Trump has pushed fierce elections in states that have published his cowardly rejection


A week from the night when America will be able to learn the identity of its next president – depending on the lengthy mail-in ballot counts and possible legal challenges – Trump greeted a crowd, packed together, wearing a few masks. He did so because hospitals in Badger State are severely weakened and are facing the threat of drowning by Covid-19 patients. But on a cold night, the bets that the president weaves an alternative reality will win him over.

Trump’s three-state swing Tuesday – he also visited Michigan and Nebraska – reflected the hand sleep he had been using for a week since Election Day, creating the false impression that the epidemic was only getting worse every day.

“We’re turning the corner. We’re turning the corner, we’re going to destroy the virus,” Trump said in West Salem, Wisconsin, as the U.S. created a record number of new infections adding half a million new cases last week. Is. Alone. More than 226,000 Americans have died. The current death rate is 800 per day, and experts warn that the trend is only rising before the severe winter.

But in the run-up to the election, Trump is denying the destructive effects of the gravest challenge facing the country, organizing potential supersprider events that re-prioritize political existence over his own supporters and those who endanger and protect public health. . .

When Trump complained in Wisconsin that all the media discusses is “covid, covid, covid,” the state’s Democratic governor. Tony Evers warned on Tuesday: “There is no way to make him a sugarcoat, we are facing an immediate crisis and one is imminent. There is a risk to you and your family.”

Andre Pam, secretary-design of the Wisconsin Department of Health Services, warned: “The rising number of cases and the increase in our deaths today is the biggest one-day increase we have seen during this epidemic. We must take significant and collective action.”

The pre-election polling week accounts for more than half of all 2016 polls
Public ambiguity about the president’s handling of the worst public health crisis in 100 years has contributed to a situation in which Trump seems to be struggling to get into states like Wisconsin, which he won in 2016, and tried to shore up Michigan, Pennsylvania. , North Carolina and Iowa.
Years ago. More than a million Americans have voted so far – more than half the total four years ago – and it’s time to change the dynamics of a race in which the Democratic nominee B Din is behind on the battlefield.

However, Trump, drawing energy from his crowd, will look excited on Tuesday, predicting a “great red wave”, criticizing the vote and promising to upset a large electoral college compared to 2016. 270 ‘- and that was OK – we reached 306. ”

If Trump wins a second upset next week, it will indicate that enough voters believe his cultural connection to the U.S. heartland and nationalist approach is more important than the worst domestic crisis since World War II and the upheaval of its daily lies. He has kept his promise well to find millions of new Trump voters who will escape the electorate. Yet, there is no sign yet in the national or state election that President Hillary Clinton is building a late momentum with her shock victory.

Biden moves aggressively

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden speaks during a drive-in campaign rally in the parking lot of the Cellaris Amphitheater on October 27, 2020 in Atlanta, Georgia.  Biden will campaign in Georgia on Tuesday, with scheduled stops in Atlanta and Hot Springs.
Biden’s trip tells the story of a Democratic campaign that believes it has more routes to the 270 electorate than the president. The former vice president vowed to heal the sick and divided country around the symbolic town of Spa in Georgia’s Warm Springs, where President Franklin Roosevelt, who guided the country from a previous crisis, once sought relief from polio paralysis.

“Many wonder, has it gone too far?” Biden asked the state if Democrats haven’t won since it was run by Bill Clinton in 1992, but looks like he could play this year.

“Have we passed the word of no return? Has the heart of this nation turned to stone?” Said Biden. “I don’t think so. I refuse to believe it. I know this country. I know our people. And I know that together we can heal this nation.”

Biden on Tuesday received a second aid from his predecessor, former President Barack Obama, who launched a second attack on his successor, dripping with ridicule and designed to drive out Democratic-base voters in Florida.

Obama ridiculed Trump that the White House, the nation’s safest building, should turn Covid into a “hot zone.”

Obama slams Trump over coronavirus: 'He's jealous of Covid's media coverage'

Obala said at a drive-in rally in Orlando, “He said this at one of his rallies, ‘Kovid, Kovid, Kovid,’ he complains. He’s jealous of Kovid’s media coverage.” “If he had focused on Kovid from the start, cases across the country would not have reached new record highs this week.”

As Trump pulled all the stops, Melania Trump, the first woman to campaign for her husband’s low status among female voters, launched her first solo campaign in Pennsylvania’s second swing state.

“Democrats have chosen to put their own agenda ahead of the well-being of the American people,” he said, while also introducing ideas to citizens like him suffering from coronavirus.

In reality, however, Trump has repeatedly denied the severity of the epidemic, misrepresenting and predicting that it will soon disappear, and advocating for a state summer that extended the Sun Belt this summer in a clear attempt to cripple the economy that Is important. Re-selection.

For women voters, especially those in the suburbs, the Trump campaign court may be discredited by the president when he used somewhat supportive language in Wisconsin, using an archeological view of extramarital affairs between men and women.

“I’m getting your husbands too – they want to get back to work. We’re getting your husbands back to work,” Trump said in Wisconsin.

When will America know who won?

Many Americans want to know if the outcome of the election will be clear next Tuesday night – especially since the president has repeatedly disqualified the election and promised to challenge it in the Supreme Court.

The election trend could become clearer sooner if Biden turns his lead in the polls into a victory for the swing states. If it captures states like Florida and North Carolina, it will effectively block Trump’s path to 270 election votes. But if the president returns to the battlefield states, the race could come to states like Michigan and Pennsylvania, where the count of mail-in votes could last for several days after November. This is the moment when the likelihood of a disputed election escalating and the bitter legal challenges become a growing risk. Making an ominous note for Democrats, Justice Brett Kavanagh set the battle lines for how the Supreme Court could hear election cases brought by Republicans in a ruling Monday night.

“Under the U.S. Constitution, state courts do not have a blank check to rewrite state election laws for federal elections,” Kavanagh wrote in a statement of consensus on his decision, rejecting a democratic bid to allow the counting of mail-in votes. Received six days after election day in Wisconsin.

Trump gives his language mirrors, warning that, without any real basis, the result that election night does not bring is itself proof of a fraudulent vote.

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