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US Election 2016: runners on the path to the White House

Hillary Clinton

LAS VEGAS, NV - OCTOBER 19: Democratic presidential nominee former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton listens to Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump speak during the third U.S. presidential debate at the Thomas & Mack Center on October 19, 2016 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Tonight is the final debate ahead of Election Day on November 8. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Donald Trump
Donald Trump

But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light. – 1 Peter 2:9

 

In eleven days, the USA, the greatest democracy in the world will have a new president. The two leading contenders running a close campaign are reality television real estate mogul known aka Donald Trump on the Republican Party and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on the Democratic Party ticket. Clinton’s campaign is exhilarating, because she is the first woman ever to be the nominee of a major US political party, putting to the litmus test what the US has been exporting into other countries as promoting gender equality. An interesting poll this week has shown that if only Millennials (people aged 18-34 years) voted in the US elections, Hillary Clinton would get 490 electoral votes compared to Donald Trump’s 23.

 

While Donald Trump has waged a media manipulation campaign, his opponent Hillary Clinton, has to her credit a 30-year roadmap to this race. It is enhanced with her role as First Lady of Arkansas when her husband was Governor; First Lady of the US when her husband was US President (where she championed universal healthcare in 1993); served as NY Senator and then Secretary of State to the first African American Barack Obama. Additionally Clinton’s campaign trail has a stockpile of VVIP surrogates – back-ups, deputies, proxies – who are adding voice to the effort to make the most impressive historic follow-up to Barack Obama – electing a woman to the highest office of the leader of the free world. Among these are President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama, VP Joe Biden, VP nominee Tim Kaine, Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Saunders (whom Clinton beat in the primaries), former President Bill Clinton and former VP Al Gore, some Hollywood stars like Barbara Streisand, Robert DiNiro, Jay-Z, Oprah and Tyler Perry among many more.

 

She has won three of the three presidential debates, mainly due to the fact that she has shown she’s highly qualified, knows the issues such as climate change, foreign policy, social issues as health care access, marriage equality and equal pay for equal work, etc.

 

On the other side the Republican nominee, Donald Trump has run a populist campaign that has mustered a collision cause of one incident after another with his campaign team running after him either explaining away or defending his actions or words. Team Trump is made up of Trump, his running mate Mike Pence, former Speaker Newt Gingrich, New Jersey Governor Chris Christy and former NY City mayor Rudy Julian and paid campaign staffers.

 

Among the many Trump faux pars are:

“The idea of a fair election — of a peaceful transition of power — is not a Democratic value. It’s not a Republican value. It literally, is an American value.” Rebecca DeHart, executive director of the Democratic Party of Georgia has said. These are values that are wholesale writ large in many countries like Malawi, and are being tested, in some cases almost as if taking place in a Third World country, in this year’s Presidential race to the White House. This is especially due to the fact that Trump has manipulated (himself fascinated and a feature in media, albeit, antagonistic), the course-way of the elections, where the media has been awash 24/7 with the ridiculous comments he has unleashed to his benefit.

Freedom is an endless horizon and there are many roads that lead to it. Shirley Chisholm. First African American Presidential candidate. 1972

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