The recently concluded United States
Presidential election has been adjudged as the most rancorous in the 238
years history of the country. Speculations were rife that Mrs. Hillary
Clinton would make history as the first female president of the US, but
against all odds, a politically inexperienced Donald Trump, a storming
petrel upturned all permutations. Jude Igbanoi examines why and how the
loser lost and the winner won
The recently concluded United States
Presidential election has been adjudged as the most rancorous in the 238
years history the country. Speculations were rife that Mrs. Hilary
Clinton would make history as the first female president of the US, but
against all odds, a politically inexperienced Donald Trump, a storming
petrel upturned all permutations. Jude Igbanoi examines why and how the
loser lost and winner won
That Mrs. Hilary Clinton didn’t win the
US presidential election has many still pondering on what really went
wrong, but for some, the former US Secretary of State and former Senator
would go down in history as the first female to have really created an
impact in the race to the White House. Hillary Clinton no doubt
commanded media attention and had a better control of the media
throughout the campaigns leading to the epic battle for Capitol Hill.
Not a few took it for granted that the tough talking, battle hardened
and eminently experienced, former First Lady of the United States of
America would clinch the ticket to govern the most powerful nation on
earth come January 2017.
But November 9, 2016 became a monumental
watershed in the political history of the US. This was the day a
political neophyte, perceived roughneck, inexperienced Donald Trump
without enviable credentials, and no perpendicular moral standing, stood
reason on its head by the winning the ticket to the White House on the
platform of the Republican Party. This was against all permutations,
expectations and calculations. There were prophesies and purported
divine pronouncements that Clinton would effortlessly walk victoriously
into the White House as the next President of the USA. This was not to
be as the American people spoke loud and clear that they would rather
settle for tempestuous Trump with all his imperfections, foibles,
failings and human frailties.
The Hidden Truths Behind the Peoples Choice of Trump
Despite the undoubted visibility of
Hilary Clinton, Trump prevailed in spite of himself over Hillary, not
because he is anywhere near what could be described as a presidential
material by American standards, but simply because as many have said,
there was a divine intervention in the affairs of the world’s most
powerful nation.
It has also been pointed out by political
experts and pundits have been ruminating and pondering over why Mrs.
Clinton didn’t win. According to Joseph Mattera, an internationally
known author, activist and theologian; Clinton didn’t win because
“first, her Supreme Court Justice Selections, her view on the Freedom of
Religion, her view on Abortion, her Constant email Scandals, her
Foreign Policy which seemed disastrous etc.’
Mrs. Clinton had been First Lady, US
Secretary of State and a Senator, yet those matchless and unrivalled
credentials couldn’t get her there, and a keen observer of American
politics noted succinctly that Americans were just not prepared for a
female president. Not at this time. Could the American society be said
to be chauvinistic and gender insensitive? Not quite so, it therefore
would mean that Clinton came before her time. So some said.
There also allegations that Hilary is
part of a network of terrorist organisations, which have made the world
most unsafe in the past decade. Her connections to these organisations
have been subject of debates, with reports from global media outfits
like Wikileaks, who had churned out a retinue of reports linking her to
these organisations, including alleged funding from the Clinton
Foundations to terrorists.
Another of Clinton’s numerous sins
included defending a child rapist and laughing about it. She illegally
accepted millions of dollars from foreign governments through the
Clinton Foundation. She was allegedly endorsed by the incumbent
President, Barack Obama, who is on record to have muscled the country
into passing the Same-Sex Marriage Law, under questionable
circumstances.
The Role of Electoral College
Another argument is that US electoral
collegiate system played a negative role in why Clinton failed at the
polls. History has it that the Founding Fathers had something particular
in mind when they set up the U.S. presidential election system.
Americans call it the presidential
obstacle course and the Electoral College and some call it the odd
political contraption. The argument is that, after all, state governors
in all 50 states are elected by popular vote; why not do the same for
the president? The quirks of the Electoral College system were exposed
last week when Donald Trump secured the presidency with an Electoral
College majority, even as Hillary Clinton took a narrow lead in the
popular vote.
According to another political expert,
‘the founding fathers chose the Electoral College over direct election
in order to balance the interests of high-population and low- population
states. But the deepest political divisions in America have always run,
not between big and small states, but between the North and the South,
and between the coasts and the interior.
‘One Founding-era argument for the
Electoral College stemmed from the fact that ordinary Americans across a
vast continent would lack sufficient information to choose directly and
intelligently among leading presidential candidates.’
To win this year, Trump didn’t
necessarily win the most votes, but he won the most votes in the right
places to become the 45th President of the United States of America.
Under the Electoral College, that’s what matters. In the final analysis
therefore, Clinton won the popular vote, but lost the election.
The Campaigns
The groundswell of spirited campaigns saw
the candidates cross swords and crisscrossed the entire length and
breadth of 50 states, canvassing for votes from rural peasants, city
dwellers, the poor and middle class Americans. But the battle wasn’t
really in the field; it was mainly in the media, with Clinton
maintaining an unprecedented visibility as her party and campaign
organisation had an unquestionable control of the mainstream media.
Starting on a rather shaky leg, most did
not give Trump any chance as he stumbled and fumbled in political
misspoke unguarded utterances. But picking the Republican Party
nomination saw him refining and retooling his machinery, making him
better prepared to face the real battle.
But a more experienced Clinton, who had
spent over three decades in the corridors of power had her own colossal
political luggage, including her actions and inaction while serving
Secretary of State.
A general overview of the entire campaign
process shows that the candidates unwittingly gravitated away from
addressing serious national issues and their manifestoes, but rather
launched personal attacks on their persons, families and associates.
As things would turn out, most agreed
that the election was devoid of fraud, manipulations and violence as
some had anticipated in both camps. In contrast, the hand of God was
seen as intervening in the affairs of the United States. The
predominantly Christian America saw Christians of Pentecostal and
orthodox persuasions coming together in prayers, seeking divine
intervention in the affairs the nation. They prayed the Democrats out of
power for their perceived ungodly acts, including same-sex marriage,
outlawing prayers in public school, legalising abortion, etc. There was
also a global network of Christian bodies that stood in prayers with the
Republicans and the result is what transpired on November 9, 2016.
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