If ever there was an ideal demonstration of the amount of
influence the United States of America has over the rest of the world it is
undoubtedly the impact which the run up to its election has. The fact that
there are more elections going on than just the Presidential one, more
candidates that Mitt Romney and Barack Obama, seems to have been missed out of
the global enthusiasm.
When America does something it tends to be on a huge scale. Everything
is a show, everything is turned into a show. When they are electing their
President why would anyone assume that it would be any different?
With the two key candidates racking up something in the
region of £2billion dollars, or as Mitt Romney may describe it “pocket money”,
it is understandable that they would generate a reasonable amount of interest.
As a Brit the way American elections play out is something
which at once amazes me and then amuses me, it is just so different from our
own relatively grey and dull affairs. The concept of attack ads for instance is
just something which wouldn’t really work in the United Kingdom. It may be that
we are just so cynical that we always look at the worst of our politicians but
they just wouldn’t have the same impact in this country.
Whereas in America politicians are seen as larger than life
symbols of a nation in this country they are seen as somewhat grey and
uninspiring for the most part. When American politicians take to the airwaves
they are filled with passion. They spout memorable and carefully crafted quotes;
they espouse rhetoric worthy of a blockbuster script. When politicians in the
UK try something similar it is “I’m a Celebrity...get me out of here” and they
get suspended from the party. It just isn’t the same really.
From our perspective across the pond it does seem that
Americans vote with a passion which we Brits just cannot seem to muster. If our
politicians spent $2 billion on campaigning they would be roundly demonised. Once
there may have been a loyalty to the party, a passion for politics, a sense of
duty in Britain, once people felt that voting was important. Nowadays, however,
it seems at times as though no-one cares anymore, and that includes the
politicians we vote for.
In America it can seem to us poor out of touch Brits that
any form of election is an opportunity for a pageant. In Britain we are rapidly
approaching electing Police and Crime Commissioners and no-one seems to know
who the candidates are, let alone what a Police and Crime Commissioner actually
does. There just doesn’t seem to be the
passion for politics in Britain that there is in America, perhaps that is why
we follow our cousins in America so closely, they get to have the excitement we
miss out on and then some.
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