The Jerusalem Post

US campaign in high gear with early voting under way in Florida

- • By ZACHARY FAGENSON and JOSEPH AX

CORAL GABLES ( Reuters) – Early voting began on Monday in Florida, a battlegrou­nd state that could decide the November 3 presidenti­al election, while a record 28 million Americans already have cast ballots nationwide with barely two weeks remaining in the campaign.

President Donald Trump, running out of time to change the dynamics of a race that opinion polls show him losing, will visit Arizona on Monday after holding a rally in Nevada on Sunday and urging his supporters to vote amid signs that Democrats are leading the surge in early voting.

His Democratic challenger Joe Biden, who campaigned on Sunday in North Carolina, another state that could favor either candidate, will spend the day at his home base in Delaware, while his running mate, US Senator Kamala Harris, heads to Florida to encourage supporters to vote early.

On Monday morning, voters lined up outside polling places across Florida to cast their ballots. Hundreds of people, most wearing face masks, stood in pouring rain outside the public library in Coral Gables, a majorityHi­spanic city near Miami.

Louis Perez, 57, an insurance fraud investigat­or, said he was voting for Biden because of Trump’s handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“He lied about it right from the beginning,” Perez, who isn’t affiliated with a party, said of Trump.

Registered Republican Antonio Sanchez, an architect who arrived in the United States from communist Cuba and was also voting in Coral Gables, said he supported Trump because he “stands for freedom” and against socialism.

“My two daughters are doctors. I don’t think this could have happened anyplace other than America,” said Sanchez, 59.

Florida is widely seen as a mustwin for Trump, whose path to victory becomes razor- thin if he loses the southern state. The state’s prize of 29 electoral votes is tied with New York for third most, behind only California and Texas, in the race for the 270 Electoral College votes that determine the presidenti­al winner under the US system.

An October 7- 14 Reuters/ Ipsos survey

of the state showed Biden with 49% of the support and Trump 47%, within the survey’s credibilit­y interval of 4 percentage points.

Both campaigns have poured advertisin­g money into Florida, although Biden, who has significan­tly out raised Trump since the summer while setting consecutiv­e monthly records for a US candidate, has outspent his Republican rival.

Harris, who was given a clean bill of health after an aide tested positive for COVID- 19, will participat­e in earlyvote rallies in Orlando and Jacksonvil­le, the campaign said.

Trump will stage rallies first in Prescott and later in Tucson, Arizona, another battlegrou­nd, or swing, state.

The 27.9 million Americans who already have voted either by mail or in person, according to the US Elections Project at the University of Florida, is a far greater number at this point in the campaign than in previous years.

Voters have cast about 20% of the overall total in 2016, when more than 136.6 million cast ballots.

Democrats account for 55% of the 10.9 million ballots cast in states that

report party registrati­on data, compared with 24% for Republican­s.

At a rally in Carson City, Nevada, on Sunday, where voting began the day before, Trump implored his supporters to “get out and vote” to help him flip a state that he lost narrowly to Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in 2016.

Despite his recent recovery from his own bout with the virus, Trump mocked Biden for his cautious approach toward the pandemic.

“Listen to the scientists!” Trump said in a mocking voice. “If I listened totally to the scientists, we would right now have a country that would be in a massive depression.”

In North Carolina, where 1.4 million, or 20%, of the state’s registered voters had voted as of Sunday morning, Biden urged residents to vote as soon as possible, and attacked Trump for saying the country had “turned the corner” on the pandemic.

“Things are getting worse, and he continues to lie to us about circumstan­ces,” said Biden, who will debate Trump for a final time on Thursday in Nashville, Tennessee.

 ?? ( Carlos Barria/ Reuters) ?? US PRESIDENT Donald Trump dances to the music as he departs a campaign rally in Carson City, Nevada on Sunday.
( Carlos Barria/ Reuters) US PRESIDENT Donald Trump dances to the music as he departs a campaign rally in Carson City, Nevada on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel