The lunatic is ..... the one obsessed with size of his crowds (btw overall much, much smaller than 2016) and dead Arnold Palmer's schwanz.
I recently unsubscribed from The Economist after over two decades. In recent years it's become more and more of the usual leftist claptrap, and the novelty of reading about elections in Sri Lanka kind of wore off.
The Courts have ruled on this matter and other related matters. (see, for example, Plyler v Doe 1982. In general you are wrong, non-citizens (tourists, immigrants, etc.) enjoy the basic protections of the Constitution, equal protection, due process and including First Amendment rights, when under the jurisdiction of the United States, regardless of whether they can legally vote. (If you don't like this you'll have an opportunity, if you are legally registered to vote, to vote for D.J.T. on Tuesday. If elected, he will likely appoint corrupt and subversive Judges to our highest Court who can not be counted on to interpret our Constitution according to it clear words and intent but instead according to their own interests. No nation can long withstand wide corruption in it's higher Courts.
The media is biased af. I see little complaint from the biased western media about Biden who is stoking deaths in Gaza and now spreading into Lebanon and Iran, possible Iraq. Media is strangely quiet about genocide fueled by the West.
Of course in Northern England to break wind is to trump. One wonders had that crossed the pond would the Donald be as popular.
In most countries you become tax resident after six months of residency, even if combining tourist stamps and student language visas which is common for expats. No taxes without representation remember? This is why in most democracies expats can vote in local elections, but not national. The idea is that novices to the country can reasonably grasp local issues affecting their immediate environment but it takes a deeper commitment and understanding for national matters.