It was inevitable that violence related to one of the major contenders aspiring to be President of the most militarily and economically powerful country in the globe, the USA, would break out. It has been the most intensely charged and potentially most consequential US presidential election campaign in modern times.
Former President Donald Trump, a figure of self-generated contention and controversy, who revels in the spotlight, his fist pump to his supporters depicting his strength, and invincibility, even as his usually manicured hairstyle is disturbed, has adorned the front page of newspapers across the US and the world after what is being referred as an assassination on his life.
He could not have required a more dramatic uplift to his campaign, which is already travelling ahead of President Joseph Biden.
His image, now fortified to his supporters as a virtuous leader, wronged by his opponents, and pilloried by the media has received this boon; the gods of political campaigning have smiled on him. His supporters and the Republican party must feel assured that after this incident, their candidate will open an even greater distance over incumbent President Biden.
Violence in American politics and society over the last decade has brought the country to this moment. Assassination attempts, including successful ones going back 159 years to the most notable of American presidents, Abe Lincoln and to the popular John F Kennedy in 1963, with Ronald Reagan seriously wounded in a 1983 attempt on his life, have been part of the American political lore.
In the present, the build-up to this year’s presidential election, with four months to a new “D Day”, the experts, the columnists, the media reporters and pundits are filing stories and opinions daily indicating the contest is whether or not the US will survive as a democracy if Trump were to be elected; or if defeated, whether an 81-year-old President Biden, who has been fluffing his lines, facing serious memory loss and experiencing verbal challenges, can survive a four-year term. And if not, will an elected vice-president Kamala Harris be accepted as President?
Beyond the Americans pondering the outcome of the election, there are deep geo-political and indeed civilizational consequences arising out of this election for the world society of the 21st century. Questions revolve around whether there will be an intensification of conflict between the USA and Russia; will the USA will be able to retain its economic supremacy against the push of China; the consequences of an assured internal conflict in the US whichever candidate is declared winner, with the real and predicted possibility of directed violence if Trump’s party, the Republicans, were to be defeated? For Trump and the Republicans, a declared victory for their party will be the only indication of a fairly contested election.
For the conflicts in the Middle East, in Russia-Ukraine, in Syria and elsewhere in which the US has a military and political input, the stakes are high. A victory for Trump will place the Russia-China, North Korea alliance in something of a commanding position; however, the actions of these quixotic and determined leaders of these countries are well-nigh impossible to predict.
The big question is whether or not a liveable world environment will prevail in its wake, whatever the outcome.