Either 2020 candidate will be good for India: S. Jaishankar

New Delhi: India’s partnership with the United States will continue to grow whether a Republican or Democrat is elected to the White House in the November elections, external affairs minister S Jaishankar has said. His comment comes against the backdrop of both parties wooing the 1.2 million Indian community that has emerged as a key constituency in battleground states that could settle the race with wafer-thin margins.

“If you look at the last four American presidents, two Republicans and two Democrats — each raised the level of relationship with India further,” Jaishankar said in response to a question whether Donald Trump or Joe Biden was better for India.

“Each President has developed on the legacy of the previous one when it comes to India. And if you follow the debates in the US now, you will find many differences between the competing candidates, but India is a common point,” Jaishankar said in an interview with Hindustan Times last Saturday. The minister stressed that though the two candidates criticized each other on many policies, this didn’t happen when ties with India is the topic.

“I actually believe that India has bipartisan, or in a sense non-partisan, support in American politics. Our footprint is very wide and so is our acceptability. Different sets of politicians who disagree on many things agree on India. And I think that is a very good place to be,” the minister said.

The approach of the two parties towards Indian Americans is seen to reflect their standpoint on India as well.

Joe Biden, the Democratic nominee for president has named Senator Kamala Harris, the daughter of an Indian mother and Jamaican father, as his running mate.

Donald Trump had been working on this constituency for quite some time, like when he accompanied Prime Minister Narendra Modi last September to the ‘Howdy, Modi!’ event in Houston and addressed the ‘Namaste Trump’ event in Ahmedabad.

A majority of the Indian-American voters have traditionally been seen to support the Democrats; a recent survey suggested that 55% of Indian Americans held a “very unfavorable” to “somewhat unfavorable” view of Trump.

Image courtesy of (Photo courtesy PTI)

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