Opinion: American democracy at peril?

G GOWTHAM
It appears that unanticipated developments will continue to plague the largest bulwark of democracy in the globe. The loss experienced by the Joe Biden administration in the US midterm elections on november 8 may be the cause of the most recent in the series. Every ruling party experiences the effects of incumbency in mid-term elections in a democratic government. However, the election results in the instance of President Joe Biden seemed to indicate that voters also penalised him for the highest inflation in 40 years, in addition to the incumbent status.

The Democrats' victory was at a considerably lower level than they had anticipated, which was a bright spot. The outcomes also suggested that voters rejected Republican attempts to outlaw abortion and question the nation's voting system.

Moving forward

At a time when hundreds of Republican candidates supported former President Donald Trump's baseless assertions that the 2020 presidential election was rigged, President Biden had cast the election as a test of US democracy. Republicans might impede the remainder of Biden's term by obstructing initiatives like abortion rights and opening probes into his administration and family thanks to their narrow house majority.

Recognizing the truth, Biden has stated he is willing to cooperate with Republicans. He chatted with Kevin McCarthy, the head of the republican party in the house, who has declared his intention to seek the office of Speaker of the house if the party gains control of the body. The American people have made it clear, according to Biden, that they expect Republicans to be ready to cooperate with me as well.

McCarthy, the next speaker of the house, may find it challenging to control the divisive Republican caucus, which has a hard-right faction that has little use for compromise. Next year, Republicans might demand expenditure cuts in exchange for extending the country's borrowing ceiling, setting off the financial markets.

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