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Trump, Harris in final week push before November election
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Trump, Harris in final week push before November election

AFP

WASHINGTON—Kamala Harris and Donald Trump will make a final push to break their bitter deadlock as they head into the last week of the most dramatic and divisive White House race in modern times.

Despite a series of historic upheavals in a US election like no other, polls show the Democratic vice president and Republican former president remain neck and neck in the polls as election day on Nov. 5 looms.

Both will pull out all the stops to sway voters, with Harris, 60, giving her closing pitch on Tuesday at the same spot where Trump rallied supporters to protest his election 2020 loss before the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the US Capitol.

Trump, 78, gave a barnstorming rally at the famed Madison Square Garden arena in his home city of New York on Sunday night to kick off his final effort. As the race goes down to the wire, the two rivals will hammer the seven battleground states where just a few thousand voters could decide who governs the world’s top superpower.

“It’s looking like a toss-up,” John Mark Hansen, a professor of political science at the University of Chicago, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

A deeply divided United States will make history either way: by electing its first woman president or by granting Trump a sensational comeback.

Stark difference

The choice reflects the starkly different visions offered by Harris, the first female, Black and South Asian vice president, and billionaire tycoon Trump.

Harris at first focused on a message of joy and positivity after her shock replacement of President Joe Biden at the top of the ticket in July, but has since switched to a relentless attack on Trump as a “fascist” who threatens democracy and women’s reproductive rights.

The Democrat has pointedly chosen the Ellipse on the National Mall in Washington for her rally exactly a week before Election Day as it is where Trump spoke to supporters to deny his 2020 election defeat by Biden, shortly before they stormed the Capitol.

“This is a very crucial time in history,” supporter Kimberly Whittaker said at a Harris rally in Kalamazoo in the battleground state of Michigan.

Critics expect Trump to reject the result in November if he loses again, raising the specter of chaos and violence in an already tense and deeply polarized United States. But the former president said in September that if he lost “that will be it” and he would not run again.

The Republican has doubled down on his extreme rhetoric, with his right-wing base further fueled by Trump surviving two assassination attempts over the summer.

Trump has described criminals among illegal migrants as animals, pledged to set up mass deportation camps and threatened to clamp down on domestic opposition, calling them the “enemy from within.”

‘Great Again’

He has also ramped up his pledge to “Make America Great Again” with a focus on the economy, which like immigration remains a top concern for voters.

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“I’m probably going to roll with Trump,” said Drew Roby, a 21-year-old health science student from Arizona, who is Black. “Honestly it was better when he was president.” At the heart of the race are the seven most hotly contested swing states: Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Wisconsin and—most crucially—Pennsylvania.

The tightest US presidential election in decades will hinge on who can win over the few remaining undecided voters—and who can get their base out to vote.

Polls also predict a historic gender gap between the candidates, as well as deep fault lines on race and age. In the closing days both campaigns will be spending hundreds of millions of dollars on ads while both are also rolling out star surrogates.

Bruce Springsteen and Barack and Michelle Obama have turned out for Harris while on the stump for Trump is tech tycoon Elon Musk. But Harris may face a bigger challenge overall.

Her campaign had a “better ground game” and more money but Trump “probably still benefits” from a built-in Republican advantage in the idiosyncratic US Electoral College system, said David Karol, who teaches government and politics at the University of Maryland.

“It’s very competitive. There’s no reason for anybody to be confident.”


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