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© American Political Science Association, 2020 PS • April 2020 355
Teacher Spotlight
Teaching US Politics in the Age of Trump:
International Perspectives
INTRODUCTION TO TEACHING US POLITICS IN THE AGE OF
TRUMP: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES
Claudia Franziska Brühwiler, University of St. Gallen, Switzerland
Hiroshi Okayama, Keio University, Japan
DOI: 10.1017/S1049096519002014
“Why Trump?”
I
n recent semesters, beginning courses on US politics with
a survey on questions that students want to address has
yielded the same results. Before the 2016 election, students—
in these cases, mostly of Swiss and German origins—were
equally concerned about the causes and effects of party
polarization, the “costs” of American democracy, and the influence
of the media and lobbies. Although these questions are still at
the center of many discussions, a resounding “why?” pervades
the classroom whenever the Trump administration is mentioned.
They ask, “Why could someone who has never held any public
office and lacks a strong tie to any political party still be elected
to the nation’s highest office while speaking and acting so divi-
sively, and how has that impacted the American democracy?” At the
end of the semester, students report that although they better
understand how the US system works and why it now may favor
polarizing candidates, they are not fully convinced that it can
be effectively shielded from democratic erosion. Referencing
Federalist Paper No. 51, students recognize that the system was
designed to withstand the grasp of not particularly angelic execu-
tives; however, intention and reality may diverge.
Students are not alone in having difficulty in making sense of
and deciding how to react to the Trump administration, as the
ongoing discussions among political scientists convey. In addi-
tion to asking “why,” scholars are discussing the effects of the
Trump presidency on the classroom. Panels at annual meetings
of the American Political Science Association have explored ways
to increase students’ readiness to become politically active, and
a symposium in New Political Science analyzed transformative
practices (Romano and Daum 2018). Debates in The Chronicle of
Higher Education and online forums suggest a heightened aware-
ness for questions of teacher neutrality and the role of emotions
and for the challenges in educating critical readers who can
maneuver the world of online (mis)information.
However, these discussions tend to focus on the US context,
overlooking the fact that American politics is taught around
the world, in countries whose historic relations with the United
States shape public—and classroom—debates as much as current
politics. That is, we automatically adopt a comparative perspec-
tive when we discuss US politics in international classrooms, and
we tend to continuously question the effects of US politics and
policy on the international realm—specifically, our own geopolit-
ical context. Contrary to what happens when US students exam-
ine their own political system from a comparative perspective
(Baron, Blair, and Grossman 2019), our discussions may end less
than optimistically. (Or they may be regarded as futile in the first
place: an exchange student from Hong Kong once told one of the
guest editors of this spotlight that he had been wondering the
entire semester why his fellow students had such heated debates
on political ideas; why care about ideas if individual citizens have
such little impact?)
This spotlight invites readers to what is intended to be a
more international conversation on the challenges of teaching
US politics, in general, and particularly considering the standing
of the current administration. The conversation takes us to cam-
puses in Europe (i.e., Germany and the United Kingdom), in two
Asian countries with a historically ambiguous relationship to the
United States (i.e., South Korea and Japan), and in Australia and
the Middle East (i.e., Lebanon). n
REFERENCES
Baron, Hannah, Robert A. Blair, and Shelby Grossman. 2019. “Teaching Trump:
Why Comparative Politics Makes Students More Optimistic about US Democracy.”
PS: Political Science & Politics 52 (2): 347–52.
Romano, Sarah T., and Courtenay W. Daum. 2018. “Symposium: Transformative
Practices of Teacher-Scholar-Activists in the Era of Trump.” New Political Science
40 (3): 515–27.
TRUMP AND THE TRANSATLANTIC RELATIONSHIP IN
CRITICAL PERSPECTIVE
Lora Anne Viola, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany
DOI: 10.1017/S1049096519001951
When the newly appointed US Ambassador to Germany, Richard
Grenell, arrived in Berlin, he immediately caused a media fire-
storm. Ambassador Grenell flaunted diplomatic protocol by
making a series of statements that appeared to undermine the
current German government, support right-wing political parties,
and criticize the “blatant anti-Americanism” in German media.
1
Former German ambassador to the United States, Wolfgang
Ischinger, retorted via Twitter: “Never tell the host country what
to do, if you want to stay out of trouble.”
2
In Germany, Grenell’s
contentious diplomacy has become emblematic of the deterio-
ration of US–German relations since the election of President
Trump. Trump has regularly taken Germany to task for its trade
policies and defense spending, even threatening to take punitive
action including tariff increases and withdrawal from NATO.
In turn, Germany, more than any other major ally, sees its rela-
tions with the United States as having severely worsened since
Trump’s election, and Germans currently view the United States
more negatively than at any other point since the end of the
Cold War.
3
This state of affairs has generated an intense demand on
the part of politicians, students, and the general public to better
understand American politics, both domestic and international.
US politics is followed almost as intensively as domestic pol-
itics. Both the media and policy makers frequently reach out to