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Sunday, November 24, 2024

US elections on November 8; Biden, Trump rally troops on eve of crucial midterms

Washington—Joe Biden and Donald Trump headline a frantic last day of campaigning Monday on the eve of a midterm election that will shape the rest of the US president’s term—and could pave the way for a White House comeback by his predecessor.

Biden’s Democrats are facing a gargantuan struggle to hang on to Congress, after a race the president has cast as a “defining” moment for US democracy—though kitchen-table issues like inflation have largely dominated the campaign.

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Republicans are comfortably placed to snatch a House majority on Tuesday, as many Democrats fear the Senate also slipping away in a defeat that would see Biden’s foes in near total charge of legislation during his last two years in the White House.

Polls show most Americans are anxious about the economy and feel the country is on the wrong track, emboldening Republican candidates in districts that once looked out of reach.

With all 435 seats in the House of Representatives up for grabs alongside a third of the 100-member Senate and a slew of state posts, Democrats were putting a brave face on their prospects.

“The party in the White House usually loses during midterms but the reality is we still have a very strong pathway, not just to keeping the Senate but really picking up seats,” New Jersey’s Cory Booker told ABC on Sunday.

Democratic candidates have been lent star power on the campaign trail by the party’s most popular elder statesmen, including previous presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton.

Republicans have tapped a narrower roster of their own political big hitters, with the campaign spotlight turning in recent weeks to Trump — who has been teasing a probable new run for the presidency in 2024.

Biden and Trump will go head-to-head on election eve: the president with a rally near the capital in Maryland, while Trump will be campaigning in a turbulent Senate race in Ohio.

‘Wake-up call’

The political landscape has been tilting away from Democrats since the summer, with polls showing Republicans odds-on for a double-digit majority in the House.

“This is going to be a wake-up call to President Biden,” was the bullish weekend prediction of Glenn Youngkin, the Republican governor of Virginia.

The Senate is more of a toss-up but Democratic hopes of keeping the upper chamber, which they control thanks to tiebreaking votes from Vice President Kamala Harris, hang in the balance.

Races in Pennsylvania, Nevada, Wisconsin, Georgia, New Hampshire, and Ohio have narrowed to projected photo finishes, and any one of them could swing the balance of power.

Democrats have focused their closing arguments on voting rights, protecting abortion access and welfare—and in Biden’s case, on the threat posed by growing support among Trump’s Republicans for political conspiracy theories.

The Republicans counter that a vote for Democrats means no end to soaraway inflation and rising violent crime, seeking to make the midterms a referendum on the president.

With his approval rating marooned around 42 percent, Biden has largely avoided the most contentious states.

But he rallied alongside his former boss Obama in Pennsylvania Saturday, as part of a hectic agenda of late stump stops that has also taken him to Illinois, Florida, and New York.

The president rebuked extremist supporters of “defeated president” Trump, telling the crowd: “Your right to choose is on the ballot. Your right to vote is on the ballot.”

‘Decline and fall’

Staging a rival weekend rally in the swing state, Trump—who continues to push false claims the 2020 election was stolen—accused the “radical, crazy” Democrats of bringing about “the decline and fall of America.”

The US president has major achievements to tout, including curbs on prescription drug pricing, ramped-up microchip manufacturing, and record investments in infrastructure.

Democrats have struggled to turn these legislative victories into enthusiasm in the US heartland.

But Amy Klobuchar, a 2016 presidential hopeful, pushed back Sunday on the suggestion Democrats had lost the messaging war, projecting a good night for her party.

Forty-eight percent of likely voters said they prefer a Democratic-controlled Congress in the final national NBC News poll of the campaign while 47 percent want Republicans in charge.

But 80 percent of Republican-leaning voters say they are certain to turn out or have already done so, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll, six points above the Democratic figure.

Turnout forecasters always keep a keen eye on Election Day weather, which looks to be warmer than average in most of the country.

About 40 million Americans had cast early votes as of Sunday afternoon according to the United States Elections Project, narrowly surpassing the figure for 2018.

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