Where Mr Trump was strong was in the first 30 minutes when he lambasted Mrs Clinton on a slew of free trade agreements that to say the least did little for America, but that was his high point. Issues which he might have skewered her on — she was vulnerable on the email brouhaha — he failed to exploit and she anyway dismissed somewhat airily parrying with his failure to release his tax returns and the eternally-embarrassing ‘birther’ issue. The strength of the Trump campaign both in its candidate and its origins lies in a widespread and deep disillusionment with mainstream politics and politicians in the US. Unconventional as he may be Mr Trump is for the first time, possibly ever in America, an alternative to the polished and Teflon-coated career politician as exemplified by Mrs Clinton. He plays well to an angry and many would argue marginalised primarily white group that are poor, often jobless or in low-paid work and who do not see themselves represented in the corridors of power. Deeply flawed he may be but so is Mrs Clinton herself, neither the perfect choice for arguably the most important — and difficult — job in the world, the Presidency of the United States of America. The markets may like Mrs Clinton today but the people may like Mr Trump even better on Tuesday November 8th. In finest show-biz traditions this one really is a cliffhanger.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 28th, 2016.
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