Kuwait Times

A year before 2020 election, a divided and ‘angry’ America

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WASHINGTON: America yesterday kicks off the one-year countdown to Election Day 2020, with President Donald Trump betting an “angry” Republican surge can deliver him a second term, as the Democratic battle to win back the White House heats up. The building political clash - dramatical­ly fueled by the House of Representa­tives’ impeachmen­t inquiry into Trump - appears to virtually guarantee another year of sharp division in a nation long weary of such drama.

Polls suggest the country couldn’t be much more divided. The latest projection from a University of Virginia political science team

points to a dead-even 2020 race, with each party leading in states totaling 248 electoral college votes, 22 short of the 270 needed for election. The division is reflected in the House, where the vote Thursday to formalize the impeachmen­t inquiry passed almost entirely on party lines - more partisan than any of the three previous impeachmen­t votes in US history.

‘Mentally violent’

As that inquiry proceeds, Trump has lashed out in increasing­ly angry, personal and crude terms, seeking to damage his political foes while energizing a fiercely loyal base. In a speech Friday in Tupelo, Mississipp­i, he called Democratic leaders “mentally violent,” denounced the impeachmen­t inquiry as a “hoax” and said former vice president Joe Biden, once a Democratic frontrunne­r, was getting “slower and slower.” Trump has even retweeted, with apparent approval, a warning by an evangelica­l pastor that his impeachmen­t could “cause a Civil War like fracture in this Nation.”

Amid all the furor, the top Democratic candidates

have struggled for a share of the spotlight while anxiety grows among some in the party that a clear, strong challenger with mainstream appeal has yet to emerge. Trump’s focus on Biden - and the allegation­s, for which there is no evidence, that he and his son were somehow tainted by corruption in Ukraine - has weighed on the former vice president. He has slipped from a dominant position in the large Democratic field to fourth place among voters in the crucial, first-in-the-nation Iowa caucus, according to a New York Times/Siena College poll released Friday.

That survey put Senator Elizabeth Warren in the lead, at 22 percent, followed by Senator Bernie Sanders, at 19 percent, with a surging Pete Buttigieg, mayor of South Bend, Indiana, at 18 percent, one point ahead of the far betterknow­n Biden. But many Democrats fear Warren and Sanders are too liberal to win in a nationwide vote, and that Buttigieg - who has struggled to widen his appeal beyond a core of white, liberal voters - might not be electable. That also means less attention on the Democrats’ top issues, including health care, gun control and immigratio­n reform. —AFP

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 ??  ?? TUPELO: Donald Trump supporters show off a banner before the President’s ‘Keep America Great’ campaign rally at BancorpSou­th Arena in Tupelo, Mississipp­i. — AFP
TUPELO: Donald Trump supporters show off a banner before the President’s ‘Keep America Great’ campaign rally at BancorpSou­th Arena in Tupelo, Mississipp­i. — AFP

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