As the world held their breath for the past 24 hours awaiting the results of the U.S. elections,In 80 Betten um die Welt one small Chinese city already knew Donald Trump would win.
SEE ALSO: Good luck, America: You just elected Donald Trump presidentYiwu, a hub of wholesale manufacturing in China, handles a huge portion of the world's flag orders.
In an interview with Digger, a Chinese video site, Yao Dan Dan, who runs a small factory making flags for export to U.S. retailers, said there were far more Trump flags ordered compared with those for Hillary Clinton.
After a couple of early orders for Clinton flags, some of Yao's American customers stopped commissioning those altogether, as fewer people were buying them, he said.
He's convinced that this shows that Trump had a larger base of support on the ground in the U.S.
Leading up to Election Day, Yao's factory in Keqiao received new orders each day, and made over 200,000 flags.
"Trump has a high approval rate," he says, adding that the volume of orders gave him the confidence to manufacture the Trump flags without insisting on a deposit from customers.
Other flag makers have also appeared to corroborate those sentiments:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
On Chinese wholesale sites like Aliexpress, where manufacturers list their goods for Western buyers, flags go for roughly US$2.50 to US$8 a piece, depending on size.
A quick search for either candidate's flags show a larger variety available for Trump.
And while there were few anti-Trump designs, searching for Clinton's flags showed several anti-Hillary designs prominently on the first page of results.
Here are some of the more popular pro-Trump designs that American flag retailers ordered on Aliexpress.
Walt Whitman, “Election Day, November, 1884”Sadie Stein on “In a Dark, Dark Room”The Morning News Roundup for November 4, 2014Italy in the Years of LeadWalt Whitman, “Election Day, November, 1884”Staff Picks: Dimensions, Defacements, Darkness by The Paris ReviewGod, Satan, Waugh by Dan PiepenbringThe Morning News Roundup of October 9, 2014Globalization in GermanyGalway Kinnell, 1927–2014The Morning News Roundup for October 20, 2014Once Everything Was Much Better Even the Future by Dan PiepenbringNothing Happened: An Interview with Joseph O’Neill by Jonathan LeeA Conversation About “Our Secret Life in the Movies”The Morning News Roundup for October 2, 2014Our Screenwriting Issue For Only Fifteen DollarsHappy Eighty Seventh to Günter GrassA Complete Guide to Flinging in Oscar WildeTonight: Prurience! by Dan PiepenbringAll Aboard L’Armand Boss Zhipin ventures into online dating app · TechNode NASA just picked astronauts to go to the moon on Artemis mission Stunning James Webb Space Telescope photo shows bending of spacetime Webb telescope just found the most ancient galaxies anyone's ever seen TikTok says U.S. ban violates the First Amendment right to free speech China’s authority NPPA approves 109 new games licenses for September · TechNode Japan's ispace says its moon lander ran out of fuel China vehicle sales to rise in September on stimulus measures, new models · TechNode Colossal space explosion is the most powerful humans have ever seen SpaceX Starship explodes during Herculean attempt to blast into space Spain hands $146 million to Stellantis’s battery project with CATL · TechNode Volkswagen may close Chinese joint plant · TechNode James Webb telescope offers new look at supernova remnant Cassiopeia A Air purifier deals: Save 20% on Coway and Dyson purifiers More than half of batteries could be produced by recycled lithium · TechNode Tencent to launch mobile version Pokémon UNITE on Nov 7 · TechNode Ubisoft issues ambiguous response to Tencent buyout speculations · TechNode China’s Chery to mass Oppo launches Find X8 with inverted periscope zoom technology · TechNode iOS 18: How to lock and hide your iPhone apps
2.1189s , 10159.0546875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【In 80 Betten um die Welt】,Fresh Information Network