Professor Markus Kienscherf, John. F. Kennedy Institute for North American Studies, Department of Sociology
“US-American society looks likely to break under the weight of two central contradictions. Social inequality was on the increase even before the coronavirus pandemic and has only gotten worse since. Structural racism isn’t just expressed in the form of police violence against Black people, but is also a major factor in the growing division between rich and poor. The Trump administration is both a symptom and a cause of these developments.
The Trump phenomenon should be viewed as white supremacy’s last stand against the fundamental transformation of America, which is changing not only American culture, but also its demographic structure. From 2040 onward, non-white people will probably make up the majority of the US population.
So for the vote on November 3, two questions are of paramount importance. First, how many white voters are more interested in white supremacy than in democratic institutions? And second, on the flipside, what proportion of the electorate with an African American or Latin American background will turn out to cast their vote?”