The United States: Divided in More Ways Than One
Polarization on trade, security and immigration hobbles the U.S. and its major parties, especially Republicans.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Polarization on trade, security and immigration hobbles the U.S. and its major parties, especially Republicans.
Special to Business Standard The future role of the United States in the world economy has been a recurring theme in the 2016 American presidential election. Republican candidate Donald Trump has called for a 45 per cent tariff on US imports from China. All of the leading presidential candidates from both parties have criticised the […]
Presidential elections are almost always about the economy. 2016 is shaping up to be an exception.
Asia is once again on the minds of the leading U.S. presidential candidates and the American public. Americans’ negative views of China are as strong as they have ever been.
With an unstable public mood on both sides of the Atlantic, terrorism could prove a political wildcard in both the United States and in Europe in the months ahead.
The U.S. presidential campaign is dominated by global issues including trade, immigration and terrorism – and voters have mixed feelings.
Recent polling shows a growing divide.
Australia, Canada, Germany and the UK are among the other countries where there are partisan clashes on climate change issues.
As the American and Indian publics warm toward one another, a head of state affinity may lead to stronger ties.
Despite their increasingly upbeat economic mood, Europeans show growing support for nontraditional political parties critical of the EU.
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