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European critics of Trump worry what his candidacy says about U.S.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump waves to the crowd after speaking at a campaign rally on March 19 in Tucson, Ariz.

BERLIN » In the United States, Republican presidential candidate front-runner Donald Trump is a hero to some, a problem to others, but generally seen a force of nature and perhaps unstoppable.

The rest of the world is having a hard time digesting that he could well be the Republican standard-bearer, if not the leader of the free world. He’s described as evil, a cyberbully, a rich narcissist, even a sort of anti-Christ. His populist campaign promises must be theater, the thinking goes, and can’t be taken seriously.

The notion that Trump could actually be the president of the United States is seen as everything from inconceivable to creating a sort of nostalgia for the good old days of the disliked George W. Bush.

The word “clown” — favored by the New York Daily News, as well — tends to pop up quite a bit.

Consider a recent column on the People’s Daily newspaper website in China, which described Trump as ” a rich, narcissist and inflammatory candidate.”

“The clown is now the biggest dark horse,” the column asserts.

Tageszeitung, a leftist German newspaper, in a recent editorial that referred to Trump’s tactics as “cyberbullying” also called him the “angry clown, darling of the masses.”

The centrist German newspaper Die Welt notes simply, “The field of the Republican candidates is dominated by a clown.”

That public commentary reflects, analysts said, growing international concern about Trump’s rise.

“For Europeans there is a mixture of incredulity and anxiety,” said Richard G. Whitman, a European politics expert at the University of Kent. “The anxiety comes from what such a wild-card president might mean for the place of the United States in the world.”

As for Trump’s comments on immigration and questioning the value of NATO, “these have been viewed as offensive or creating uncertainty,” Whitman said.

One place that Europeans, especially Germans, have been unwilling to go in attacking Trump is comparisons to Adolf Hitler, the infamous German leader whose campaign of racial hatred killed 6 million Jews and as many members of other ethnic groups. Germans don’t make such comparisons, even if some of Trump’s harshest critics in the U.S. do. Hitler was Hitler, and the Holocaust is without comparison.

In a recent interview published in Welt am Sonntag, German Economic Minister Sigmar Gabriel put Trump in more contemporary company.

“Donald Trump, Marine Le Pen or Geert Wilders — all these right-wing populists — are not only a threat to peace and social cohesion, but also to economic development,” Gabriel said, referring to the leaders of nationalist political movements in France and the Netherlands.

Joerg Wolf, the editor in chief at the Atlantic Initiative research center in Berlin, said Trump himself wasn’t as concerning to Europeans as the fact that his support was so high.

“We thought he was promoting the Trump brand, and would be off the stage when the serious campaign began,” Wolf said. “People are realizing … it’s not just Trump we need to worry about. People, a lot of Americans apparently, back him. Europeans can no longer count on U.S. support.”

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©2016 McClatchy Washington Bureau

4 responses to “European critics of Trump worry what his candidacy says about U.S.”

  1. Cricket_Amos says:

    It is also hardly surprising that China is so critical. They have been taking us to the cleaners for years and may fear that it is not going to be so easy in the future.

    The Europeans are in the process of committing cultural suicide, why would we take them seriously.

    As for the HItler comparison, nothing could be further from the truth. Hitler, like the Soviet Marxists, like today’s lefty social scientists, are all ideologues. They have this one little stunt they have learned – categorizing people – and it is how they see the whole world. Trump is not an ideologue, which is why they are powerless against him. His touchstones are common sense and excellence.

  2. st1d says:

    it’s hiliar’s brown shirt campaign slogan “fighting for us” that encourages her attack goons to disrupt peaceful trump campaign events.

  3. kekelaward says:

    Who cares what they think. They are looking out for their own interests.

    Those clowns thought 0bama was the greatest thing and that didn’t work out at all.

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