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U.S. midterms: Voters head to the polls in a crucial test for Donald Trump

Signs direct voters to a polling location where Hurricane Michael destroyed many schools and other buildings used as polling stations in the area in Lynn Haven, Florida on November 5, 2018.

Signs direct voters to a polling location where Hurricane Michael destroyed many schools and other buildings used as polling stations in the area in Lynn Haven, Florida on November 5, 2018.   | Photo Credit: REUTERS

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In casting their ballots for House of Representatives and Senate races, voters will decide whether Mr. Trump’s 2016 election was a one-off or if his divisive style of governing will define the future of American politics.

Clara Swallows pulled herself out of bed. Her aching back made her want to stay put, but the 74-year-old in Indiana had somewhere she needed to be — the polls.

Some 1,000 km away in Florida, Stephanie Kent suspended repairs to her home flooded during Hurricane Michael and drove 30 km out of the way to circumvent a still-closed bridge just to cast her ballot, too.

Like Ms. Swallows and Ms. Kent, more than 30 million Americans already have voted in a midterm election expected to draw unprecedented numbers by the time polls close on November 6 night. In casting their ballots for House of Representatives and Senate races, voters will render a verdict on President Donald Trump’s tumultuous tenure, deciding whether his 2016 election was a one-off or if his divisive style of governing will define the future of American politics.

Ms. Swallows and Ms. Kent voted from opposite ends of the political schism. Ms. Swallows was determined to help put Democrats in office to curtail Mr. Trump’s agenda, while 54-year-old Ms. Kent committed to Republicans as a show of support for him. But both agreed this election was among the most important of their lifetimes.

 

“I woke up in pain, but I said I’m going to get out and do this,” said Ms. Swallows, a former Republican who has never before voted in a midterm. She cast her ballot for all Democrats, citing Mr. Trump’s stirring of racial and political tension. “I’m here to say that hatred is not going to win. We are not going to stand for it.”

Mr. Trump has sought to counter some of that rage toward his administration by stoking even more anger among his base. In recent weeks, he’s put the spotlight on a caravan of Central American migrants fleeing poverty and violence that he calls “an invasion” of criminals and terrorists. He ran an advertisement about immigration so racially incendiary that all three major cable news networks, including Fox News, either refused to air it or eventually decided to stop showing it.

Among some Republican voters, that message resonated.

Supporters wait for the arrival of U.S. President Donald Trump for a campaign rally at the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum in Fort Wayne, Indiana on November 5, 2018.

Supporters wait for the arrival of U.S. President Donald Trump for a campaign rally at the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum in Fort Wayne, Indiana on November 5, 2018.   | Photo Credit: REUTERS

 

“This whole thing with this caravan is pretty scary,” said Jennifer Rager, 55, of Bozeman, Montana, who approves of Mr. Trump’s plans to crack down on immigration. She cast her ballot to keep Republicans in power so the President doesn’t become a lame duck. “It just feels like he’s really trying to do a good job of protecting our country, you know? I can’t wrap my head around why the other side is so unhappy and so terrified.”

In St. Louis, Susan Riebold, 53, posed for a photo with a cardboard cutout of Mr. Trump at a pre-Election Day rally for her Republican candidate for U.S. Senate. She said she fully supports Mr. Trump’s decision to send military troops to the Mexican border to intercept the caravan a move critics say is unnecessary and a political stunt, given the migrants are travelling mostly on foot and remain hundreds of kilometres away.

The country, she said, “is more strong, confident and unified than it’s ever been, and most of the confidence and people feeling unified and patriotic again has come right before Mr. Trump got in and since he’s been in”. And she dismissed any criticism of the President as fake news. “We hate the media,” she said, “because they’re the Democratic arm.”

Others expressed a heightened sense of unease and sadness about the state of America’s political climate. The election comes just days after a series of hate crimes and political attacks, including the arrest of a man who mailed pipe bombs to Mr. Trump critics whom the President often derides as “evil”, “un-American”, and “the enemy”.

Many voters said they saw the election as an opportunity to reject that kind of bombast.

“We’ve forgotten our decency. We’ve forgotten the truth,” said Morris Lee Williams, 67, an Army veteran and member of Zion Travellers Missionary Baptist Church in St. Louis. “We’re supposed to be a group of people, Americans, who are supposed to be that light in the world. Instead of a light, it’s turned into a nightmare.”

In suburban Chicago, Lea Grover agreed. “It seems to me a referendum on empathy, and whether or not we as a nation have any,” said the 34-year-old mother of three daughters.

Ms. Grover, a survivor of sexual assault who works for a nonprofit that helps other victims, was angered by the confirmation hearings for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. He was accused by a high school classmate of sexually assaulting her decades ago. Republicans voted to confirm Justice Kavanaugh, and Mr. Trump at one point mocked the accuser during a rally.

Voters on the other side were also galvanised by the Kavanaugh hearings a “smear campaign”, in the opinion of Natalie Pig, a 31-year-old attorney in Missouri motivated to elect people to Congress sure to stand behind Mr. Trump.

Civil engineer Pritesh Mehta also cast his early vote for those who would support the President. Mr. Mehta, who lives in Little Rock, Arkansas, emigrated from India in 2000 and believes Mr. Trump is steering the country in the right direction, including with his immigration policies. Mr. Mehta came legally, he said, and he doesn’t see anything wrong with vetting others who want to live in the United States.

Uroosa Jawed is an immigrant, too. She relocated from Pakistan with her family when she was 5. Now 42 and a naturalised citizen living in Omaha, Nebraska, she has always considered herself an American. But over the last two years, as Mr. Trump has made sowing fear about immigrants the centerpiece of his presidency, she’s wondered whether her neighbours see her that way, too.

Ms. Jawed, who works for a nonprofit aimed at cultivating interfaith cooperation among Jewish, Muslim and Christian groups, said this election offers an opportunity to turn back that tide.

“I don’t feel despair,” she said. “I feel we’re on the precipice of change.”