Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 January 2020
Election night, Tuesday, November 8, 2016, seemed interminable for many Americans. It certainly was for me. I was scheduled to teach an election law class the following day, during which my students and I would discuss the legal implications of the presidential and congressional elections. But before that, I had to fulfill a commitment to speak to a high school audience about the election. I was to address students at Chicago’s Legal Prep Charter Academy first thing Wednesday morning—a daunting task because I had been up all night puzzling over election returns that had elevated a reality television show host, Donald Trump, to the most powerful position in the world.
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