The race for the White House … a small difference between Trump and Biden



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The latest polls, especially in the states that will decide the race for the White House on Tuesday, revealed that the Democratic candidate, Joe Biden, is well ahead of 47% compared to 46% of his Republican opponent, Donald Trump.

In Ohio, she has 18 electoral votes, as Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton in this industrial state of the American Midwest in 2016, which was a popular destination for candidate visits during election campaigns.

His Democratic opponent, Joe Biden, is completely equal to Trump in this state, at 46% for all Republican and Democratic candidates.

Georgia tends toward Democrats

As for Georgia, where no Democrat has won since 1992 when Bill Clinton won, it now leans toward the Democrats and has 16 votes in the electoral college.

Biden is ahead of less than one percentage point in the state and 48%, compared with 47.2% for Republican candidate Donald Trump.

In the last crucial state of the contest, Iowa, Trump scored an easy victory in the state four years ago, defeating Clinton by nearly 10 points, but the results seem close this time in the midwest agricultural state, which has 6 votes in the electoral college.

Voting percentages

In addition, voting began in Alabama, Kansas, Minnesota, Mississippi, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas and Wisconsin.

Voter rates in 4 US states, including Texas, exceeded 2016

The polls opened their doors early Tuesday in New York at 11:00 GMT for voting, as well as in the states of New Jersey, Connecticut, Maine and Virginia.

Starting at midnight (5:00 GMT), Dixville Notch Village in New Hampshire began opening the polls, according to tradition.

While the number of those who voted early, either in person or by mail, more than a hundred million Americans, at a record level.

While most opinion polls in the country slightly favor Biden, a national forward, Trump seems confident in his victory, relying on the “joyous and surprising” experience he witnessed in the last elections, and is counting on repeating the same scenario, where his opponent popularly won and lost the electoral college race.

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