With America’s de-industrialisation, concomitant to China’s rise, and shifting of backoffice jobs to destinations like India, the US middle class is no longer as sanguine about its future as it was in the second half of the 20th century. Bill Clinton’s success in moving the Democrats to the centre and stitching an alliance of minorities, educated whites, women, the non-religious, union members etc broke a Republican hold over power that saw it hold the White House for 28 out of 40 years between 1969-2008. George W. Bush’s contentious win in 2000, enabled by US Supreme Court’s partisan vote, followed by 9/11 and the war on terror, led to a decade of distracted governance. Barack Obama’s 2008 victory was the nation seeking a more equitable posture at home and a less hawkish one abroad. Obama successfully weathered the banking crisis, got the US out of Afghanistan and Iraq, passed his health cover laws, and saw the US achieve energy sufficiency through shale gas. But new, even more dangerous challenges have emerged: ISIS, the Syrian civil war and refugee crisis, random terror attacks and tepid job growth. This legacy was the ground for the rise of a politics of hyperbole.