By Mildred Robertson
The 2016 Presidential election
will be noted as perhaps the most bizarre in the annals of American history.
This distinction will not be achieved because, for the first time, a woman will
head the ticket of a major party as the presidential nominee, although that is
a noteworthy detail. What has made this election unique is the nature of the
race itself.
The country faces numerous
challenges that are vital to our continued stature as the premier super-power
on the world stage. We are facing economic challenges as we wrestle to balance
domestic and international trade to fully participate in the global economy
while creating a robust business climate within our borders. We must continue
to work to create international partnerships that will support fair trade
practices and create good-paying American jobs.
The browning of America has
pushed racial tension to new heights, and racial profiling and militaristic
police tactics have pitted the Black and brown communities against municipal
governments across the nation. While still the most affluent nation in the
world, according to Pearson's Global Education
Index, America ranks 14th in the world for “cognitive skills
and educational attainment.” A Bloomberg poll ranks health care
efficiency in the US at 44 out of 51 countries surveyed. The International Centre for Prison Studies
states that America has more prisoners than any other country in the world. All
of these issues and more loom large on our horizon. These are the issues that
the next President of the United States will face as he or she strives to move
us forward toward peace, growth and prosperity.
So, it is bizarre that the
nominees for the 2016 presidential election and the media are talking about a
beauty queen’s weight, women’s menstrual cycles, the relevance of the size of a
man’s hands to other body parts, how one might be weak following a bout with
pneumonia, or how it is not nice to poke fun at those with disabilities.
Granted, these topics were all introduced by Republican nominee
Donald Trump as part of the presidential discourse. But both the media and the
opposing party have allowed Trump to set the tone for this presidential race.
First, the media seemed to think
that ratings were more important than the final patriotism as they gave Trump
millions of dollars in free advertising as he said one outrageous thing after
the other, guaranteeing him prime-time news coverage on a regular basis. He was
allowed to introduce myriad falsehoods into public discourse that an uneducated
and unsophisticated portion of the electorate embraced as gospel fact. Those in
the Republican Party who didn’t believe his many falsehoods eventually embraced
the fact that a lot of the Republican base were willing to give Trump a pass as
long as he was able to defeat Hillary Clinton, and just got on board.
Meanwhile, Clinton wrestles with
a millennial vote unfamiliar with her true record. Many of them have come to
accept an obfuscated representation of who she is and what she has stood for
over the years. Clinton has failed to break through years of negative media
directed at her and the Clinton machine, and she holds an unenthusiastic lead
among Blacks and Latinos.
So, with only a lukewarm Obama
coalition behind her, she has taken to poking the bear rather than staying on
message. This tactic has impeded her efforts to clearly enunciate
the challenges that face our country and express how her policies will address
them.
She has learned that she can’t
focus on what appears to me to be a pretty solid platform, and make headway
with the electorate. But when she pushes Trump’s buttons she can make him veer
off the script that has been carefully crafted to make him seem more acceptable
to the reluctant party liners who have pledged “never Trump.” All it takes is a
poke at his wealth, or his misogyny to send Trump off into a Twitter storm that
will ultimately result in bad press and a drop in the polls.
I get it. Poll numbers and bad
media mean something in an election. But it is an election, folks, for the
highest office in the United States; the most powerful country in the world.
This election is far too important than to hinge on emotions. It is too
important to be decided by media coverage, or the antics of a carnival barker.
We have real problems that need
real solutions. The fact that someone as incompetent, dishonest, racist,
misogynistic and unstable as Donald Trump is one step away from the presidency
is more than bizarre. It is dangerous.
There is just a little more than
a month before most Americans go to the polls to elect the 45th
President of the United States. Let’s pray that the majority of Americans can
dig through all the drama, falsehoods, and knee-jerk emotions that have
dominated this election. Let's hope that the majority of us can make a sound
judgment based on facts about what is best for our nation. Otherwise, on
November 9th we may wake up to a country in chaos—a country we don’t
even know. A bizarre America where facts don’t matter, leadership is
self-serving, aimless and corrupt, and the average American is left, like many
enterprises with whom Trump did business, holding the bag.