What to watch from Canada as U.S. race to midterms showdown enters final month
WASHINGTON — Campaigning politicians say it all the time: the coming election will be the most important in a generation.
These days, amid the cultural division, political gridlock and social instability in the United States, every trip to the polls — including midway through a president’s term — feels more consequential than the last.
“I am always a bit concerned, upset, chagrined that when we have an election, the world has to worry about the outcome,” Bruce Stokes, a visiting senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund in D.C., told a recent discussion panel.
“When we are electing a Congress or a president, that Congress and president has a disproportionate influence on what happens in the world.”