Greenwich Time

Voters fret about democracy, polarizati­on before election

-

American voters are fractured politicall­y and culturally ahead of Election Day, and they are anxious about where their country is heading — on inflation, abortion, immigratio­n, crime, and much more.

They also sense something more fundamenta­l at stake at a time of rising mistrust of institutio­ns and each other: the future of democracy.

Some Americans remain hopeful, but a fretful outlook emerges from interviews with more than two dozen Democratic, Republican and unaffiliat­ed voters before Tuesday's midterm elections — the first since followers of former President Donald Trump tried to halt the certificat­ion of President Joe Biden's 2020 victory.

These midterm elections are also the first since the Supreme Court took away a woman's constituti­onal right to terminate a pregnancy, leaving the matter to states.

“This election is hugely consequent­ial,” said Edward Foley, a professor at Ohio State University who directs its election-law program. “It's a question of where our democracy is and how we are doing with our collective self-governance.”

Midterms are always important because a switch in control of the House or Senate can stunt the plans of a sitting president. Control of Congress could also affect various investigat­ions into Trump, including his role in the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrecti­on.

Dozens of statewide candidates have said the 2020 election was stolen; some running for positions that validate elections have refused to say if they will certify the 2024 results. And there are already more than 100 legal challenges against this year's election.

The United States has stood at the precipice before. Not long after Abraham Lincoln's election in 1860, 11 states withdrew from the nation and the Civil War began.

Ultimately, Foley said, the election turns on a question: “Can we actually build the system and produce accurate, honest outcomes, and will enough people believe them?”

Here is a sampling of what voters had to say about democracy and other issues:

College student ‘motivated to change things’

Brian Montes' Mexican-born parents told him that America is “a shining city on a hill” and urged him to take his responsibi­lity as a U.S. citizen seriously.

Montes, 21, is majoring in political science at Portland State University, and will vote this election for the second time in his life.

Montes was appalled to see election deniers attempt to overturn President Biden's victory. For him, democracy is on the ballot this November.

“Protecting our democracy truly is ... paramount. We can't

really fix climate change, we can't, you know, help the health care system, we can't bring relief to students across this country until we have faith in our democracy,” he said.

Montes, who is gay, also worries that political beliefs are now such a part of personal identity that it's almost impossible to separate politics from hate.

Election is about ‘economy, first and foremost’

Tony Bergida, a 27-year-old father from the Kansas City, Kansas suburb of Olathe, said pocketbook issues carry more weight for him in this election than abortion, transgende­r rights or the validity of the 2020 presidenti­al election.

Bergida, the chair of the Kansas Young Republican­s, cast his ballot in advance and picked Republican Amanda Adkins over the incumbent, Democratic Rep. Sharice Davids.

Democratic ads have focused on abortion protection­s but the election is “really going to be the economy, first and foremost,” said Bergida, who said his grocery bill has soared over the past two years.

“The cost of living has got to be on everyone's minds right now.”

Bergida is also opposed to transgende­r athletes participat­ing in girls' sports, an issue that's at play in the Kansas gubernator­ial race.

Worried about Social Security, wealth disparity

Cynthia Jones was severely injured at work more than a decade ago and has relied on Social Security disability benefits to help pay bills and hold on to the ranch-style house left by her father.

The Atlanta native sees a country split between haves and have nots. She doesn't have health insurance that could pay for back surgery, but noted that members of Congress get access to health care and a pension. She worries

that if Republican­s take over Congress they will cut Social Security. (Republican Sen. Rick Scott of Florida has proposed a plan that would require Congress to adequately fund Social Security and Medicare or consider phasing them out.)

“If you're poor, you don't matter,” said the 64-year-old Democratic voter, who is pursuing a master's degree to be a mental health counselor.

She was also motivated to vote this year by the false claim by Trump and other Republican­s that the last presidenti­al election was stolen. She views that lie as an attack on Black and other marginaliz­ed voters who cast ballots in large numbers in 2020.

Pushing for Latino turnout, good governance

Ron Flores is a Republican retiree in his 70s who lives in a surf-friendly California beach community not far from the mostly Latino city of Santa Ana, where he lived as a child.

The son of a Mexican immigrant, Flores said he always had an interest in history and politics but didn't act on it until more recently and last year formed the group “BASTA!,” which is aimed at encouragin­g Latinos to vote and promoting mostly — but not solely — politicall­y conservati­ve candidates.

“Are you honest? Are you going to do what we want you to do?” he asked. “I support good governance candidates and sometimes it's on the left, but most of the time, it's on my right.”

In California, there are measures on the ballot right now about online gambling and abortion. But Flores said there are bigger issues, like how much it costs to fill his car with gas and the rising price of nearly everything.

“That impacts me, number one,” said Flores, who said he raised six children and worked in product design and consulting.

For Congress, Flores said

he's fed up with progressiv­es' views on social issues so he's voting for a Republican. But he isn't thrilled about his choice.

“I'm going to go for the best of the worst,” he said, pinching his nose.

After tragedy, combating crime is top of mind

Mary Elledge, 80, raised four children with her high school sweetheart in suburbs of Portland, Oregon. In 1986, her life was upended when her only son, Rob, was brutally murdered in their home.

The registered Democrat has been laser-focused since then on the rights of murder victims and their loved ones.

Now, as homicides spike in Portland, Elledge is choosing the independen­t candidate in Oregon's gubernator­ial election. She feels Democrats have strayed too far to the left on public safety and it bothers her deeply.

“It isn't safe to let your children outside without being able to know exactly where they are,” said Elledge, who has grandchild­ren and greatgrand­children. “What kind of a world are we bringing these children into?”

“I believe that being soft on crime is what's caused a lot of this,” she said. “Anyone who wants to defund the police, I wouldn't vote for them if they talk like that.”

Other than public safety, Elledge more neatly toes the Democratic Party line.

She believes in a woman's right to an abortion and she's “appalled” by former President Donald Trump.

Elledge, who has family members who are Trump supporters, said she struggled after her son's murder to avoid descending into hatred and now sees a lesson in her own story for today's polarized times.

“You have to agree not to agree,” Elledge said. “I think in all of this, we have to be careful that we don't become angry with everything.”

 ?? Charlie Litchfield / AP ?? Rebelann Barfield, left, and her sister November, sit as their mother Khara casts her vote in the general election on Tuesday, Nov. 2, 2010 in Star, Idaho.
Charlie Litchfield / AP Rebelann Barfield, left, and her sister November, sit as their mother Khara casts her vote in the general election on Tuesday, Nov. 2, 2010 in Star, Idaho.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States