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Asia and the Trump administration 2.0
US-China relations and, more immediately, the people chosen to execute the president’s policies will be key to how countries in the region will be affected by Trump’s comeback.
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President-elect Donald Trump on election night in West Palm Beach, on Nov 5. Remarkably little was said about foreign policy during the campaign.
PHOTO: NYTIMES
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In this century, no election has been followed as intently throughout the world as the US presidential election of 2024. That it was so closely watched affirms, like it or not, that the United States is the decisive power globally, and can profoundly impact the direction of war and peace, alliances and partnerships, trade and investment, climate change and global governance. The choice for the American people was between two candidates, two different world views and who connected better with voters and their primary concerns.
Donald Trump reiterated his America First policy of the 2016 campaign and highlighted immigration and the economy as key issues. He repeatedly asked the voters: “Are you better off today than you were four years ago?” On Nov 5, he ushered in a red wave that’s almost certain to hand him a trifecta victory

