tv DW News Deutsche Welle November 8, 2022 11:00pm-11:31pm CET
11:00 pm
oh, rare natural spectacle improves world. the return of the spiky yellow with louse will ensure the survival of the entire ecosystem. ah, one of the many success stories from a bastion of biodiversity. st. helena starts november 18th on d. w. come have a t kaziz county. the highlights you every week in your inbox, subscribe. now with the midterm elections in the united states, they've usually not been a big story outside the united states. congressional seeds up for grabs, state governors races for decades. this has been considered a purely american affair, domestic democracy. we're not this talk today is voters in the u. s. caps there ballads. the world is watching. there's international interests because the outcome
11:01 pm
will impact every one. think climate change and the world is also worried. are these the mid terms of a democracy at work or of a democracy in disarray? i broke off in berlin. this is the day ah, re election is important. but this one, it feels almost like a presidential. if i hoping craig's like all the people i know that means they'll be able to make a difference to people to represent us are mostly, you know, octogenarians that are men. and i'd like there to be more diverse representations. the fate of our democracy is probably the top issue i'm hearing that will be taken over by radical our religious salad. it's pretty close. i'm hoping that citizens, such as myself, actually get our exercise their right to protect the democracy. if we don't god
11:02 pm
invoke, we're not going to have our voices heard to our viewers watching on p b. s. in the united states into all of you around the world. welcome that we begin the day and the final hours of election day in the united states. americans are casting their balance to day in mid term elections and the results could change the balance of power. will democrats maintain control of both houses of congress or will republicans retake power on capital hill? it would be a blow to president biden. yes and unexpected outcome, no history is full of mid term shall, lacking for the political party of the sitting president, ronald reagan, bill clinton rock obama. they all suffered mid term losses in congress. but this mid term election, it's different. it's unprecedented. most of the republican candidates on the balance have either questioned or outright denied the outcome of the last presidential election. they do not believe that joe biden is the legitimate
11:03 pm
u. s. president. democrats, including the president himself, have sounded the alarm warning that the future of democracy is at stake. well, who wins the midterms can make or break the rest of a president's time in office? and if the polling numbers are reliable, biden is poised to lose his democratic majority, at least in the house, if not the senate 2. now, americans are basically voting for a brand new congress, almost all $435.00 seats will bring it up here in the house of representatives. they are up for reelection. but in the senate, we only have $35.00 of the $100.00 seats that are up for grabs. this time. democrats need to hold on to practically every seat in order to maintain control of congress. that seems unlikely. all you have to do is just go back in time and you can see why this shows you right here. that the sitting president's party almost
11:04 pm
always takes a hit in mid term elections. you see it all the way going back to 946, and there are many unknowns this time around as well. the 2020 census means that this is the 1st national election with those newly redrawn voting districts. gerrymandering is alive and well thanks to both political parties. there are new voting rules in some places and while he may not be on the ballot this time, donald trump, he remains a force to be reckoned with. the picture that emerges after these mid terms and it may takes days or weeks before we have the final results. it will definitely send signals to the world signals about the presidential election coming up in 2024 and signals about the health and future of american democracy. this is the year we're going to take back the house. we're going to take back to said it, we're going to take back america. and in 2024. most importantly, we are going to take back our magnificent light. we
11:05 pm
known our bones are and markers is at risk. and we know that this is your moment to defend it. preserver, protect to choose it. every for young i can these understand the time stand up to the slowing left pulling. unity is right. one most important elections. you heard us time and again, i almost feel guilty repeated it. our lifetimes are going to be shaped by what happens. the next rear to 3 years. it's got a shape with the next couple decades look like. we have team coverage tonight of the mid term elections of joy. now by our corresponded in his po. she is in phoenix, arizona, and steph on is he mom? he is in washington dc. it's good to see both of you in just let me start with you . history is on the side of the republicans in these mid term elections. the party that controls the white house, the democrats, this time almost always loses seeds in the mid terms. is history going to repeat itself? in 2022 it's very likely brand just as you the showed us on the,
11:06 pm
on the map that normally the party which is in power loses at the house. and this is likely to happen this year again. but what is really interesting here in the state of arizona, which is so crucial, is one of these crucial states in the midterm, said a 3rd of all electrons are voters already accosted their mail in ballads before yesterday. and normally this is mainly democrats were due early voting so therefore, republicans are really in high alert and carry lake the, the, a republican, a candidate for governor, just costed her a ballot here behind me in this building. and she, as did donald trump already kind of try to hint out if the republican stones, when that's because they had such a hard time today, casting their ballot here in arizona. so definitely if the republicans will have a hard time here in arizona,
11:07 pm
we will hear that over and over again. that voter fraud happened. that's right over it before the fact almost trying to imply that that these votes have not been fair and, and free stuff on the me go to use the power equation in congress will most likely look very different after today. and that is a fact that the executive branch, the white house, cannot ignore what will the next 2 years of jo biden's presidency look like? well, very different from what it looks like until now. it will taste different, feel different, look different. why is that? because if the republicans take back both chambers of the house here of congress, then they can make the life of the executive, and that is the by demonstration, the white house, very difficult. on the other hand, of course you will have the president then um, you know, striking more with his veto pan. he can veto this legislation that legislation. so what you're looking at here and that is of course also a fear um,
11:08 pm
even of the electorate. he of people who vote now against the, by their ministration as it looks like with bringing more republicans into the representative house of representatives or inter senate and or into senate. um, what it looks like is partisan political warfare for the next 2 year. so nothing will get done. this has impact domestically and it of course has impact on international in international affairs. you mentioned environment rights, climate change, a ukraine, an aides and so on. i could go on and on and on. so it will half an impact in the united states outside of the united states is let's talk a little bit about messaging here, the democrats and joe by. they've campaigned on these mid terms on the future of democracy, being at stake. the republicans, on the other hand, they focused on inflation in the economy, which message has resounded most among voters there in arizona where you are
11:09 pm
well, we talked to tens of voters this morning. we went to a couple of voting stations and the majority definitely says it's the economy, it's inflation. this is the main message and this is what the republicans have been playing and, you know, brand, it is interesting if the election would have happened, let's say 4 or 5 or 6 weeks ago than maybe topics like abortion would have been much more important because and you also talked about that. a roby wade rather a national wide protection of abortion rights were over ruled by the supreme court . but this has changed. it's really the inflation, which is high here. it's the gas praises, it's the housing praise prices. so it will be very, very difficult to get the message across. well, joe biden try to do that here. it's so much more at stake than, than money or, or the economy. it's really the future of the democratic system here in this country. but this is the measure message which, which seems to be pretty complicated to bring across to the average roader. yet,
11:10 pm
initially you mentioned abortion after the u. s. supreme court overturned roe vs wade ending that constitutional right to an abortion. a lot of people predicted that that would be the issue that was going to carry democrats to victory, but there was also gun control the you've all the sco shooting the july, 4th, shooting near chicago. i want you to take a look at this video advocating more gun control in the u. s. that's been circulating on social media. i want to be fearful. every time i'm in an open area in a public place. i want to think about how completely vulnerable i am, while i'm closing my eyes to pray at my place of worship. i enjoy practicing semiannual lockdown, janelle, so 6 year old, don't fully understand what's happening. i go to the movies and making a mental note of every eggs in limine. i hope that our sat is interrupted by loud, passive sounds like hardly audiences, freeman or run for their lives. i want to think of the stem sir as a hiding place for my kid is tiffany. this is
11:11 pm
a very effective spot on social media regardless of where you stand to be the it gets to mix the point. the president has said that these mid terms are about more than just the economy, about inflation. the video kind of sums that up these are, these are existential. i'm issues with that in mind. talk to me about how polarized americans are on this election day and their inability or their ability to find common ground alone in this country for 22 years now. brand and i have not, not, and i went through 2020 to 2020 no b, l m. and all of that, i have not seen this country more polarized, deeply polarized and divide it than now really now at this midterm elections. and, you know, who knows what's coming in the next 2 years, but why is that? it's not just on the fringes that this society is radicalized itself. somehow it's
11:12 pm
not just the white supremacists or the their white wing, or the christian nationalists who are pushing or acting on the fringes of society. they're pushing into the middle and bring a somehow radicalism also into the middle, into the mainstream. and that is, i think, and will be a continuous and growing problem for this country. so when the democrats say like democracy is at stake, he and how our country is going forward in the next years. what the future of america is. i think that it, that is true and that includes gun control. by the way, you know, the democrats hold is the young voters, the so called jen z waif, because for them gun control you've all the columbine and any other school parkland . any other school shooting you want to mention in that regard, right? for them, this is a real, real big issue, and they were millions of them who had the right to vote for. so maybe that's a chance for their market, for the democrats actually not lose too badly,
11:13 pm
but we'll see you. we'll see if the, if those youngest of the voters, if they actually come out on this election day in is i want to talk a little bit about what we, we've seen in terms of threats, of violence against politicians. those threats of increased. there's been claims of, of more voter intimidation. there's been calls for violence if the election results are not in line with certain expectations from where you are in arizona. is this mid term election considered a bad omen for what is to come in 2024 snowbrite for me. what is kind of the worse omen if one can say so? is really the fact that there is hardly any common ground where people come together and talk about facts. it's all about fake news and we have been talking about that. but what we experience now here in this election, especially here in arizona, is as, as kerry lake, i just talked about her, the republican government. a candidate used to be a journalist,
11:14 pm
herself. they're always blaming the so called mainstream media. why? because they, because we are offering just information, just pure facts, and that's what they don't want to hear. they, when they're people to be in their own kind of social media bubbles just following their news outlets. and that is such a huge danger for a democracy. if people don't get the information, they know it, they need to really cast ballads on a solid a ground. so for me, this is the biggest threat which is very visible in this midterm. elections did have easiness poland, phoenix, arizona, stefan simmons in washington, dc to both of you. thank you. every want to continue the conversation. now i'm joined by constance her stilton, mula. she is the director of the center on the united states in europe at the brookings institution. in washington dc and started going to see you again,
11:15 pm
you know, we, we've talked several times on this program about how europeans see the us, the transit when it ties that bind to. let me ask you as a european, looking at these mid term elections. how do you feel? is there a sense of dread? is there a sense of optimism or maybe a wait and see, feel how do you feel? oh, 1st off, i have a german passport. i don't have an american passport. i'm not entitled to vote. i'm a guest in this country, albeit one living there for the 3rd time. so i think the weight and see part is true in as much as there are because of the popularity of men in voting. there are a lot of races whose outcomes we will not see until in a couple of days, or maybe even weeks on the optimism factor,
11:16 pm
i think is pretty minimal at this point. because we are looking at, i think, very clear when the for the to the house and probably g o p majority in senate of 52 to 3 seats. what that would mean for the federal government at the very least is probably impeachment, filibustering, gridlock and the administration having to move to governance by executive order. which, you know, will hold up things. and also, i think be a significant constraint in foreign and security policy. very specifically in the credit. and then of course, as i believe is mentioned, there is the other element of all the state and local races on which in which could i think creates the, the,
11:17 pm
the institutional framework put people in place for shaping a republican victory in 2024. so in other words, the sense of dread is one that will play out between today and 2024. what do you tell other europeans when they talk to you about american democracy, particularly considering that in these mid terms, you have a significant number of republican candidates who look set to when seen in congress, who are election deniers. they do not believe that the last election was on the up and up, and they questioned the legitimacy of the presidency of joe biden. with that in mind, what do you say to people when they ask you how healthy is american democracy? well again i'm,
11:18 pm
i don't think i'm prepared to pronounce on the health of american democracy. i'm her to leave that to americans. frankly, a, but i do say to germans, to other europeans, is that the, this and previous elections in america are an object lesson in the importance of the, of safeguarding the effectiveness and an agenda massey, of democratic governance. and of looking to the economic and social and your logical foundations of governments of democracy. and i think it's possible to make a case that here and naps and other countries in europe on those preconditions and the effectiveness and legitimacy of democratic institutions have been taking for granted. and one is paying the price for that. and i think that in america,
11:19 pm
i'm just going to say with, based on that, i mean, do you have the sense, i mean, you've observed american politics, american democracy for a long time. there been periods in american history where the united states, as, as also been american democracy itself, has been in crisis and it has managed to correct itself. it is managed to come back into a sense of normative behavior. if you will, do you get the sense that we are still in that safety zone, if you will, or the had the guard rails baby? had they been taken off? oh, i think you and i both realize that what you're asking, the leading question. when you're predisposing, major a certain answer and i don't know, it's really hard to say. i have had a lot of trust in their vitality of american democracy in the past. but i've also
11:20 pm
never seen election periods, like in the last 56 years, where people question the validity of democratic institutions, question ha, majority rule. and so the protection of minority is question the separation of powers, question, political pluralism. all foundational principles of limited government and constitutional democracy since really the days of the, the early days of, in fact, the founding of this republic. i've never seen those questioned, quite so broadly and in quite this ferocity as in this election period. i wanted to talk in a moment about what the implications of this election for foreign policy. first that we've got a report about u. s. foreign policy. we're going to take a look at that. and then we're going to come back and talk. ross's war against ukraine is won,
11:21 pm
the us has not been able to look away from americans have already sent more than 60000000000 dollars worth of assistance into this war zone. democrat, president joe biden has promised to continue to do all it takes to defend ukraine sovereignty as americans head to the polls. and these midterm elections, us congress, is expected to turn more republican. and the big question everybody is asking is what impact that will have on us assistance to ukraine and other allies? well, the answer depends on who you are. there will be enough support no matter who control which house and given a president biden still in the white house. so i, i, i am quite confident that very, very strong support will continue for ukraine. yet one prominent republican started sending a very different signal ahead of the elections. kevin mccarthy is the top republican in the house of representatives. he says he believes americans would no longer be
11:22 pm
willing to write a blank check to ukraine in the face of a biting recession back home. after all, the soaring prices of gas, food and housing top, the list of worries for ordinary americans. democrats fee that a republican majority in congress could soon make ukraine a domestic bargaining chip, but po, so more than $2.00 thirds of americans, fac u. s. assistance to ukraine. warnings that china may try to invade taiwan, rather sooner than later could become the next test for the west and for america's willingness to pay a price for global leadership. because that's in the last 20 for 48 hours has been we're talk about russian meddling in you us elections. if the republicans, if they do take control of congress, can that be seen as
11:23 pm
a victory for vladimir putin? no i honestly just i'm not i'm not responsible question to ask where do you that? well let me, let me job what it will be dempsy this did. do you have faith that the republicans will continue the support of ukraine the same way that we have seen the last 2 years with a democrat controlled congress? yeah, that's a very different question. and in key candidates, as your previous report suggests, have made it clear that they are going to want to impose restrictions on future support the term that they use as oversight. but we've also heard key exponents of the mac, right, like margaret taylor green. say there should not be any,
11:24 pm
any more ukraine and at all. i think that's a more or less verbatim quote. i don't even said some similar things. the thing that i have been saying on visits back in berlin for quite a while is that it's important to understand that that position may be most harshly articulated by the mag or right. but there are also middle of the road. restrain hers was very different priorities. there are china hawks who say russia is a problem that should be left exclusively to europe. and then finally, as we saw it with this, with this letter from the progressive caucus in congress 10 days ago, there are also folks on the progressive left for whom ukraine age should be moderated or just reduced. and, and that if you take that together, the impact of that whatever the,
11:25 pm
the vitamin registrations position ends up being the impact of that, of course, is to have a chilling effect on, on the alliance. and i think and enabling effect on its adversaries. first and foremost to, to i've had about 30 seconds left. confronted, there is a lot of talk about donald trump after these midterm elections announcing his candidacy once again for the presidency of the united states. if that happens, what should europeans braced themselves for? well, he would still have to be elected right that so we still have 2 more years and, but i would suggest i have been suggesting for a while that europeans need to think very hard what that would mean for them. with a very aggressive china adversarial russia and in america that might be somewhere between indifferent and hostile. that could amount to
11:26 pm
a strategic i'd say, i said for europe and i would just prepare a bench reality because that's unfortunate. we're out of time, but it's always great to talk with you and great to get your valuable insights in your analysis. we appreciate your time tonight. thank you. you're welcome. bye bye . the day's almost done. the conversation continues online, you'll find it on twitter. you can follow me on twitter, it brent. gov tv. and remember whatever happens between now and then tomorrow is another day our coverage of the mid term elections in the united states continues to stay with the double unit with
11:27 pm
the, you know, that 77 percent of a younger than 35. got me and me and you and you know what? it's time of voices. what high? honda? 77 percent we talk about the issues with this is where the 77 percent next on d. w. nation as an environmental in closing graveyard to land desert. this is where things with nations no longer a waste gets stranded about the
11:28 pm
fun in the global fashion industry. global 3000 in 60 minutes on d, w. o. ah, she's got, is just a thought. say what grady several did and right wing extremists writes mcgrath and again wild mommy and couple late in burned in south africa with disabilities more likely to lose their jobs independent, make black lives matter. shine a spotlight on racially motivated beliefs. same sex marriage is being legalized in
11:29 pm
more and more country discrimination and inequality are part of everyday life. for many we ask why? because life is diversity. to make up your own mind. d. w, need for minds, i think is everything challenging. there are big so much different culture between here and there. so challenge for everything. ah. so i think it was worth it for me to come to germany. shove my got my license to work as a swimming instructor on dish, and now i teach children who don't just what's your story? take part. share it on info, migrants dot net what's
11:30 pm
it state for the well, when americans elect a new congress as us democracy faces. yes, another stress test. we're here to ring you the latest. oh, the fear of violence translate into action. and what the thief, mid terms mean for the next president to write in 2024. let us bring the back story across all platform this week on b, w. it's great to be back for another edition of your favorite magazine show. this is the 77 percent the platform for africa's you. i am eddie mike, a junior hello and welcome to the program. today show is quite special to me. it's all about black.
34 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on