The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 04, 2025
Today: April 04, 2025

American and British voters share deep roots. In 2024, they distrust their own leaders, too

Global Elections Nations Reflected
June 30, 2024

DARTFORD, England (AP) โ€” Distrust has settled over the campaign trails in the United States and United Kingdom ahead of July 4 like a soggy summer haze.

On that day, British voters will choose a new Parliament in an election expected to finish with a Labour government after 14 years under the Conservatives. Americans across the pond, deeply polarized by the rematch between Democratic President Joe Biden and Republican Donald Trump, will mark Independence Day in something resembling unity with barbecues and fireworks ahead of their vote on Nov. 5.

Thereโ€™s much to celebrate on the Fourth of July for one of the worldโ€™s biggest democracies and the venerable kingdom that gave rise to it, 248 years after they split and set off on slow, troubled journeys toward granting all citizens the right to vote. Both remain rooted in the Magna Carta, the English document signed in 1215. It set in writing the idea that leaders โ€” including kings, presidents and their governments โ€” are not above the law. The nations have become close friends and stalwart allies.

American and British voters share deep roots. In 2024, they distrust their own leaders, too
Global Elections Nations Reflected

Thatโ€™s how it started.

As for how itโ€™s going, the run-up to July 4, 2024 โ€” Independence Day for one land, Election Day for the other โ€” offers a snapshot of the stress test facing voters in each country.

โ€œIโ€™m just very disheartened, really, because I donโ€™t think any of the parties know what theyโ€™re doing,โ€ Dartford, England, resident Jacqueline Richards, 77, said of her countryโ€™s election. โ€œBut then looking at yours in America, itโ€™s not that great, is it?โ€

Trust has taken a beating in both countries

Every democratic election is, at its core, about who voters trust to run their country so they can go about running their lives.

American and British voters share deep roots. In 2024, they distrust their own leaders, too
Global Elections Nations Reflected

Debates are candidate aptitude tests in real time, never more so than during Thursdayโ€™s showdown between Biden, 81, and Trump, 77. Bidenโ€™s halting performance did the opposite of building confidence, even among some of his most loyal supporters. Trump, meanwhile, repeated his lies about the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection and his record as president.

Thatโ€™s only the most recent example of why distrust and a sense of resignation dominate the emotional landscape in both countries, according to voters interviewed by The Associated Press in recent weeks. From battleground Wisconsin to bellwether Dartford, England, voters said years of misinformation, scandal and lies have drained them of the sort of optimism or excitement they might once have felt about the right to vote or the future.

In Britain, 45% said they โ€œalmost neverโ€ trust governments to put the nationโ€™s interest first, up from 34% in 2019, according to a survey published June 12 by the National Centre for Social Research. The pandemic, the Russia-Ukraine War and the countryโ€™s cost-of-living crisis affected living standards and the economy, it reported. Two Tory prime ministers were ousted. Also, there was Boris Johnson, who resigned rather than be thrown out of Parliament over boozy parties at 10 Downing Street when the nation was under COVID-19 lockdown.

A vote to turn the Conservative government out of power is not necessarily a vote for Labour, opposition leader Keir Starmer acknowledged during a May 27 debate. Voters, he said, โ€œstill have questions about us: Has Labour changed enough? Do I trust them with my money, our borders, our security?โ€

American and British voters share deep roots. In 2024, they distrust their own leaders, too
Global Elections Nations Reflected

Starmerโ€™s own answer was yes, of course. But British voters told the AP in the weeks before the election that theyโ€™re far from sure.

โ€œThey promise and promise and promise and nothing ever changes,โ€ said Shane Bassett, 34, the bar manager at a pub in bellwether Dartford, where the Peasantsโ€™ Revolt of 1381 is said to have started. โ€œNo matter who gets in โ€” if itโ€™s Labour, if itโ€™s Conservative, itโ€™s all the same. They all lie.โ€

In the United States, trust has been eroded by deepening political polarization, misinformation and Trumpโ€™s lies about Bidenโ€™s victory in the 2020 election โ€” all amplified by social media.

Roughly 2 in 10 Americans say they trust the U.S. government to do what is right โ€œjust about alwaysโ€ or โ€œmost of the time,โ€ according to a recent Pew Research Center survey. About 6 in 10 say they can trust the government โ€œonly some of the timeโ€ and about 2 in 10 say they can never trust the government to do whatโ€™s right.

American and British voters share deep roots. In 2024, they distrust their own leaders, too
Global Elections Nations Reflected

Nearly three-quarters of American adults blame the news media for dividing the nation, according to a 2023 poll by AP-NORC. Families and friends have learned to avoid discussing politics around Thanksgiving tables and other gatherings. In many places, even celebrations of the Fourth of July โ€” a national holiday when Americans mark the 1776 ratification of the Declaration of Independence from Britain โ€” fall under this practice of restraint.

In Racine, Wisconsin, Rebecca Eisel, 48, wondered how the vast United States, home of 262 million eligible voters and the worldโ€™s biggest economy, faces a rematch that few Americans wanted.

โ€œHow did our democratic process result in something that the majority of the population doesnโ€™t like?โ€ Eisel, 48, said over a sandwich at the Maple Table restaurant.

The United States: โ€˜The country is strugglingโ€™

The last time Kathleen Barker, 64, was excited about a candidate, it was Ronald Reagan, who went on to serve two terms in the 1980s and exited office by referring to the country as a โ€œshining city on a hill.โ€

American and British voters share deep roots. In 2024, they distrust their own leaders, too
Global Elections Nations Reflected

โ€œHe was a very real person, very respectful, family-oriented,โ€ she said while walking her dog near the river in Racine. โ€œYou could relate to him. He felt like just that average man.โ€

Now, she says, the โ€œnasty back-and-forthโ€ between Biden and Trump โ€” who each insist the other is unfit for office โ€” suggest neither can be trusted to dig into the major problems facing the United States.

โ€œPeople are poor. The country is struggling. And this is their focus?โ€ she said.

Emmanuel McKinstry, a 58-year-old businessperson, voiced similar frustration. The economy, he said while waiting in line to hear Trump speak in Racine, is his top issue. The next morning, McKinstry said heโ€™d still vote for Trump โ€” with reservations.

American and British voters share deep roots. In 2024, they distrust their own leaders, too
Global Elections Nations Reflected

โ€œIโ€™m tired of politicians working for themselves and not really getting down and asking people what we really want,โ€ McKinstry said. โ€œWeโ€™re putting you in office. What are you gonna do for us?โ€

The last presidential candidate to excite high school teacher Marcus T. West, 49, was Democrat Barack Obama, who went on to serve two terms.

โ€œHe got the importance of educators. He had good intentions,โ€ West said over breakfast at Mrs. Bettyโ€™s Kitchen. โ€œHeโ€™s the last person I felt talked like me, talked to me, passed policies that I liked.โ€

This year, he said of Biden and Trump, โ€œthey arenโ€™t looking out for us.โ€

Britain: โ€˜Not very optimisticโ€™

American and British voters share deep roots. In 2024, they distrust their own leaders, too
Global Elections Nations Reflected

In Britain, the distrust is less personal. Itโ€™s about scandal โ€” think Johnson and โ€œpartygateโ€ โ€” and the cost-of-living crisis.

On May 22, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak had good news and a bombshell: Inflation was down to 2.3% for the first time in three years, and he was dissolving Parliament immediately, which started a clock that required an election on July 4.

But the visuals are whatโ€™s remembered about that day. Rain soaked his suited shoulders as Sunak spoke where his predecessors had stood for 275 years, before the iconic black door of No. 10 Downing Street. No one sheltered him with an umbrella. Protesters nearly drowned out his words by playing โ€œThings Can Only Get Better,โ€ a rival Labour campaign song used in the Tony Blair era.

โ€œThings can only get wetter,โ€ led the reports on several news sites.

American and British voters share deep roots. In 2024, they distrust their own leaders, too
Global Elections Nations Reflected

Thatโ€™s what concerns Bassett, the manager at the Wat Tyler Pub, named for a leader of the Peasantsโ€™ Revolt that started on that site. Youโ€™re not supposed to talk about politics in British pubs, he says โ€” the counterpart, perhaps, of the American reluctance to stir up trouble on the same topic at parties.

But Bassett looked around at the empty dining room at lunchtime. There were no customers to offend. So he let it fly.

The pubโ€™s energy bill last winter jumped from its usual 800 pounds a month (about $1,000) to 1,200 pounds (about $1,500). It has struggled since the Christmas season to bring in customers for a beer. He thinks the owners are likely to sell the place only four years after buying it.

โ€œIโ€™m not very optimistic.โ€ he said. Thinking of his family members in Canada, Bassett added: โ€œIf I could leave the country, I would.โ€

American and British voters share deep roots. In 2024, they distrust their own leaders, too
Global Elections Nations Reflected

___

Fernando reported from Racine, Wisconsin. AP writer Jill Lawless contributed from London.

Related Articles

Some measles patients in West Texas show signs of vitamin A toxicity, doctors say, raising concerns about misinformation A misinformation expert encouraged picket lines at Tesla sites to protest DOGE cuts. Then came the online threats Leaders of Brazil and Japan stress importance of multilateralism and agree to strengthen ties Pro-Russian leader of Moldovan ethnic minority detained
Share This

Popular

Election|Political|US

North Carolina judges open door to tossing 60,000 ballots in high court race

North Carolina judges open door to tossing 60,000 ballots in high court race
Election|Political|US

Billionaires Musk and Soros push Wisconsin Supreme Court race spending over $100M

Billionaires Musk and Soros push Wisconsin Supreme Court race spending over $100M
Election|Political|US

The hidden power of marathon Senate speeches: What history tells us about Cory Bookerโ€™s 25-hour oration

The hidden power of marathon Senate speeches: What history tells us about Cory Bookerโ€™s 25-hour oration
Crime|Election|Political|US

Washington D.C.'s top prosecutor to probe alleged media leaks on Jan 6 cases, email says

Washington D.C.'s top prosecutor to probe alleged media leaks on Jan 6 cases, email says

World

MidEast|Political|World

Syria welcomes UN resolution to investigate human-rights violations

Syria welcomes UN resolution to investigate human-rights violations
Europe|Political|World

Zelenskiy says details of foreign troop contingent in Ukraine could be ready in a month

Zelenskiy says details of foreign troop contingent in Ukraine could be ready in a month
Americas|Political|US|World

US Defense Secretary Hegseth to visit Panama next week

US Defense Secretary Hegseth to visit Panama next week
Business|Economy|Finance|Political|World

Stocks slump again after China fires back in trade war with tariffs on US goods

Stocks slump again after China fires back in trade war with tariffs on US goods

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In