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Speechless Netizens Parse Trump Win With Memes

Photo: Andrew MacGregor Marshall / Facebook

BANGKOK — Thailand on Wednesday welcomed the new Trumpasat University among a flood of memes seeking to make sense or just fun of the surprise upset win of U.S. president-elect Donald Trump.

Politically active netizens couldn’t help but bounce their mouses in Photoshop to spread groan worthy-to-dank memes about the shocking outcome.

Here’s what’s spreading in the timelines.

https://twitter.com/rituaii/status/796257485405310977

‘The real golden era’

‘Since you chose to be with him, I’m trembling on my knees,’ says classic pop song ‘Jai Nakleng’ by Pongpat Wachirabunjong Photo: Underground Karaoke / Facebook
‘Since you chose to be with him, I’m trembling on my knees,’ says classic pop song ‘Jai Nakleng’ by Pongpat Wachirabunjong Photo: Underground Karaoke / Facebook
Photo: Nong / Facebook
Photo: Nong / Facebook
Photo: Pongsathon Kanjananithi / Facebook
Photo: Pongsathon Kanjananithi / Facebook
Photo: Pixel Crazy 8bit / Facebook
Photo: Pixel Crazy 8bit / Facebook
Photo: Journaltist / Facebook
Photo: Journaltist / Facebook
‘I was born in the reign of Donald Trump.’ Photo: Kai Mod Took Sing / Facebook
‘I was born in the reign of Donald Trump.’ Photo: Kai Mod Took Sing / Facebook
Someone resurrected the time Steve Harvey infamously announced the wrong Miss Universe in 2015. Photo: Varinthorn Aussaneevuttikorn / Facebook
Someone resurrected the time Steve Harvey infamously announced the wrong Miss Universe in 2015. Photo: Varinthorn Aussaneevuttikorn / Facebook
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Duterte Congratulates Trump on Election Victory

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte delivers his speech during departure ceremonies last November at Manila's International Airport, Philippines. Photo: Aaron Favila / Associated Press

MANILA — Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, who has lashed out at Barack Obama for criticizing his deadly anti-drug crackdown, has congratulated U.S. President-elect Donald Trump.

Duterte says he looks forward to working with the new American leader to further enhance the treaty allies’ relations.

Duterte, who took office in June, has had an uneasy relation with the U.S. The 71-year-old leader has announced his desire to scale back joint combat drills with the U.S. military and end the presence of foreign troops, including Americans, in the country in two years.

In Duterte’s statement on Trump’s victory released by his spokesman, however, the tough-talking Philippine leader was unusually diplomatic.

“President Duterte wishes President-elect Trump success in the next four years as chief executive and commander-in chief of the U.S. military, Communications Secretary Martin Andanar said in a statement. Duterte, he said, “looks forward to working with the incoming administration for enhanced Philippines-US relations anchored on mutual respect, mutual benefit and shared commitment to democratic ideals and the rule of law.”

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It’s Trump! Stunning Outsider Victory for 45th President

Vice president-elect Mike Pence, right, watches as President-elect Donald Trump speaks during an election night rally Wednesday in New York. Photo: Evan Vucci / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump claimed his place Wednesday as America’s 45th president, an astonishing victory for the celebrity businessman and political novice who capitalized on voters’ economic anxieties, took advantage of racial tensions and overcame a string of sexual assault allegations on his way to the White House.

Trump’s triumph over Hillary Clinton, not declared until well after midnight, will end eight years of Democratic dominance of the White House. He’ll govern with Congress fully under Republican control and lead a country deeply divided by his rancorous campaign against Clinton. He faces fractures within his own party, too, given the numerous Republicans who either tepidly supported his nomination or never backed him at all.

As he claimed victory, Trump urged Americans to “come together as one united people.”

Clinton called her Republican rival to concede but did not plan to speak publicly until Wednesday morning. Trump, who spent much of the campaign urging his supporters on as they chanted “lock her up,” said the nation owed Clinton “a major debt of gratitude” for her years of public service.

The Republican blasted through Democrats’ longstanding firewall, carrying Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, states that hadn’t voted for a GOP presidential candidate since the 1980s. He needed to win nearly all of the competitive battleground states, and he did just that, including Florida, Ohio, North Carolina and others.

Global stock markets and U.S. stock futures plunged, reflecting investor concern over what a Trump presidency might mean for the U.S. and world economies and trade.

A New York real estate developer who lives in a sparkling Manhattan high-rise, Trump forged a striking connection with white, working class Americans who feel left behind in a changing economy and diversifying country. He cast immigration, both from Latin America and the Middle East, as the root of the problems plaguing many Americans and tapped into fears of terrorism emanating at home and abroad.

GOP Senate candidates fended off Democratic challengers in key states, including North Carolina, Indiana and Wisconsin. Republicans also maintained their grip on the House.

Senate control means Trump will have great leeway in appointing Supreme Court justices, which could mean a shift to the right that would last for decades.

Trump has pledged to usher in sweeping changes to U.S. foreign policy, including building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border and suspending immigration from countries with terrorism ties. He’s also praised Russian President Vladimir Putin and spoken of building a better relationship with Moscow, worrying some in his own party who fear he’ll go easy on Putin’s provocations.

Putin sent him a telegram of congratulations early Wednesday.

Trump upended years of political convention on his way to the White House, leveling harshly personal insults against his rivals, deeming Mexican immigrants rapists and murderers, and vowing to temporarily suspend Muslim immigration to the U.S. He never released his tax returns, breaking with decades of campaign tradition, and eschewed the kind of robust data and field efforts that helped Obama win two terms in the White House, relying instead on his large, free-wheeling rallies to energize supporters. His campaign was frequently in chaos, and he cycled through three campaign managers.

His final campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, touted the team’s accomplishments as the final results rolled in, writing on Twitter that “rally crowds matter” and “we expanded the map.”

Clinton spent months warning voters that Trump was unfit and unqualified to be president. But the former senator and secretary of state struggled to articulate a clear rationale for her own candidacy.

She faced persistent questions about her honesty and trustworthiness. Those troubles flared anew late in the race, when FBI Director James Comey announced a review of new emails from her tenure at the State Department. On Sunday, just two days before Election Day, Comey said there was nothing in the material to warrant criminal charges against Clinton.

Trump will inherit an anxious nation, deeply divided by economic and educational opportunities, race and culture.

Exit polls underscored the fractures: Women nationwide supported Clinton by a double-digit margin, while men were significantly more likely to back Trump. More than half of white voters backed the Republican, while nearly 9 in 10 blacks and two-thirds of Hispanics voted for the Democrat.

Doug Ratliff, a 67-year-old businessman from Richlands, Virginia, said Trump’s election was one of the happiest days of his life.

“This county has had no hope,” said Ratliff, who owns strip malls in an area badly beaten by the collapse of the coal industry. “Things will change. I know he’s not going to be perfect. But he’s got a heart. And he gives people hope.”

The Republican Party’s tortured relationship with its nominee was evident right to the end. Former President George W. Bush and wife Laura Bush declined to back Trump, instead selecting “none of the above” when they voted for president, according to spokesman Freddy Ford.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, a reluctant Trump supporter, called the businessman earlier in the evening to congratulate him, according to a Ryan spokeswoman. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said the American people “have chosen a new direction for our nation.”

Obama, who campaigned vigorously for Clinton throughout the fall and hoped his own rising popularity would lift her candidacy, was silent on Trump’s victory, but he is expected to invite him to the White House this week. It will be a potentially awkward meeting with the man who pushed false rumors that the president might have been born outside the United States.

Story: Julie Pace

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Putin Congratulates Trump on Winning US Election

Russian President Vladimir Putin meets with Russian Transport Minister Maxim Sokolov in 2016 in the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia. Photo: Alexei Druzhinin / Associated Press

MOSCOW — Russian President Vladimir Putin has sent Donald Trump a telegram of congratulation on winning the U.S. presidential election.

In a brief statement Wednesday, the Kremlin said Putin expressed “his hope to work together for removing Russian-American relations from their crisis state.”

Putin also said he has “confidence that building a constructive dialogue between Moscow and Washington that is based on principles of equality, mutual respect and a real accounting each other’s positions, in the interests of our peoples and the world community.”

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Gunman in Deadly Rampage Was High on Cocaine

SWAT team moves in on a barricaded suspect on Fourth Street east of Orange Avenue after several people were shot at that location Tuesday in Azusa, California. Photo: Leo Jarzomb / Associated Press

AZUSA, California — Authorities say a gunman was high on cocaine when he opened fire randomly in a Los Angeles suburb, killing a 77-year-old neighbor and wounding two other people before police shot him.

The Tuesday afternoon attack in Azusa shut down two nearby polling places but police say it wasn’t related to the election.

Los Angeles County sheriff’s Lt. John Corina says the 45-year-old shooter had a military background and was a gun fanatic. He had been binging on cocaine when he armed himself with various guns, went outside and opened fire, Corina said.

Corina says a 77-year-old neighbor who went outside to see what was happening was shot dead, and two women who happened to be driving or walking by were critically wounded.

When police arrived to help the victims, authorities say, the man opened fire with an assault rifle. Officers returned fire, fatally wounding the man, who was found dead hours later in a home.

The names of the gunman and the victims haven’t been released.

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Russia’s Parliament Applauds Trump Election

Russian political experts react as they watch a live telecast of the U.S. presidential election Wednesday in the Union Jack pub in Moscow, Russia. Photo: Alexander Zemlianichenko / Associated Press

MOSCOW — Russia’s lower house of parliament is applauding the election of Donald Trump as the next U.S. president.

State news agency RIA-Novosti says Vyacheslav Novikov, a member of the foreign affairs committee from the governing United Russia party, addressed the State Duma on Wednesday morning.

Novikov said that “three minutes ago, Hillary Clinton acknowledged her defeat in the U.S. presidential elections and just a second ago, Trump began his speech as president-elect. I congratulate all of you on this.”

The chamber, where the pro-Kremlin party holds an overwhelming majority, then broke into applause, the report said.

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Prospect of Trump Presidency Unnerves Companies, Economists

A currency trader works at the foreign exchange dealing room of the KEB Hana Bank headquarters Wednesday in Seoul, South Korea. Photo: Ahn Young-joon / Associated Press

The prospect of a Donald Trump presidency unnerves businesspeople and economists who see him as a reckless novice who might disrupt trade and imperil the struggling global economy.

Financial markets tumbled Wednesday as Trump claimed victory after a campaign marked by fiery anti-foreign rhetoric and promises to tear up trade deals, restrict immigration and lock up political rivals.

Trump’s confrontational stance toward China and other trading partners, shifting and radical positions on key issues and lack of detailed plans have left many saying it is impossible to know what he might do in office.

That has added to jitters over his upset victory. By 3 a.m. EST (0800 GMT) Trump had claimed 276 electoral votes to Hillary Clinton’s 218. Trump vowed to unite the nation after a long campaign season fraught with antagonism.

“We simply can’t know what type of President Trump will be,” said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist for Capital Economics, in a report.

“Will he be the demagogue from the campaign trail, who threatened to lock up his political opponents, punish the media, build border walls and start a global trade war?” said Ashford. “Or is he capable of becoming a statesmanlike figure who leads in a more measured manner?”

Trump’s campaign tapped into American economic anxiety and frustration among workers who feel they have been left behind by globalization.

The celebrity businessman threatened to scrap trade deals and penalize U.S. firms that shift jobs abroad. Proposals including building a wall along the Mexican border to block immigration resonated with white working class voters who feel abandoned by traditional leaders.

The world will see a rise in protectionism if Trump makes good on promises of a more aggressive approach to dealing with countries such as China, Germany, Japan and South Korea, said Ha Keon-hyeong, an economist at Shinhan Investment Corp. in Seoul.

“It will strengthen protectionism,” said Ha. “That’s basically bad.”

Disruption to trade could hit economies such as China and South Korea especially hard as they struggle with sluggish growth. China’s exports in the first 10 months of this year were down 7.7 percent from the same period of 2015.

Trump offered so few details during the campaign that he left the impression the White House would run on instinct. That has left many around the world uneasy about the direction of the world’s largest economy and market.

“Trump appears to have only a passing grasp of policy, so it is important that he appoints people with experience,” said Ashford. “This is where Trump’s running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, could prove to be pivotal.”

Others saw a potential bright side to Trump’s proposed immigration curbs.

South Korean tech firms could find it easier to compete with Silicon Valley for talent if a Trump administration makes it harder for foreign experts to get visas, said Marcello Ahn, a fund manager for Quad Investment Management in Seoul.

“In the long term, it could be an opportunity for the South Korean tech industry,” said Ahn. “Those engineers could come to us.”

Story: Joe McDonald

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European Stocks Open Lower as Trump Wins

DAX 30 chart in the Frankfurt Stock Exchange. Photo: Thomas Richter / Wikimedia Commons

FRANKFURT, Germany — European markets have opened lower after Donald Trump was elected president of the United States.

The Stoxx Europe 600 index was down 2.2 percent, while Germany’s main DAX index opened 2.9 percent lower. The euro was 0.6 percent higher at $1.1092 as the dollar dropped across the board.

Carsten Brzeski, chief economist at ING Germany, said markets faced “chaos and turmoil” in coming days because of uncertainty about what economic program Trump would follow. Germany, for instance, depends heavily on global trade, while Trump has spoken out against trade treaties.

Brzeski said global market turmoil could be worse than that which followed the British vote to leave the European Union due to the bigger role the U.S. plays in the global economy.

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Trump Says Clinton Called and Congratulated Him

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton shake hands after a presidential debate in September at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York. Photo: David Goldman / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump says Hillary Clinton called him to congratulate him on his victory.

Trump, addressing supporters at his victory party in New York City, said Wednesday that he “congratulated her and her family on a very, very hard-fought campaign.”

He added that “we owe her a major debt of gratitude” for her service.

The gracious sentiment was a far cry from Trump’s usually heated rhetoric about Clinton. He has suggested that she should go to jail and chants of “Lock her up!” were a staple at his campaign rallies.

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Thai Gov’t: Trump Presidency Won’t Affect Longstanding Ties

In this Oct. 28, 2016 file photo, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally in Manchester, N.H.

BANGKOK — Relations between Thailand and a new American administration under President Elect Donald Trump will continue as usual, Minister of Foreign Affairs Don Pramudwinai said Wednesday.

Reached for comment minutes after Trump was declared the winner of the 2016 United States presidential election, Don said the Thai government will accept “the voice of the American people” and is looking forward to a continuity in diplomatic cooperation.

Read: Donald Trump, New President of the United States

“It is the voice of the American people,” Don said. “Throughout the 183 years of relationship between the two nations, there were successions of governments, especially in the United States, both Democrats and Republicans took to power. But we have always been nations of friends. Everything goes on as normal.”

The government is expected to send a mandatory message of congratulations within today, he added.

Don said Trump’s victory reflected calls for change among the American public.

“What’s clear is that people wanted changes,” the minister said. “After a period of continuity, people want change. There’s a word for that in English: seven-year itch. It’s a term of married people, but it’s no different when it comes to the relationship between a government and its people.”

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