In the latest pre-election push, Biden and Trump also prepare for court battle



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‘A LITTLE WORRIED’

Many Democrats said they were nervous about the results after expecting Trump to lose easily in 2016. “I’ll be honest, I’m a little worried,” said Patti Cadoso, 41, a medical school administrator who attended a rally in Miami. hosted by former Democratic President Barack Obama.

Obama, whom Biden served as vice president for eight years, said Trump’s push to stop counting votes on election night was undemocratic.

“That’s what a petty dictator does,” he told a rally in Miami. “If you believe in democracy, you want all the votes to be counted.”

After visiting North Carolina and Pennsylvania, Trump headed to Wisconsin and Michigan, four states he narrowly won in 2016, but which polls show he could trade Biden this year. As he has for months, the president addressed large crowds, where many attendees avoided masks and social distancing despite the resurgent COVID-19 pandemic.

Biden, 77, who has made Trump’s handling of the pandemic a central theme of his campaign, spoke in Ohio and Pennsylvania in much smaller meetings.

The latest Reuters / Ipsos poll in Florida, an ever-changing state, showed Biden leading 50% to 46%, a week after the two were statistically tied.

Early voting has skyrocketed to levels never seen before in the US elections. A record 97.8 million early votes have been cast either in person or by mail, according to the US Elections Project.

The number equals 71% of the total voter turnout for the 2016 election and represents approximately 40% of all Americans who are legally eligible to vote.

That unprecedented level of early voting includes 60 million mail-in ballots that could take days or weeks to count in some states, meaning a winner may not be declared in the hours after polls close on Tuesday. the night.

Some states, including critics Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, don’t begin processing mail-in ballots until Election Day, slowing down the process.

Trump has repeatedly said without evidence that mail-in ballots are prone to fraud, although election experts say that is extremely rare in American elections. Voting by mail is a long-standing feature of American elections, and about one in four ballots were cast that way in 2016.

Democrats have promoted voting by mail as a safe way to cast a vote, while Trump and Republicans have a large in-person turnout on Election Day.



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