Introduction
On Novembe
r 5, 2024, Donald J. T
rump was
re-elected to se
rve as the 47th p
resident of the United States of Ame
rica. Having won all seven key battleg
round states in the Electo
ral College as well as the popula
r vote, P
resident-elect T
rump will assume office with an even st
ronge
r mandate to gove
rn than he had in 2016. This time he will also be backed by a gove
rning t
rifecta with
Republican cont
rol of the 119th Cong
ress in both the House of
Rep
resentatives and Senate as well as a supe
rmajo
rity on the U.S. Sup
reme Cou
rt. The next fou
r yea
rs will once mo
re be a
rolle
rcoaste
r in Ame
rican politics. The
Republic of Ko
rea (
ROK) must seek effective measu
res to p
repa
re fo
r P
resident-elect T
rump’s second te
rm given the
re will be limited legislative o
r judicial const
raints on his executive autho
rity. In sho
rt, P
resident T
rump’s fo
reign and
defense policies this time could be unstoppable and unp
redictable. What should U.S. allies make of the unp
recedented 2024 U.S. elections? How might P
resident T
rump deal with f
riends and foes this time?
This Asan Issue B
rief p
rovides an ove
rview of the 2024 U.S. elections and the outlook fo
r U.S. allies, with a focus on the view f
rom Seoul. The Issue B
rief p
roceeds as follows. Fi
rst, it
reviews the 2024 U.S. election
results and looks at how public opinion su
rveys pe
rfo
rmed in p
redicting the final outcome. Second, it int
roduces key changes in the 119th Cong
ress as they
relate to the Ko
rean Peninsula. Thi
rd, it canvasses the T
rump administ
ration’s expected
ROK-U.S. alliance agenda. Finally, it discusses how the Yoon administ
ration can engage the T
rump administ
ration in te
rms of
defense cost-sha
ring, bu
rden-sha
ring on shipbuilding, and collective ba
rgaining with othe
r allies.
1. The Presidential Election Results Explained
The 2024 election campaign and
results saw many ‘fi
rsts.’ It began with P
resident Joe Biden’s d
ramatic decision not to seek
re-election following the fi
rst debate with fo
rme
r P
resident T
rump in June 2024, making him only the second U.S. p
resident in histo
ry to do so afte
r Lyndon Johnson in 1968. This was followed by the shocking assassination attempt on P
resident T
rump du
ring a campaign
rally and P
resident Biden’s sudden handove
r to Vice P
resident Kamala Ha
rris who
ran a 100-day campaign. The election also became the most expensive p
residential election eve
r, with an estimated $15.9 billion in spending on all fede
ral
races, nea
rly double what 2016 cost.
1
Most commentato
rs the
refo
re expected the 2024 U.S. p
residential election to be a tight
race.
Right befo
re the election, Electo
ral College fo
recasts showed that 82 electo
ral votes
remained undecided while othe
r p
rediction models in
FiveThirtyEight and
The Economist also suggested that the election would be essentially a toss-up.
2 P
re-election polls consistently suggested that this would be the tightest
race in histo
ry, such as when
Republican
Ruthe
rfo
rd B. Hayes beat Democ
rat Samuel J. Tilden by one electo
ral vote in 1876 and even in 2000, when
Republican Geo
rge W. Bush defeated Democ
rat Al Go
re by the compa
rably comfo
rtable ma
rgin of 271 to 267.
3 Nume
rous national polls showed a na
rrowing gap between the two candidates as the election ente
red its final weeks. The seven battleg
round states in 2024 we
re Wisconsin and Michigan in the Midwest, Pennsylvania in the no
rtheaste
rn indust
rial hea
rtland, No
rth Ca
rolina and Geo
rgia in the southeast, and A
rizona and Nevada in the west. Meanwhile, p
rominent election fo
recaste
rs such as P
rofesso
r Allan Lichtman, who had co
rrectly p
redicted 10 of the past 11 U.S. p
residential elections, also p
redicted that Vice P
resident Kamala Ha
rris would win the election.
4
In the end, P
resident T
rump won all seven battleg
round states to secu
re the necessa
ry 270 Electo
ral College votes and ultimately win 312 votes. He also won the popula
r vote by about 2 pe
rcentage points (50.1% vs. Ha
rris 48.3%).
5 The Electo
ral College win was fa
r la
rge
r than the 22,000 votes ac
ross th
ree states that P
resident Biden na
rrowly won by in 2020 though nowhe
re nea
r as comp
rehensive as
Republican
Ronald
Reagan’s 49-state victo
ry ove
r Democ
rat Walte
r Mondale in 1984, when P
resident
Reagan won by 525 Electo
ral College votes and 58.8% of the popula
r vote. The vote
r tu
rnout in 2024
reached 65%, the second highest in the past centu
ry, which did not su
rpass the
reco
rd in 2020 with 66%, but the ea
rly voting in key states such as Michigan and Geo
rgia was notable.
6 While Vice P
resident Ha
rris became the twelfth incumbent pa
rty candidate to lose a bid fo
r a second te
rm, P
resident T
rump set a new
reco
rd by winning 312 Electo
ral College votes fo
r the fi
rst time since 2012.
Table 1 shows how tight the election was in those seven states in cont
rast to the
results of the Electo
ral College votes. As with othe
r U.S. elections, the ove
rall diffe
rence in votes
repo
rted so fa
r in the swing states was less than 800,000. Ultimately, a
relatively small numbe
r of votes dete
rmined the election. The winning ma
rgins of P
resident T
rump we
re less than 4 pe
rcentage points, except in states like A
rizona. In Pennsylvania, P
resident Biden won in 2020 by a ve
ry slim of fewe
r than 50,000 votes.
7 But in 2024, P
resident T
rump won the state by about 140,000 votes out of seven million votes cast and this helped him secu
re 19 electo
ral votes as a majo
r victo
ry. In Geo
rgia, P
resident Biden only won by a little unde
r 12,000 votes in 2020. P
resident T
rump su
rp
risingly
received about 110,000 mo
re votes and secu
red 16 electo
ral votes.
Table 1. U.S. Presidential Election Results in Swing States (%, Number of Votes)

In No
rth Ca
rolina, which the Democ
rats have not won since 2008, seve
ral polls showed a smalle
r T
rump lead than in A
rizona and Geo
rgia.
8 In 2016, P
resident T
rump defeated P
resident Biden by just about one pe
rcent, 74,000 votes, but this yea
r, he won the state by 190,000 mo
re votes. Michigan was mo
re likely to go to Democ
rats judging f
rom the past, but P
resident T
rump won in 2016 by a slim 0.2 pe
rcentage point.
9 In 2020, the state was P
resident Biden’s biggest win among the swing states, and in 2024, T
rump ultimately won by less than 90,000 votes. In A
rizona, bo
rde
r c
rossings and immig
ration have been the hottest debate and the 2020 election was just the second that the Democ
rats had won since the 1940s.
10 In 2024, P
resident T
rump was successful in secu
ring a little ove
r 180,000 mo
re votes. Nevada has been a blue state since 2008, but some polls suggested that it was competitive in 2024.
11 Finally, P
resident T
rump won by about 50,000 votes in 2024. Also, in Wisconsin, P
resident T
rump by less than a 1 pe
rcentage point ma
rgin with less than 30,000 votes. Inte
restingly, though vote
rs in A
rizona and Nevada app
roved an abo
rtion
rights amendment, the same vote
rs cast mo
re votes fo
r P
resident T
rump.
12
Ove
rall, public conce
rn ove
r the state of the national economy appea
red to be a main d
rive
r fo
r vote
rs who suppo
rted P
resident T
rump. As the exit polls suggested, many vote
rs cited the economy as a top p
rio
rity when they headed to the polling booth.
13 It was expected that P
resident T
rump would do a bette
r job in dealing with economic p
roblems than Vice P
resident Ha
rris, and low app
roval fo
r the Biden administ
ration was la
rgely due to high inflation. As the vote
rs have p
reviously sought change in a p
residential election when they a
re dissatisfied with the economy,
14 a poo
r pe
rfo
rmance by the Biden administ
ration on the economy seems to have t
ranslated into votes fo
r P
resident T
rump.
2. The Congressional Elections
In addition to the p
residential election, the U.S. Cong
ressional elections we
re held to elect all 435 membe
rs in the House of
Rep
resentatives and 33 out of 100 Senate seats. The
Republican Pa
rty won the necessa
ry 218 seats to
retain a majo
rity. It also
regained cont
rol of the Senate with c
rucial wins in Ohio, West Vi
rginia, and Neb
raska to have a 53-seat majo
rity.
15 As Table 2 shows, the election outcomes in the Senate and the House will give P
resident T
rump a gove
rning t
rifecta, much like du
ring the sta
rt of his fi
rst te
rm in office. In the Senate, the
reti
rement of long-time Senate
Republican leade
r Mitch McConnell (
R-Kentucky) paved the way fo
r his deputy Senato
r John Thune (
R-South Dakota) to take the
reins fo
r the
Republican majo
rity, ove
rseeing key pe
rsonnel confi
rmations. Meanwhile, in the House, Speake
r Mike Johnson (
R-Louisiana) continues in his position, especially given the ac
rimonious nominating p
rocess that p
receded his election with the House
Republican F
reedom Caucus.
Table 2. Electoral College, Popular Vote, and Congressional Balance
In te
rms of
ROK-U.S.
relations and pa
rticula
rly the Ko
rea Caucuses in both the House and Senate, the
re is expected to be continuity of membe
rship in both. In the Senate, none of the fou
r Senato
rs who launched the Ko
rea Caucus in 2023 we
re up fo
r re-election, including Senato
rs Jon Ossoff (D-Geo
rgia), Dan Sullivan (
R-Alaska), B
rian Schatz (D-Hawaii), and Todd Young (
R-Indiana). In the House, one significant change has been
Rep
resentative Andy Kim (D-New Je
rsey) who won p
re-selection to contest the Senate seat and successfully won the election, becoming the fi
rst Ame
rican senato
r of Ko
rean he
ritage. In addition to his membe
rship on the House Ko
rea Caucus, Senato
r-elect Kim had se
rved on the House A
rmed Se
rvices Committee as well as the House Fo
reign Affai
rs Committee.
17
Also in the House of relevance to Korea-U.S. relations, Representative Young Kim (R-California), who chaired the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Indo-Pacific, won re-election. Representative Michelle Park Steel (R-California), whose foreign policy roles included the Select Committee on Strategic Competition between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party, was in a tight race with the outcome undeclared when this Issue Brief went to publication on November 19. Re-elected on the Democratic side was Representative Marilyn Strickland (D-Washington) who had served on the House Armed Services Committee. In sum, most of the key Congressional representatives in both the House and Senate who advocate on behalf of the ROK-U.S. alliance will return to office.
3. President Trump’s ROK-U.S. Alliance Priorities
The United States’ 51 t
reaty allies a
round the wo
rld will once again face a T
rump administ
ration that has pledged to put ‘Ame
rica Fi
rst’ in its app
roach to alliances. Allied gove
rnments may have lea
rned lessons f
rom thei
r fi
rst expe
rience dealing with the T
rump administ
ration f
rom 2017-2020, but many of thei
r leade
rs a
re no longe
r in office while the leade
rs of adve
rsa
ries a
re all still in powe
r. The wo
rld has also changed ma
rkedly f
rom the days of the COVID-19 pandemic when P
resident T
rump left office. It is now engulfed in bloody conflicts that have claimed hund
reds of thousands of lives in Uk
raine, the Middle East, Af
rica, and Myanma
r. Meanwhile, autho
rita
rian
regimes like No
rth Ko
rea, China,
Russia, and I
ran have moved f
rom oppo
rtunistic coope
ration to de facto milita
ry alliances.
Who P
resident T
rump chooses to se
rve in his administ
ration will have eno
rmous consequences given the high tu
rnove
r and pe
rsonnel c
rises that plagued his fi
rst te
rm. While he has announced a se
ries of cabinet picks in quick succession in the two weeks since his victo
ry, it
remains to be seen which of these nominees will ultimately pass Senate confi
rmation when the 119
th Cong
ress sits, o
r whethe
r they will be made as
recess appointments o
r without Senate hea
rings as P
resident T
rump has p
roposed.
The day befo
re the U.S. elections, the
ROK p
residential office emphasized that “the gove
rnment is
ready to
respond to any outcome in the U.S. p
residential election.”
18 The
re will inevitably be conce
rn about how P
resident T
rump will app
roach the No
rth Ko
rean nuclea
r issue and whethe
r he will continue the Biden administ
ration’s effo
rts to st
rengthen extended nuclea
r dete
rrence assu
rances to the
ROK th
rough the Nuclea
r Consultative G
roup (NCG). P
resident T
rump’s ‘all o
r nothing’ DP
RK st
rategy failed in the 2019 Hanoi Summit and he has subsequently downplayed the dange
r posed by Kim Jong Un. Neve
rtheless, as No
rth Ko
rea and
Russia a
re st
rengthening thei
r ties and P
resident T
rump has been touting his co
rdial
relations with st
rongmen as evidence of his statesmanship, he may engage Kim Jong Un just as he has p
romised to deal with
Russian P
resident Vladimi
r Putin to end the wa
r in Uk
raine.
The second majo
r p
rio
rity that the
ROK should be
ready fo
r is P
resident T
rump’s almost ce
rtain attack on the
recently concluded Special Measu
res Ag
reement (SMA). As the
ROK’s economic and
defense powe
r sta
rted to g
row th
roughout the yea
rs, the United States shifted f
rom fully bea
ring the cost of stationing United States Fo
rces Ko
rea (USFK) to negotiating the
ROK’s cont
ribution to some of the costs. The fi
rst T
rump administ
ration demanded a five-fold inc
rease in cost-sha
ring, and the
re has been continuous
renegotiation between the two count
ries. On Octobe
r 4, the Yoon administ
ration concluded the 12
th SMA with the Biden administ
ration ahead of schedule as a five-yea
r deal f
rom 2026-2030 with an 8.3% inc
rease.
19 Howeve
r, the SMA is an executive ag
reement that the p
resident can ove
rtu
rn. P
resident T
rump said at the Economic Club of Chicago on Octobe
r 15 that the
ROK is ‘a money machine,’ and also a
rgued that the
ROK would be paying $10 billion a yea
r if he was in the White House.
20
4. The Trump Alliance Burden-sharing Dilemma
The allied bu
rden-sha
ring dilemma that the United States has long faced between encou
raging g
reate
r allied self-
reliance and maintaining dominant influence ove
r its allies has shifted in favo
r of the fo
rme
r unde
r P
resident T
rump.
21 Allies that have
repeatedly d
rawn his i
re will not only be expected to do mo
re fo
r thei
r own
defense, but also financially cont
ribute towa
rds the collective
defense that the United States milita
ry unde
rw
rites. Fo
r the
ROK, this will
requi
re putting the SMA back on the negotiating table.
Yet it is also impo
rtant to imp
ress upon P
resident T
rump that the U.S. milita
ry p
resence in the
ROK is not, as he often po
rt
rays, a p
rotection
racket fo
r which the U.S. is not p
rope
rly paid o
r receives no benefit. The U.S. milita
ry commitment to the
ROK actually magnifies Ame
rican powe
r in many ways. The 28,500 U.S. t
roops and thei
r families based in the
ROK—and not the e
rroneous 40,000 t
roops that P
resident T
rump has
recently mentioned to inflate the size of the U.S. commitment—a
re the most tangible demonst
ration of the U.S. secu
rity commitment to its allies. Mo
re impo
rtantly, thei
r p
resence has also dete
rred No
rth Ko
rea, China, and
Russia f
rom sta
rting anothe
r all-out wa
r in No
rtheast Asia fo
r ove
r 70 yea
rs, a wa
r that the United States would almost ce
rtainly find itself involved in at fa
r g
reate
r cost and sac
rifice.
The
ROK-U.S. alliance is also a unique combined fo
rces command in pa
rtne
rship with almost 500,000
ROK fo
rces as well as U.S. leade
rship of the 18-membe
r United Nations Command that is unlike its othe
r alliances in the Indo-Pacific. The alliance is also becoming a ‘global comp
rehensive st
rategic alliance’ whe
reby the
ROK is stepping up to suppo
rt U.S. effo
rts beyond the Ko
rean Peninsula in a new fo
rm of bu
rden-sha
ring.
22 The U.S. milita
ry p
resence has also const
rained
ROK debates about nuclea
r a
rmament that would su
rely follow a U.S. t
roop withd
rawal. And even f
rom a st
rictly t
ransactional pe
rspective, it is unclea
r how much money the United States would actually save by
relocating its fo
rces and thei
r dependents to the continental United States given it would need to build new bases and facilities o
r instead conside
r a
reduction in the size of the U.S. a
rmed fo
rces.
23
Nonetheless, the Yoon administ
ration will need mo
re ba
rgaining chips than just mo
re cost-sha
ring offe
rs o
r appeals to U.S. self-inte
rest. Fo
r example, the Moon administ
ration also
revisited the Ko
rea-U.S. F
ree T
rade Ag
reement in 2017-18 to g
rant mo
re U.S. access to the
ROK automobile ma
rket and negotiated an alte
rnative steel expo
rt quota
regime in
response to P
resident T
rump’s 25% steel ta
riff. This time, the
ROK will need to demonst
rate what mo
re it can cont
ribute when it comes to the bipa
rtisan U.S. desi
re to att
ract significant
ROK co
rpo
rate investment in U.S. manufactu
ring. Afte
r all, att
racting $200 billion in Asian co
rpo
rate investment was one of P
resident Biden’s p
roudest achievements, of which the
ROK was the la
rgest investo
r in 2023 alone at $21.5 billion and fa
r mo
re ove
r the past fou
r yea
rs.
24
It was the
refo
re notewo
rthy that P
resident T
rump’s fi
rst phone call with P
resident Yoon explicitly discussed shipbuilding as an a
rea fo
r close coope
ration.
25 This builds on the p
romising sta
rt unde
r the Biden administ
ration to engage
ROK shipbuilde
rs to suppo
rt U.S. naval shipbuilding and sustainment
requi
rements, including th
rough the maintenance,
repai
r, and ove
rhaul (M
RO) of fo
rwa
rd-deployed U.S. Navy supply ships. P
resident T
rump’s commitment to
rebuilding U.S. milita
ry st
rength is coupled with an intense u
rgency about an imminent c
risis with China exp
ressed by many of his adviso
rs and senio
r officials. This can be an oppo
rtunity fo
r the
ROK to demonst
rate how it can help keep existing U.S. milita
ry capabilities in se
rvice longe
r th
rough in-theat
re sustainment while the U.S.
defense indust
rial base gets back on schedule with its majo
r capability acquisitions.
26
Finally, the
ROK will need to wo
rk closely with othe
r U.S. allies a
round the wo
rld. The majo
r bilate
ral p
rio
rities—cost-sha
ring and fo
rce postu
re, th
reat p
rio
ritization and
risk tole
rance, indust
rial policy and t
rade access, nuclea
r dete
rrence, shipbuilding, and
defense indust
rial base suppo
rt—a
re not solely
ROK-U.S. issues. These p
rio
rities will have familia
r echoes whethe
r it is in Seoul o
r Tokyo, Canbe
rra o
r Manila, B
russels o
r Be
rlin,
Riyadh o
r Je
rusalem. The Biden administ
ration’s final alliance gift may the
refo
re be the st
ronge
r linkages that it has foste
red among allies and pa
rtne
rs ac
ross
regions, f
rom the NATO IP4 meetings to the AUKUS pa
rtne
rship, which will now be called upon to build gua
rd
rails fo
r U.S. global leade
rship.
Conclusion
In his 2015 election manifesto,
Crippled America: How to Make America Great Again, P
resident T
rump asked, “If othe
r count
ries a
re depending on us to p
rotect them, shouldn’t they be willing to make su
re we have the capability to do it? Shouldn’t they be willing to pay fo
r the se
rvicemen and se
rvicewomen and the equipment we’
re p
roviding?
27 A decade on as he p
repa
res fo
r his second te
rm in office, P
resident T
rump’s attitude towa
rds allies in gene
ral, and especially the ‘money machine’ allies hosting U.S. t
roops, has only ha
rdened. Conside
ring his unp
redictability and tendency to exploit any leve
rage in negotiations, the Yoon administ
ration should t
ry and shape the agenda of the fi
rst leade
rs’ meeting to include a wide
r range of topics whe
re
ROK indust
rial and technological st
rengths can be f
ramed by P
resident T
rump as a good deal but also continue the ongoing t
ransfo
rmation of the
ROK-U.S. alliance to
reflect the needs and
responsibilities of a mo
re p
rospe
rous and capable
ROK.
The views expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the views of the Asan Institute for Policy Studies.
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- 14. Ruth Igielnik, “Polls show Trump’s edge shrinking on voters’ top issue: the economy,” The New York Times (October 30, 2024), https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/30/us/elections/trump-harris-economy-poll.html.
- 15. The U.S. Senate election for Pennsylvania was scheduled for a recount on November 13, 2024.
- 16. Latest figures from NBC News as of November 17, 2024: https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2024-elections/president-results. Note that the Pennsylvania Senate race had not been officially called but other outlets such as AP had called it for Republican candidate Dave McCormick.
- 17. Press Release, “Congressman Andy Kim’s Statement on the Trilateral Summit with South Korea and Japan” (August 18, 2023), https://web.archive.org/web/20240929064938/https://kim.house.gov/media/press-releases/congressman-andy-kim-s-statement-on-the-trilateral-summit-with-south-korea-and-japan
- 18. “Presidential office says ready to respond to any outcome in US election,” The Korea Times (November 5, 2024), https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/nation/2024/11/113_385695.html.
- 19. U.S. Department of State, “ROK Special Measures Agreement Consultations” (October 4, 2024), https://www.state.gov/rok-special-measures-agreement-consultations/.
- 20. Soo-Hyang Choi, “Trump Says ‘Money Machine’ Korea Should Pay More for US Troops,” Bloomberg (October 16, 2024), https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-10-16/trump-says-money-machine-korea-should-pay-more-for-us-troops.
- 21. Brian D. Blankenship, The Burden-Sharing Dilemma: Coercive Diplomacy in US Alliance Politics (Cornell University Press, 2023).
- 22. The White House, “Leaders’ Joint Statement in Commemoration of the 70th Anniversary of the Alliance between the United States of America and the Republic of Korea” (April 26, 2023), https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2023/04/26/leaders-joint-statement-in-commemoration-of-the-70th-anniversary-of-the-alliance-between-the-united-states-of-america-and-the-republic-of-korea/.
- 23. Ryan Browne, “Top general: Cheaper to keep troops in South Korea than U.S.,” CNN (April 21, 2016), https://edition.cnn.com/2016/04/21/politics/trump-troops-korea-japan-cheaper-abroad/index.html.
- 24. The White House, “FACT SHEET: Biden-Harris Administration Highlights Nearly $200 Billion of Private Sector Investments from the Asia-Pacific into the United States Since Taking Office” (November 16, 2023), https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2023/11/16/fact-sheet-biden-harris-administration-highlights-nearly-200-billion-of-private-sector-investments-from-the-asia-pacific-into-the-united-states-since-taking-office/.
- 25. Park Jae-hyuk, “Trump woos Korean shipbuilders,” The Korea Times (November 7, 2024), https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/tech/2024/11/129_385877.html.
- 26. Choi Kang and Peter K. Lee, “Why U.S. Naval Power Needs Asian Allies,” War on the Rocks (January 12, 2024), https://warontherocks.com/2024/01/why-u-s-naval-power-needs-asian-allies/.
- 27. Donald Trump, Crippled America: How to Make America Great Again (Threshold Editions, 2015), p. 34.