And almost a third are displeased. None the less, the President-elect’s standing is up: almost half our readers hoped Clinton would beat him.
Moving away from the current system would make America’s polarisation worse, not better.
Only in a place or time where you hadn’t witnessed the effects on people of a lack of choice might you be willing to countenance it yourself.
Castro’s apologists find it too painful to admit they’ve raised a feeling of belonging above moral principle.
“Donald Trump is going to be our president. We owe him an open mind and the chance to lead.”
May, Johnson, Hannan, Davidson, Fabricant and others give their thoughts. Plus, has anyone checked on Sir Simon Burns?
We will have a pro-Leave President and may get a trade deal. But we face a threat to the security umbrella that has protected us and our neighbours since the war.
Trump will soon lead what is still the most powerful country in the world, and we shouldn’t break with it until or unless we have to.
“I will be President for all Americans.”
It’s easy, even comforting, to stick a simple narrative onto the election result. But it would be a mistake.
“He promises us a new beginning.”
“We will have a friend in the White House, someone who likes this country.”
Like the Conservatives after 1997, Corbyn’s Labour and some Remainers, America’s Democrats are failing to learn from their mistakes.