Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Voters pack polls in crucial test of President Trump’s tenure

- By Claire Galofaro

There were first-time voters and straight-ticket voters and some who, this goaround, switched sides. They went to the polls considerin­g the caravan of migrants trudging across Mexico, their health insurance and their paychecks, an impotent Congress, and the nation’s poisonous political culture that has divided even families and friends along party lines.

More than anything on this Election Day in America, in a midterm contest like no other before it, voters cast their ballots with one man in mind: President Donald Trump.

“Trump is terrifying and we need to make a change, so I’ve been encouragin­g my friends and family to vote,” said Samantha Bohr, a 26-year-old who lives in suburban Parsippany­Troy Hills, New Jersey. She checked the text messages on her phone as she finished voting, because her family had promised to let one another know they’d made it to the polls.

They joined millions of Americans who turned out in droves Tuesday — some lining up before the sun rose, some standing for hours or braving pouring rain or snow — to vote in an election that will determine control of Congress and render a verdict on Trump’s first two years in office. The outcome could redefine the nation’s political landscape for months and years to come.

Democrats need to gain 23 seats to take control of the House of Representa­tives and hope to ride the wave of liberal fury that organized after Trump’s surprising victory in 2016.

“My loathing for him knows no bounds,” said Kathleen Ross, 69, a retired professor voting in Olympia, Washington, who described herself as a lifelong progressiv­e. She said she was confident the country eventually would reject Trumpism and the divisive governing it represents. “I tend to think the arc of the universe bends toward justice, so I don’t become discourage­d.”

Trump has sought to counter some of that rage by stoking anger and fear in his base. In recent weeks, he’s put the spotlight on a caravan of Central American migrants that he calls “an invasion” of criminals and terrorists. He ran an advertisem­ent about immigratio­n so racially incendiary that all three major cable news networks, including Fox News, either refused to air it or eventually decided to stop showing it.

Among some Republican voters, that message resonated.

“What’s going on right now is pretty scary to me, at the border, with all those people coming, and I don’t think I’m hardhearte­d or anything,” said Patricia Maynard, 63, a retired teacher in Skowhegan, Maine.

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