Biden and Harris head to the Republican strongholds as they try to sway voters a week before the election.



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JOE BIDEN AND Kamala Harris target Republican strongholds a week before US elections.

Biden travels to Georgia, which has not supported a Democratic presidential candidate since 1992 and will visit Iowa later in the week, which President Donald Trump comfortably won in 2016.

Harris, Biden’s vice presidential running mate, heads to Arizona and Texas, where Republicans haven’t lost an election for state office since 1994.

The aggressive schedule is a show of confidence on the part of Biden’s team, which is trying to stretch the electoral map and open more paths to 270 electoral college votes.

But after Democrats flirted with Republican turf in 2016, only to lose those states, as well as their traditional Midwest strongholds, Biden’s campaign is aware of the overreach.

The former vice president will also visit Wisconsin, Michigan and Florida in the coming days.

Georgia, where Biden will make two stops today, has become an increasingly attractive draw to Democrats in recent years, as turnout among black voters increases and suburban Atlanta drifts away from Republicans.

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Source: PA Graphics

“If this was the Georgia of 2008, 2012, I think there would be no way we would have seen a Biden show up this late,” said Nse Ufot, executive director of the New Georgia Project, which aims to increase voter registration, especially among the young. and minorities.

“It is a strong signal and recognition of Georgia as a battlefield state.”

Trump remains focused on the so-called “blue wall” states that turned around in 2016: Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, where he will return today to hit West Salem just three days after holding a rally in Janesville.

While Biden rarely travels to more than one state per day, the president has kept a dizzying schedule, traversing the country and arguing that he built a booming economy before the coronavirus pandemic upset him.

His latest twist could be a victory lap after the Senate yesterday approved Amy Coney Barrett’s nomination and gave the Conservatives a dominant 6-3 lead on the Supreme Court.

Trump has tried to use the vacancy created by the death of Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg last month to encourage conservative evangelical and Catholic voters for his candidacy, but the fight in the superior court has been overshadowed by concerns about the coronavirus with cases on the rise.

Meanwhile, Biden hopes to lift up Democrats running for Senate in Georgia and Iowa with these travel plans.

He planned to deliver his final message during a speech today in Warm Springs, Georgia, where natural hot springs provided comfort to President Franklin Delano Roosevelt as he fought polio and ruled a nation resisting the Great Depression and World War II.

The former vice president’s campaign says his appearance will end his visit earlier this month to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, when Biden used the site of the bloody Civil War battle to call for bipartisanship and put the country ahead of the party.

Today, he will attempt to evoke the sensibilities of Roosevelt’s New Deal while promising to restore the character of the nation.

“This is our chance to leave behind the dark and angry politics of the last four years,” Biden declares in a 60-second closing ad that airs on national cable channels and 16 states that his campaign considers battlegrounds.

Both campaigns were focused on Pennsylvania on Monday, and Trump drew thousands of supporters, largely without masks, to rallies as Biden crossed the border from his home in Delaware to greet a small group of supporters outside a campaign office of campaign in Chester.

Biden stated, “The bottom line is that Donald Trump is the worst possible person to guide us through this pandemic.”

Trump responded that his Democratic rival would impose unnecessary shutdowns.

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“It’s a choice between a Trump boom or a Biden lockdown,” the president said at a rally in Allentown.

With more than a third of the expected votes in the election already cast, it could be increasingly difficult for Trump and Biden to reshape the race.

Biden leads the majority of national polls and has an advantage, albeit more limited, on many key battlefields.

The final week of the campaign is colliding with deepening concerns about the Covid crisis.

Trump is eager for voters to focus on other issues like the economy.



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