<< p>> And yet, there are numerous world leaders who have gotten a lot out of his presidency– in ideological support or specific policies– and who wont be happy if he loses in November. When Polish President Andrzej Duda was on the edge of losing re-election this summer season, he << a href=" https://www.gzeromedia.com/us-election-seen-from-poland-extremely-lucky-to-have-trump" target=" _ self">> made a beeline< for the White House for a photo-op that most likely assisted him to a narrow win. New Delhi has actually been really, really pleased with one particular aspect of Trumps policy: his difficult line on China. When Trump won in 2016, Russian lawmakers << a href=" https://www.pri.org/stories/2016-11-09/russian-leaders-literally-cheer-trumps-victory" target=" _ blank">> popped champagne<. < p><> < em>> Want to understand more about how the world sees the US election?
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> And yet, there are numerous world leaders who have actually gotten a lot out of his presidency– in ideological support or specific policies– and who wont be pleased if he loses in November. Lets go to some of Trumps highest-profile fans.< < p><> < strong>> Brazil. < In 2018, an unknown, far-right legislator called Jair Bolsonaro swept to power with a brand name of provocative anti-establishment politics so similar to the US presidents that he earned the nickname "Trump of the Tropics." Whats more, Trumps ridicule for ecological regulation has actually helped Bolsonaro to avoid wider global censure for motivating Amazon deforestation. However just as Trumps victory helped to legitimize rightwing populism around the globe, says Brazilian commentator Guga Chacra, Trumps << a href=" https://www.gzeromedia.com/a-referendum-for-the-whole-world-global-voices-on-the-us-election" target=" _ self">> loss could injure Bolsonaros own re-electio< n bid for 2022. < < p><> < strong>> The illiberal Europeans.< Much of Western Europe is fed up with Trump, but the avowedly "illiberal" rightwing nationalist federal governments in Poland and Hungary are impassioned admirers. When Polish President Andrzej Duda was on the brink of losing re-election this summertime, he << a href=" https://www.gzeromedia.com/us-election-seen-from-poland-extremely-lucky-to-have-trump" target=" _ self">> made a beeline< for the White House for a photo-op that probably helped him to a narrow win. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, meanwhile, has already << a href=" https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/9/21/hungarys-pm-orban-endorses-trumps-re-election-bid" target=" _ blank">> openly backed< Trump for re-election. < < p><> < strong>> Israel.< Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has bet huge on the Trump administration, and its settled. No American president in current memory has actually been as accommodating to Israels aims-- whether in acknowledging its control of the Golan Heights, leaving of the Iran nuclear offer, moving the United States embassy to Jerusalem, or brokering the normalization of ties with the UAE and Bahrain. As a result, Trump is extremely popular with Israelis, and he included prominently in Bibis own re-election campaign this summer season. Netanyahu now faces growing demonstrations-- along with sticking around graft charges-- and he can ill-afford to see Trump fall from power, Tel Aviv-based analyst Neri Zilber just recently << a href=" https://www.gzeromedia.com/us-election-seen-from-israel-a-domestic-political-issue-here" target=" _ self">> told< us. < < p><> < strong>> India.< New Delhi has actually been very, extremely delighted with one particular aspect of Trumps policy: his difficult line on China. India has actually had testy ties with Beijing throughout the years, and they are becoming worse as the two nations now jockey for 21st century Asian supremacy. While previous United States administrations had talked a big video game on China but then gone soft behind closed doors, Trump, << a href=" https://www.gzeromedia.com/us-election-seen-from-india-trump-was-willing-to-break-china" target=" _ self">> states< Pramit Pal Chaudhuri of the Hindustan Times, "was willing to break China." < < p><> < strong>> Russia.< When Trump won in 2016, Russian lawmakers << a href=" https://www.pri.org/stories/2016-11-09/russian-leaders-literally-cheer-trumps-victory" target=" _ blank">> popped champagne<. 4 years later, the bilateral relationship is as toxic as ever-- the US has actually imposed more sanctions while leaving of arms control treaties that Moscow wants to renegotiate. Still, Trump has actually been fantastic for Vladimir Putin in a more basic sense: Trumps view is that worldwide politics has to do with deals rather than worths and he thinks America has no service playing global police officer. All of that lines up well with Putins vision of a multipolar world in which US power is substantially reduced. If Trump loses, Putin would need to contend with a more standard internationalist president in Joe Biden. < < p>> But lets be severe: what Putin most likely wants<< em> > most<, whoever eventually wins, is a disputed election that further weakens confidence in American democracy. < < p><> < em>> Want to know more about how the world sees the United States election? Take a look at our whole project on it– interviews with residents in 24 different nations– < a href=" https://www.gzeromedia.com/a-referendum-for-the-whole-world-global-voices-on-the-us-election" target=" _ self"><> < em>> here< < em>>! <.