Trump is far from perfect candidate for president
That's true. His speech last night, where he thanked his supporters, praised Hillary and promised to be President of all Americans, was very good though.
but I would like to point out important aspect of this election.
It's a huge political earthquake that historians and political-"scientists" will probably be talking about for generations. It probably has to be seen in conjunction with European events like the Brexit vote. It's another illustration of something that's widespread and growing throughout the Western world. (Next up: the French Presidential elections, I guess, or maybe the Netherlands. )
It seems to me that one of the factors which brought down Hillary is that people are already tired by leftist - political correctness - pro immigration - gender - positive discrimination - false racist accusations - LGBTI
Here in the US, it's a result of how the political parties developed. The Democrats have always been the 'outsiders' party, a party defined in large part by alienation. They grouped together racial and ethnic minorities, political feminists, immigrants, Jews, dissatisfied intellectuals, gays, 19th century-style 'workers' as opposed to the 'bosses', and the poor welfare-state proletariat. It's why the Democratic elites in places like New York City, Washington DC or Los Angeles feel more at home in Paris than in Oklahoma City or Boise. Paris is felt to be less foreign, more filled with people like them. It's why they love open-borders, so as to fill the country with additional outsiders who will vote along with them. It's why they think of the American people in "flyover country" as crude and stupid people clutching "their religion and their guns", as Obama so memorably put it. It's why Americans are perceived as a "basket of deplorables", the "irredeemables" who damnably continue to identify with a national history and traditions that have already been dismissed by the opinion leaders as "racist", "imperialist", "capitalist" and evil.
Well, last night the American people, or a large segment of it, its white middle classes, said that they are tired of that stuff. They voted for a candidate who is an unabashed nationalist, a candidate who doesn't hesitate, even seemingly delights in saying things that people like them supposedly aren't supposed to say. Such as saying that foreigners who enter the US need to obey US immigration law. (Sentiments that supposedly are "racist" and "xenophobic".) Or that American trade policy should be negotiated in the interest of the American people, not the interests of transnational elites.
Middle income people who identify their ethnic background in the census as "American", are seemingly acquiring what the left used to call 'class consciousness' and are voting more as a bloc, just as blacks and Hispanics are universally expected to do. So in a way, the Trump victory is a victory for race-class-gender politics. It's just that in the Democrats' view the wrong race, class and gender was energized. Their votes are what won Trump Wisconsin, Ohio and Pennsylvania and probably Michigan too. Holding Romney's states and winning these new ones is what won Trump the election.
propaganda shoved down their throats every single day from 90% of "mainstream" media, scores of leftist activists and "standard" politicians. All the rigged polls presented by “mainstream” media tried to show that Trump has no chance to win. Majority of "mainstream" media have totally pushed anti Trump propaganda and used standard leftist false accusation tactics naming Trump racist, misogynist and so but the result of election clearly showed that majority of people in US simply don’t believe the mainstream media propaganda anymore.
Yes, that's one of the most interesting aspects to this. Every day, every time they turned on TV, picked up a newspaper or a magazine, or turned on late-night TV, people were treated to non-stop insults and caricatures directed at Trump and his supporters. All the respectable polls announced that Trump had no chance and that Hillary was going to kick his ass. (The only question was how many down-ticket Republicans would lose.) Pundits were writing obituaries for the Republican party, crying crocodile tears over its loss, and telling its soon-to-be remnants what they needed to do to atone (move to the left).
So what happened? How could the media and other 'opinion leader' elites have gotten it so wrong? The parallels here with the Brexit vote are striking. The disconnect between poll results and what happens in the voting booth isn't just in the US.