Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted November 4, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted November 4, 2024 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Ten reasons why either Trump or Harris might win US election Getty Images With just one day to go, the race for the White House is deadlocked – both at the national level and in the all-important battleground states. The polls are so close, within the margin of error, that either Donald Trump or Kamala Harris could actually be two or three points better off – enough to win comfortably. There is a compelling case to make for why each may have the edge when it comes to building a coalition of voters in the right places, and then ensuring they actually turn out. Let’s start with the history-making possibility that a defeated president might be re-elected for the first time in 130 years. 1. He’s not in power The economy is the number one issue for voters, and while unemployment is low and the stock market is booming, most Americans say they are struggling with higher prices every day. Inflation hit levels not seen since the 1970s in the aftermath of the pandemic, giving Trump the chance to ask “Are you better off now than you were four years ago?” In 2024, voters around the world have several times thrown out the party in power, partly due to the high, post-Covid, cost of living. US voters also seem hungry for change. Only a quarter of Americans say they are satisfied with the direction the country is going in and two-thirds have a poor economic This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . Harris has tried to be the so-called change candidate, but as vice-president has struggled to distance herself from an unpopular Joe Biden. 2. He seems impervious to bad news Despite the fallout from the 6 January 2021 riot at the US Capitol, a string of indictments and an unprecedented ********* conviction, Trump’s support has remained stable all year at 40% or above. While Democrats and “Never-Trump” conservatives say he is unfit for office, most Republicans agree when Trump says he’s the victim of a political witch-hunt. With both sides so dug in, he just needs to win over enough of the small slice of undecided voters without a fixed view of him. 3. His warnings on ******** immigration resonate Beyond the state of the economy, elections are often decided by an issue with an emotional pull. Democrats will hope it’s *********, while Trump is ******** it’s immigration. After encounters at the border hit record levels under Biden, and the influx impacted states far from the border, polls suggest voters trust Trump more on the immigration – and that he’s doing much better with Latinos than in previous elections. 4. A lot more people don’t have a degree than do Trump’s appeal to voters who feel forgotten and left behind has transformed US politics by turning traditional Democratic constituencies like union workers into Republicans and making the protection of ********* industry by tariffs almost the norm. If he drives up turnout in rural and suburban parts of swing states this can offset the loss of moderate, college-educated Republicans. 5. He’s seen as a strong man in an unstable world Trump’s detractors say he undermines America’s alliances by cosying up to authoritarian leaders. The former president sees his unpredictability as a strength, however, and points out that no major wars started when he was in the White House. Many Americans are ******, for different reasons, with the US sending billions to Ukraine and ******* – and think America is weaker under Biden. A majority of voters, especially men who Trump has courted through podcasts like Joe Rogan’s, This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up 1. She’s not Trump Despite Trump’s advantages, he ******** a deeply polarising figure. In 2020, he won a record number of votes for a *********** candidate, but was defeated because seven million more Americans turned out to support Biden. This time, Harris is playing up the ***** factor about a Trump return. She’s called him a “fascist” and a threat to democracy, while vowing to move on from “drama and conflict”. A This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up in July indicated that four in five Americans felt the country was spiralling out of control. Harris will be hoping voters – especially moderate Republicans and independents – see her as a candidate of stability. 2. She’s also not Biden Democrats were facing near-certain defeat at the point Biden dropped out of the race. ******* in their ******* to beat Trump, the party quickly rallied around Harris. With impressive speed from a standing start, she delivered a more forward-looking message that excited the base. While Republicans have tied her to Biden’s more unpopular policies, Harris has rendered some of their Biden-specific ******* lines redundant. The clearest of these is age – polls consistently suggested voters had real concerns about Biden’s fitness for office. Now the race has flipped, and it is Trump who’s vying to become the oldest person to ever win the White House. 3. She’s championed women’s rights This is the first presidential election since the US Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade and the constitutional right to an *********. Voters concerned about protecting ********* rights overwhelmingly back Harris, and we’ve seen in past elections – notably the 2022 midterms – that the issue can drive turnout and have a real impact on the result. This time around, 10 states, including the swing state Arizona, will have ballot initiatives asking voters how ********* should be regulated. This could boost turnout in Harris’s favour. The historic nature of her bid to become the first female president may also strengthen her significant lead among women voters. 4. Her voters are more likely to show up The groups Harris is polling more strongly with, such as the college-educated and older people, are more likely to vote. Democrats ultimately perform better with high-turnout groups, while Trump has made gains with relatively low-turnout groups such as young men and those without college degrees. Trump, for example, holds a huge lead among those who were registered but didn’t vote in 2020, according to a New York Times/Siena poll. A key question, then, is whether they will show up this time. 5. She’s raised – and spent – more money It’s no secret that ********* elections are expensive, and 2024 is on track to be the most expensive ever. But when it comes to spending power – Harris is on top. She’s raised more since becoming the candidate in July than Trump has in the entire ******* since January 2023, according to a recent Financial Times analysis, which also noted that her campaign has spent almost twice as much on advertising. This could play a role in a razor-tight race that will ultimately be decided by voters in swing states currently being bombarded by political ads. North America correspondent Anthony Zurcher makes sense of the race for the White House in his twice weekly US Election Unspun newsletter. Readers in the *** can This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . Those outside the *** can This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #Ten #reasons #Trump #Harris #win #election This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/160543-ten-reasons-why-either-trump-or-harris-might-win-us-election/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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