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With the start of voting operations on Tuesday, the day of the US presidential election, the focus is on a number of key states that will decide the outcome of the race between Democrat Joe Biden and President Donald Trump.
All of the changing states this year that could shift from one field to another – Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan, North Carolina, Wisconsin, and Arizona – beat Donald Trump in the 2016 election, including four that voted for Democrat Barack Obama in 2012.
Polls were opened in Washington, DC, Maryland, Massachusetts, Delaware, South Carolina, Georgia, West Virginia and Ohio.
The Foundation for the American Election Project had revealed that early voting in the United States reached 71 percent of overall turnout in 2016, with close to 100 million Americans.
The number of those chosen by mail reached about 64 million Americans.
Pennsylvania
The birthplace of Biden, the state is the largest in the region known as the “rust belt” and includes areas in the north-central United States that have seen decades of industrial decline.
Volunteers for Trump’s campaign flocked to the state, traveling from house to house, even into the suburbs.
Pennsylvania includes several regions of social and economic importance. Biden’s campaign team, which adhered to health rules to prevent the spread of Covid-19 when organizing its major events online, has allocated large sums to run political ads in the state.
Major cities in Pennsylvania will vote heavily for Biden, while the rural west and conservative midfielders are committed to Trump. The Northeast suburbs and regions will be crucial.
Michigan
Trump won 2016 in Michigan by a slim margin, and the battle continues this year in the state.
Trump visited the state that includes the Great Lakes to confirm his efforts to restore American values, but it is the voters, the impact of the new Corona virus on the economy and the presidential management of the epidemic crisis.
Gretchen Whitmer, the state’s Democratic governor, often clashed with the president, and her decisions to impose a mandatory shutdown enraged conservatives.
Demonstrators carrying firearms staged demonstrations outside the state government building this summer, and members of a right-wing group were recently arrested for plotting to kidnap the governor.
Wisconsin
Democrat Hillary Clinton chose not to campaign in the state known for dairy production in 2016, and voters punished her for it.
This year, Democrats focused on Wisconsin and announced that they would hold their national conference there, despite their subsequent meeting on the Internet, due to fears of the Corona virus.
Both Trump and Biden campaigned in that state, which was also visited by Vice President Mike Pence and Biden’s running mate Kamala Harris.
Florida
It is the largest of the swing states and represents the mainstay of the “Sun Belt” that stretches across the south and southwest of the United States, which has an increasing population density, is famous for agricultural and military industries and has a large number of retirees.
Republicans are stepping up their defenses there, while Democrats accuse them of stifling voices, especially in communities of people of color.
Voters in South America will be huge, and polls show less support for Democrats than in 2016.
Most experts, according to a France Press report, see Florida as a wall of fire for Trump, so if he breaks through, Trump will likely lose the White House seat.
South Carolina
Trump won this traditionally conservative state by three points four years ago, but the two games are now matching the closeness of the race.
The popular Democratic governor of the state is praised for his balanced handling of the epidemic.
Republicans hosted their national convention in the state, but it ended mostly on the Internet.
Arizona
Arizona was for decades a Republican stronghold, but its voters are changing with the growing number of Latin American nations and the influx of citizens from a more liberal California.
Conservative voters appreciate Trump’s efforts to impose restrictions on immigration and build a wall on the border with Mexico.
But Trump has damaged his fortune by repeatedly harming the late Senator John McCain, who represented Arizona, while still supporting his weight in state politics. McCain’s widow, Cindy, announced her support for Biden.