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violen9ce (nm2678@naver.com ) (¿¬¶ôó : nm26979j4737.com ) 12¿ù 16ÀÏ 5½Ã 53ºÐ Á¶È¸¼ö: 122 |
Beijing is right to point out that there are
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For the most part American ¿¡¸£¸Þ½º¿©¼ºÀÇ·ù=¿¡¸£¸Þ½º¿©¼ºÀÇ·ù politics exists in its own bubble with its own preoccupations. But every now and then something that happens in a foreign country intrudes. And pokes its nose in. Big time.
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The 12 December 2019 UK General Election might be such a moment for the US Democratic Party - just as British politics imposed ¼ÃÊÀÌ»ç¾÷ü itself on the US presidential election on 23 June 2016, when the British people voted for Brexit. Coincidentally, Donald Trump arrived in Scotland ¼®°üµ¿Æ÷ÀåÀÌ»ç the following day (not the day before as he has repeatedly claimed) and what the British people had just done was a galvanising moment in his campaign, a light bulb moment, as he prepared to face the American people five months later.
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So what should Democrats learn from the misery that befell the Labour Party last Thursday night? And more particularly can they afford to have È«Äá¸íǰ°¡¹æ È«Äá¸íǰÁö°© È«Äá·¹Çø®Ä«=È«Äá¸íǰ°¡¹æ È«Äá¸íǰÁö°© È«Äá·¹Çø®Ä« Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren as their candidate and stand a chance of defeating Donald Trump in 2020 after the shellacking meted out to Jeremy Corbyn and his brand of radical, left-wing policies? |
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