Abstract

Election View from Abroad

McKenzie, R. T. | October 27, 1956 issue

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The article focuses on the American election politics. There is hardly the faintest interest in the American election; the "serious" press and the BBC carry only brief reports, while the popular press is ignoring it almost completely. In America an election is usually announced no more than five or six weeks before polling day and campaigning is effectively confined to the last three weeks. American election is a cause for neither concern nor alarm; neither side represents, in British eyes, the incarnation of Good or Evil.

See Also:

ELECTIONS; PRESS; POLITICAL participation; VOTING; POLITICAL campaigns; REPRESENTATIVE government & representation
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