BY J.A.
WHEN Barack Obama proffered his election-day olive
branch to a divided country on November 8th, it sounded rather trite: “No
matter what happens, the sun will rise in the morning.” But in the dark of a
night that, state by state, delivered a coruscating verdict on Mr Obama’s
legacy and elected Donald Trump to the White House, those words started almost
to feel optimistic.
Most pundits had predicted a comfortable victory for
Mr Trump’s Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton. Opinion polls put her around four
percentage points ahead, and her paths to the necessary 270 electoral college
votes looked easier and more numerous than the narrow way Mr Trump seemed to
have mapped for himself.
Early voting returns, which suggested a heavy turnout by Hispanics, whom Mr Trump has frightened and offended, seemed to confirm that advantage. So did the first exit polls in the dozen or so battleground states, some of which contained snippets to suggest voters considered Mr Trump unelectable. Polls for ABC News suggested 61% of voters considered him unqualified to be president; only 34% said he had the right personality and temperament. But they went ahead and elected him anyway.
Early voting returns, which suggested a heavy turnout by Hispanics, whom Mr Trump has frightened and offended, seemed to confirm that advantage. So did the first exit polls in the dozen or so battleground states, some of which contained snippets to suggest voters considered Mr Trump unelectable. Polls for ABC News suggested 61% of voters considered him unqualified to be president; only 34% said he had the right personality and temperament. But they went ahead and elected him anyway.
As polling stations closed in a slow ripple across
America, east to west, television networks began calling a predictable roster
of results based on exit polls and early voting. Maryland, Massachusetts and
New Jersey stayed blue; Oklahoma, South Carolina and Tennessee remained red.
But then Mr Trump changed the script by taking an early lead in a trio of
important swing states, Florida, North Carolina and Ohio, which he never lost.
Along the way, Mrs Clinton suffered a scare in Virginia, where she had won or
tied 86 of the past 91 polls, before being saved by a late surge of support
from the state’s northern suburbs of Washington, D.C. Yet by the time results
started coming in from right across the Midwest the electoral trajectory seemed
clear.
Mr Trump tore through the Rust Belt states, such as
Iowa, Ohio and Wisconsin, turning red a swath of states that had not voted for
a Republican presidential nominee in decades—including Pennsylvania, which last
voted Republican in 1992, Michigan which last went red in 1988, and Wisconsin,
which had been blue since 1984. Mrs Clinton had hardly bothered to campaign in
the latter two states, where almost every poll gave her a solid lead; she did
not even visit Wisconsin after the primaries.
There was a consistency, too, in what was fuelling Mr
Trump’s success. The Republican did better than his immediate predecessors in
places with large concentrations of whites, especially in rural and semi-rural
counties, and among men. Exit polls suggested he won the votes of 60% of white
men and 52% of white women. He won whites without a college degree by 39
points—his predecessor Mitt Romney won them by 26 points when losing to Barack
Obama in 2012. In Florida this outperformance allowed him to do better than Mr
Romney had in 51 of the state’s 67 counties.
Meanwhile, Mrs Clinton fared worse than Mr Obama in
almost every voter group. She led with non-whites by some 50 points; Mr Obama
beat Mr Romney by 61. She won 54% of younger voters (almost 10% of whom voted
for a third-party candidate), while Mr Obama had won 64% of them. Most
conspicuously she did far less well in the major urban centres where Democratic
voters are congregated than Mr Obama had. In Philadelphia, where Mrs Clinton
held a massive rally on November 7th, at which her husband Bill, Mr Obama and
his wife Michelle, and Bruce Springsteen all performed, she won 46,000 fewer
votes than Mr Obama had in 2012. Hate Mr Trump as they did, many of Mr Obama’s
voters, it seems, just could not bring themselves to vote for the unexciting
and reviled alternative that Mrs Clinton presented them with.
The repercussions of Mr Trump’s victory will be
enormous—they seem to grow bigger with every passing second of contemplation.
Mrs Clinton ran a lavishly funded and highly professional campaign, using the
sophisticated voter identification and mobilisation methods perfected by Mr
Obama. Mr Trump raised less money, had little organisation to speak of in many
states, and relied largely on social media and an outsized reality television
persona to push his authoritarian and protectionist agenda. He was endorsed by
only a tiny handful of newspapers and tipped for success by almost no serious
pundit. Barely anyone gave him a chance. Yet, soon after the results started
flooding in, his eventual victory hardly looked in doubt.
It is one of the most dramatic electoral upsets
America, or anywhere, has ever seen. America’s next president will be a man who
led a racist campaign to discredit the incumbent, Mr Obama. While campaigning,
he abused women, the disabled, Hispanics and foreigners. He advocated using
torture, and nuclear bombs, said his opponent was corrupt and possibly a
murderer, and swore that, if elected, he would lock her up. Almost half of
American voters have now given Mr Trump an opportunity to follow through on
that threat. Who knows; perhaps he will.
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