The U.S. presidential election is a little more than a month away; the election will be November 6. President Barack Obama and the Republican candidate, Mitt Romney, have faced each other in the first televised debate out of the scheduled three. It is a sound democratic exercise since it permits a contrast of programs and the opportunity for each candidate to punish the weaker sides of his adversary, as has happened in more than one occasion since the first televised debate which took place between Kennedy and Nixon in 1960.
In this election, obviously, the debate is going to repeat itself; that is why one should appreciate that the First Secretary of the Socialist Party of Catalonia opened debate proposing an innovative formula given the peculiar multiparty in Catalonia, in which the weight of the second party is not in Spain. Navarro has proposed a three-way debate between Convergence and Union, the Socialist Party of Catalonia and the People’s Party, and has even chosen the channel: 8tv. The offer has been accepted by the President of the People’s Party, Alicia Sánchez-Camacho. Let’s hope that in the next couple of days the organizers of the campaign for Convergence and Union and Mas will also accept.
If this electoral gridlock [in domestic policy] does occur, it may well result in Trump — like several other reelected presidents of recent decades — increasingly turning to foreign policy.