The Columbus Dispatch

Tears, frustratio­n, division with 1 week left

- Amanda Garrett

“The day after [President]

Karen Smith choked on tears when she tried to explain the year leading up to the 2020 presidenti­al election.

“My life became a train wreck, honestly,” Smith said.

She lost a wedding, her job and inperson medical appointmen­ts she depends on – because of the pandemic.

She can’t talk to her “ultra conservati­ve” family about anything political, even how she no longer earns enough to pay for her old insurance plan that covered a $10,000 medication.

And on top of everything, she’s afraid to post anything with a political slant on social media for fear she’ll be attacked or labeled with her own name – Karen – which in 2020 has become a national symbol for obnoxious, often racist, privileged, white women who demand things at the expense of others.

“It’s been humbling,” Smith told a group of strangers from Central Ohio during a Your Voice Ohio Zoom meeting Oct. 6.

Weeks before Election Day, Ohioans are weary.

The pandemic. The political divisions. The difficulty sorting fact from fiction as their country seems to teeter on the edge of history, uncertain if it will muddle on largely as it was, or evolve, for better or for worse.

That’s motivated some voters, confused others and left many so frustrated they may not even vote.

Two university students in the YVO group, neither of whom wanted to be identified in this article, both crave change – largely because of racism and the fight for social justice.

A 22-year-old college student from Powell, who is Black, said she was too young to vote in 2016, but the election changed her world and how she saw herself in it.

“The day after [President] Trump was elected, I had people coming up to me who I thought were my friends and saying, ‘Go back to your country,’ ‘I hope you have your passport on you,’ ” she

Trump was elected, I had people coming up to me who

I thought were my friends and saying, ‘Go back to your country,’ ‘I hope you have your passport on you,’. I was shocked.”

An unidentified 22-year-old college student from Powell, who is Black

said. “I was shocked.”

A fourth-year Ohio State University student, who is white, said his extended family is “very right wing” and “proTrump,” yet he and almost all of his friends hold opposing views.

The student, who is in an interracia­l relationsh­ip, said "it’s very difficult trying to reconcile these people are my family and I love them but I’m against what they believe in,” particular­ly after the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapoli­s police and all that’s come after.

“I don’t see a future if the incumbent president is elected,” he said.

Yet deciding who to vote for is more complicate­d for others.

Amy Pache, a chauffeur from the Dublin area, voted for Barack Obama and then flipped parties in 2016 and voted for Donald Trump.

“I considered both of them outsiders and agreed more than I disagreed with their platforms,” she said.

Pache, who is white, is also in an interracia­l relationsh­ip.

“Black Lives Matter, Antifa and the riots and conflict and the murder rate and all of that is on my mind,” Pache said.

At the same time, Pache wants to maintain strong police department­s – perhaps with better training – and lift pandemic restrictio­ns to help so many friends who have been ruined financially by COVID-19.

“I care about how much milk costs, how much is gas,” Pache said, wondering why the media doesn’t ask the candidates about how their policies will impact ordinary Americans.

“I don’t have stocks ... I don’t care about stocks ... I don’t have 22 zeroes behind the numbers in my bank account,” she said.

Anthony Dorman felt the same disconnect between candidates and Americans like himself.

Dorman is a general laborer who lives in the Bottoms, a Columbus neighborho­od west of downtown. It earned its nickname because of its low-lying topography, but for decades the name also reflected many of the people who lived in the Bottoms since they were stuck on the bottom rung of the economic ladder.

Dorman voted for Obama but didn’t vote for Trump or Hillary Clinton in the last election, even though he leans Republican.

“I would like to see somebody normal, that’s real, that says I growed up in this small town,” Dorman said.

Instead, Dorman said he sees politics as nothing but a useless game played by Democrats and Republican­s, but particular­ly by Trump.

“It’s hopeless, my friends don’t even want to vote” because the country will still have the same problems no matter who is in office, he said.

Dorman sees the presidency much like he sees COVID-19.

He doesn’t know anyone who’s fallen ill with COVID-19. And he doesn’t have any ancestors who have died in previous pandemics.

“Covid is not a reality to me, just like the president,” he said. “It doesn’t matter who he is going to be. There is no effect in my daily life.”

Amanda Garrett is a reporter for the Akron Beacon Journal and can be emailed at agarrett@thebeaconj­ournal.com.

Want to volunteer for a future dialogue and receive $125 for two hours? Register at the Your Voice Ohio Election 2020 website.

 ?? USA TODAY NETWORK FILE PHOTOS ?? President Donald Trump trails former Vice President Joe Biden in the latest poll of Ohio registered voters.
USA TODAY NETWORK FILE PHOTOS President Donald Trump trails former Vice President Joe Biden in the latest poll of Ohio registered voters.
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