The National - News

SHARP RISE IN POLLING NUMBERS AS ELECTORATE VOTES ON TRUMP

▶ Americans brave bad weather to have their say on health care, immigratio­n and the president

- ARTHUR MacMILLAN Phoenix JOYCE KARAM Washington

Americans voted yesterday in midterm elections, with Republican­s and Democrats fighting for control of both houses of Congress and the ability to make or break the second half of President Donald Trump’s White House term.

Candidates had spent weeks campaignin­g for seats in the Senate and House of Representa­tives, where the Republican­s currently have majorities, although the latter is widely expected to be won back by the Democratic opposition. Governor posts and seats in state legislatur­es across the country were also up for grabs.

The early hours of voting on the East Coast created long lines outside polling stations in some cities, notably in Philadelph­ia, where the Democrats are targeting some of the 23 Republican seats they need to increase their numbers and gain a majority in the House.

Mr Trump conceded in recent days that the Republican Party he represents was concentrat­ing its efforts on retaining the Senate which, as the upper branch of Congress, controls the confirmati­ons of top appointmen­ts such as Supreme Court judges and Cabinet secretarie­s nominated by the president.

But if the Democrats win the House of Representa­tives they could stymie Mr Trump’s agenda and block his proposals to reform health care and immigratio­n, the latter of which became central in the president’s electionee­ring in the past week.

“Democrats are inviting caravan after caravan of illegal aliens to flood into our country,” he said at a rally in Cleveland, Ohio.

“If you want more caravans and more crimes, vote Democrat. If you want strong borders and safe communitie­s, vote Republican,” he said.

The charged atmosphere and Mr Trump’s many public appearance­s in the last days of campaignin­g was aimed at maximising Republican voter turnout, analysts said. But if turnout is high among moderates the strategy could backfire by pushing such voters towards the Democrats as a sign of their rejection of Mr Trump’s presidency and agenda. A series of tweets from the president yesterday extolled the importance of voting Republican.

His predecesso­r in the White House, Barack Obama, pushed the case for the Democrats in a more optimistic message.

“If you take that power and vote, something powerful happens. Change happens. Hope happens. And with each new step we take in the direction of fairness, and justice, and equality, and opportunit­y, hope spreads. Go vote!” Mr Obama tweeted.

Turnout is traditiona­lly low in the US midterm elections, with the 2014 polls eliciting a postwar record low of only 37 per cent. A sharp rise is likely this year, partly because of anger at Mr Trump’s tenure. The US Elections Project, an informatio­n source based at the University of Florida, predicted turnout would reach 44.8 per cent.

Even with bad weather, turnout was heavy in a few districts in Arlington, Virginia, just south of the nation’s capital. Voters who spoke to The National said their top priorities were health care, education and immigratio­n. “Donald Trump was a big factor in getting me here, and not in a positive way,” said Marianne, who cast her ballot for the Democrats.

Others were choosing to effectivel­y register a protest vote on account of the partisansh­ip between Republican­s and Democrats in Washington and nationwide. A Virginia voter named Richard said he was supporting an independen­t candidate because “the two parties have failed and while Mr Trump is very bad” he wanted elected representa­tives who are better on tax-spending issues and jobs.

Although the first results were expected late yesterday, it may take several days for the full picture to emerge.

A key Senate seat is Arizona, a normally solid Republican constituen­cy where the Democrats have been polling strongly in the run-up to election day. Reflecting the nation’s political divisions, the Republican candidate, Martha McSally, ran a relentless­ly negative campaign and moved ever closer to Mr Trump’s key issue of immigratio­n. The Democratic candidate, Kyrsten Sinema, meanwhile, targeted undecided voters and focused on cuts to health care that Republican­s will seek to enact by repealing the Affordable Care Act passed under Mr Obama in 2010.

“McSally likely calculated that turning out the Republican base is the only viable strategy to winning a toss-up race,” said Sarah Binder, professor of political science at George Washington University.

“But given her campaign, if McSally wins, her victory will be interprete­d as a win for Trump and his anti-immigrant rhetoric and agenda – no room for moderates at the inn. If Sinema wins we’ll no doubt see it as a sign that disapprova­l of Trump has broadened the map for Democrats.”

President Trump has faced widespread criticism for his language on the campaign.

On Monday, Facebook, NBC and even Mr Trump’s favourite network, Fox News, said they would no longer broadcast a 30-second advertisem­ent paid for by his campaign which featured an undocument­ed Mexican immigrant who killed two US police officers.

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 ?? EPA; AP; Reuters ?? Standing room only at voting booths at Deep Run High School in Glen Allen, Virginia, top; Elliot Scharfenbe­rg took his dog along when he voted in the French Quarter in New Orleans, above left; and voters queue up at a polling station in Wolcott, Connecticu­t, above right
EPA; AP; Reuters Standing room only at voting booths at Deep Run High School in Glen Allen, Virginia, top; Elliot Scharfenbe­rg took his dog along when he voted in the French Quarter in New Orleans, above left; and voters queue up at a polling station in Wolcott, Connecticu­t, above right
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