production. Slavery and the subsequent legal discrimination against African Americans were perceived by many outsiders as inconsistent with the United States’ discourse of freedom. Today, in the eyes of many foreign observers, African Americans and other minorities have been mistreated and denied full access to the American democratic system. Overseas observers are often aware of the fact that even after the Civil Rights movement in the 1960s many forms of intolerance and discrimination persisted.

      The issue of race


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