Mikey, I was more struck by the existence of a Republican fringe. We have a Celtic fringe of those who the rest never managed to drive into the sea, and they have a Republican one. Unsurprisingly it is quite a wealthy fringe in their case. But that's the Presidential polling map. The US has a constitution with what might seem to us a fatal flaw, in that it is quite possible to have one or both of the Senate and the House in the hands of the opposite party to the President's, a position not improved by mid-term elections which, in the very nature of mid-term elections, tend to go against, in America, the President's party. As, historically, this has been a very common position for a President, Americans have learned to live with it and approve it, thinking that compromise is their watchword, and far better than one party government.
But here we have a perfect example of what can go wrong. The system depends on compromise. If one party takes the attitude that they should oppose anything and everything that the President was elected to do, or wants, they end up as here.