The Columbus Dispatch

An anxious country sets its course for future

- Susan Page

An anxious and divided nation, gripped in the most serious health and economic crises of modern times, finishes voting Tuesday in what both sides describe as the most crucial presidenti­al election in their lifetimes.

Partisans for President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden, who disagree on almost everything, agree on this: The stakes are fundamenta­l and far-reaching, a choice that offers dramatical­ly different visions for the future.

Scholars see it that way, too. “Whichever way it goes, we’re going to go down very different paths,” said Susan Stokes, director of the Center on Democracy at the University of Chicago.

She struggled when asked if any previous

elections seemed similar. “Maybe before the Civil War?” she suggested.

The candidates’ closing arguments reflected not only contrastin­g priorities but also clashing perception­s about what reality the newly elected president will face when he is inaugurate­d in January.

Trump assured supporters that the USA is “rounding the curve” of the pandemic – even though the number of new cases last week broke records – and that an economic boom was poised to take off.

“If I don’t always play by the rules of the Washington establishm­ent, it’s because I was elected to fight for you, and I fight harder than any president has ever fought for his people,” he told a rally Monday in North Carolina, the first stop in a day of barnstormi­ng in four battlegrou­nd states.

Biden accused Trump of having “raised the white flag of surrender” against COVID-19. Only after bringing the pandemic under control can the country hope to fix the economic upheaval in its wake, he said.

“We’re going to beat the virus,” he told a crowd in Cleveland on Monday, before heading for Pennsylvan­ia. “The first step to beating the virus is beating Donald Trump.”

Biden called Trump “a disgrace.” Trump called Biden “a career politician who hates you.”

100 million votes already cast

Even before traditiona­l polling places opened Tuesday morning, about 100 million Americans had cast their ballots, smashing all records for early voting. Michael Mcdonald, a University of Florida professor who directs the U.S. Elections Project, estimated that a total of 160.2 million Americans will have voted by the time the polls close Tuesday night, the highest number in history.

If that prediction is correct, the turnout rate among those eligible to vote would be 67%, the highest since 1900. (For the record, that was when Republican President William Mckinley defeated Democratic challenger William Jennings Bryan.)

The superheate­d interest in this election has been fueled not only by voters’ allegiance to their candidate but also by their alarm about the other guy. One in 10 Trump voters say in the latest USA Today/suffolk University Poll that they are voting against Biden, not for Trump. Almost a third of Biden voters, 30%, say they are voting against Trump, not for Biden.

The survey of 1,000 likely voters, taken by landline and cellphone Oct. 23-27, has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

If Biden wins, “it’s going to be terrible for the country, absolutely terrible,” said Barry Brebart, 57, an architect from Chicago who voted for Trump and was among those polled. “It’ll be four years of socialist, leftist legislatio­n that will take a dozen years to undo.”

If Trump wins, “I think it will say that a vision of the country that was inclusive and tolerant ... wasn’t the case,” said Tim Barber, 31, a Biden voter from Salt Lake City who works at a homeless shelter. “That we live in a far meaner, more brittle society that we were led to think we were.”

By roughly 2-1, voters in both camps say they would be more than disappoint­ed if their candidate lost. Nearly 6 in 10 Trump voters say they would be “scared” if Biden was elected. Two-thirds of Biden voters say they would be “scared” if Trump won.

The task of deciding just who won may take longer than usual, especially in states that by law can’t begin to count the flood of mail-in and early ballots before Election Day. An unpreceden­ted number of lawsuits in Florida, Texas, Pennsylvan­ia and elsewhere have been filed over what ballots should be counted and when.

“As soon as the election’s over, we’re going in with our lawyers,” Trump said. He complained about a court decision that will allow Pennsylvan­ia to count absentee ballots that arrive up to three days after the election if they are postmarked by Tuesday.

Contributi­ng: Sarah Elbeshbish­i

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