Presidential election: The then President's position and the current President's position are the most important of all the US regime. Who are the presidents, what they did, and much about the whole of the United States. In colonial America, elections of officials and church officials can be traced back to the early stages of Plymouth Rock. During the presidential period in the latter half of the 19th century, the presidency work was regarded as a job. Unlike today's main audience, the president hardly tried hard to contact the public, and it is necessary to make the people happy.
With this in mind, it is important to point out that democracy is actually growing fast in this region. The eight largest countries in Central America and South America will prepare for the presidential election in the next two years, and peaceful power transfer is becoming common (except Venezuela and Cuba). For investors and companies in contact with Latin America, these elections are very uncertain given the economic and political crisis that has affected the region since the 2008 financial crisis.
If there are problems that influenced democratic elections in the past year, that is a matter of immigration. This is one of the major issues of the Brexit referendum, the US and French presidential elections, and the Dutch and German elections. In general, this is understandable. After all, many OECD countries are struggling to solve the high level of immigration problems and refugee problem management methods that have not been seen so far. In 2015 and 2016, OECD countries received approximately 6 million asylum applications each year. This is the maximum number since the Second World War. Nearly 75% of the applications are being held in EU countries.
In the 2016 presidential election, 55% of the American voters participated in the democratic process by voting. In the year of the non-presidential election, this percentage declined by an average of 20%. Compared to developed countries, American voters have the lowest voter turnout rate - 66% in the UK, 69% in Spain, 71% in Germany, voter turnout in Canada Is 68%. The average voter rate of developed countries is 76% - the United States is 27th in the world. The obstacles in voting should force people to remind their politicians - the vote on Tuesday was old and established in the American agricultural era. Nevertheless, there are rare cases in which the participation rate of voters declines by 20% in the yearly elections.