Minggu, 01 November 2020

Trump starts two-day, seven-state, 10-rally pre-election campaign - Daily Mail

'Our numbers are looking VERY good': Trump touts his chances for a second term as new polls show Biden leading in four swing states  and he kicks off two-day, seven state, 10 rally swing in final 24 hours of race

  • President Trump kicks off last 24 hours of presidential race with a two-day, seven state campaign swing with 10 rallies on his schedule
  • Trump started his day with positive sounding tweets about his poll numbers even as new polling showed Joe Biden leading in battleground states 
  • 'Our numbers are looking VERY good all over,' Trump wrote
  •  Trump to spend Sunday in Michigan, Iowa, North Carolina, Georgia, and Florida
  • Biden will hold two campaign events in Philadelphia on Sunday 

President Donald Trump on Sunday bragged 'the radical left is going down' and touted his 'very good' poll numbers as he kicked off a two-day, seven state, 10 rally campaign swing in the final 24 hours of the presidential race.

Trump started his day with a series of positive sounding tweets as he fights for a second term in the White House and polls show Democratic rival Joe Biden in the lead.

'Our numbers are looking VERY good all over. Sleepy Joe is already beginning to pull out of certain states. The Radical Left is going down!,' Trump wrote as new polls out Sunday morning showed Biden ahead in several critical battleground states.

And the president had a special message for Michigan, which will be his first stop of the day, touting his economic record there after Barack Obama trashed him during campaign stops for Biden in Flint and Detroit on Saturday.

'When I originally became your all time favorite President, the Great State of Michigan was hemorrhaging car companies and jobs. Plants were closing and moving to Mexico, and other places. No new plants for decades. I stopped the moves, & now many plants are and have been built,' Trump wrote.

'The place was a mess and would have lost much more business if I hadn’t come along. Many new plants are starting. Foreign countries and companies now treat the USA, and Michigan, with respect. Big jobs plans. Please remember this when you go to cast your very important vote!,' he added. 

President Donald Trump kicks off last 24 hours of presidential race with a two-day, seven state campaign swing with 10 rallies on his schedule

President Donald Trump kicks off last 24 hours of presidential race with a two-day, seven state campaign swing with 10 rallies on his schedule

In a blistering denouncement of his successor on Saturday, Obama criticized Trump's job record to Michigan voters during a stop in the critical battleground state. 

He pointed out he and Biden fought for the auto industry – which is huge in Michigan – during the economic recession. He said Trump has lost manufacturing jobs.

‘The economic damage inflicted by botching the pandemic response means he'll be the only president since Herbert Hoover, to actually lose jobs,’ Obama said of Trump. ‘Herbert Hoover. That's a long time ago.’

Trump will spend Sunday in Michigan, Iowa, North Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. He'll sleep at his golf club in Doral before Monday's swing to North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin.

Biden will spend Sunday and Monday in Pennsylvania. Trump held four rallies in that state on Saturday. He'll have daughters Ivanka and Tiffany there on Sunday.

New polling out Sunday shows Biden running strong in the last two days of the election. 

A new Washington Post/ABC News poll has Biden up in Pennsylvania by seven points: 51 per cent to 44 per cent.

But the poll has Trump leading in his home state of Florida although by two points: 50 per cent to Biden's 48 per cent. Trump needs Florida in his column if he wants a second term. 

Biden, meanwhile, leads in four critical states in a new New York Times/Siena College poll: Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Florida, and Arizona.

He is up 11 points in Wisconsin (52 per cent to Trump's 41), six points in Pennsylvania (49 per cent to Trump's 43), three points in Florida (47 per cent to Trump's 44), and 6 points in Arizona (49 per cent to Trump's 43). 

Biden leads by seven points in the RealClearPolitics polling average on the presidential race. 

Trump is repeating the closing arguments that helped him win the White House four years ago - labeling his opponent as 'corrupt' and arguing he is an outsider beholden to no one.

But Biden is not Hillary Clinton, Trump's 2016 foe, and the charges are a little harder to stick. 

The president has expressed repeated frustration that the media is not covering allegations against Hunter Biden like they covered Clinton's emails. 

'Joe Biden is a corrupt politician,' the president said at a rally in Arizona on Wednesday. 'But Big Tech will not allow that to be said and the media will not say it.' 

He told a crowd in Montoursville, Pa., on Saturday night: 'You elected an outsider as president.'

'If I don't sound like a typical Washington politician it's because I'm not a politician,' he continued. 'I don't always play by the rules of Washington and the Washington establishment. It's because I was elected to fight for you.'

Both campaigns are spending most of the final few days of the campaign in the Midwest. 

The White House on Sunday morning before President Trump left for his campaign swing

The White House on Sunday morning before President Trump left for his campaign swing

Former President Barack Obama, campaigning for Joe Biden in Michigan on Saturday, trashed President Trump's economic record

Former President Barack Obama, campaigning for Joe Biden in Michigan on Saturday, trashed President Trump's economic record 

Joe Biden will hold two campaign events in Philadelphia on Sunday

Joe Biden will hold two campaign events in Philadelphia on Sunday

President Donald Trump held four campaign rallies in Pennsylvania on Saturday

President Donald Trump held four campaign rallies in Pennsylvania on Saturday 

Trump will begin Sunday in Washington, Michigan, where is trying to replicate his 2016 win when the states there put him in the White House. 

Democrats are trying to rebuild their 'blue wall' - a set of Midwest states that were reliably in their corner until Trump won them four years ago.

The Trump victory there left the party shocked and stunned - a situation they do not want to revisit this year.  

Those states include Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. Trump won them by a point or two, leaving Democrats hopeful that Biden - long a champion of the blue-collar worker - can win them back.  

Biden brought former President Barack Obama to him in Michigan on Saturday where the two made their first joint campaign appearance together with rallies in Flint and Detroit. 

'Guess what Mr President, I'm coming for you,' Biden said to cheers from the crowd in Detroit.

Obama made it clear what was at stake on November 3.

'Three days Detroit. Three days until the most important election of our lifetimes,' he said. 'And that includes mine, which was pretty important.'  

Trump will be back in Michigan for two rallies on Monday. Ivanka Trump will also campaign there on Monday.

After his Michigan stop on Sunday, Trump moves to Iowa - a state he won by 10 points in 2016 and wants to keep in his corner.

From there he'll bounce to Hickory, North Carolina, before moving down to Rome, Georgia and ending the night in Miami.

Democrats are trying to flip Georgia their way this year. Obama will be there on Monday to help the party. 

Recent polls have shown Biden in the lead but the race is tight. Obama is expected to try and rally people to the polls while Trump will do the same in his address.

But Trump will conclude his first day in his new home state of Florida, a state he needs to win if he wants a second term in office. 

He brought Melania Trump with him to a rally there on Thursday. Several other family members - including Donald Trump Jr and Ivanka Trump - have campaigned for him in the state. 

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2020-11-01 12:40:00Z
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Quebec stabbing: Two dead after attack by man in medieval clothes - BBC News

Are you in Quebec? How have you been affected by the incident? If you have any information to share, and only if it is safe for you to do so, please email haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

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2020-11-01 12:16:00Z
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Quebec stabbing: Two dead after attack by man in medieval clothes - BBC News

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2020-11-01 07:47:00Z
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Quebec stabbings: Man in 'medieval clothing' kills two and injures five in Halloween attack - Sky News

Two people have been killed in Quebec City after a man dressed in medieval clothing and armed with a bladed weapon carried out a stabbing spree on Halloween.

Another five victims have been taken to hospital but there was no immediate word on their conditions, Canadian media reports.

Police have arrested a man on suspicion of carrying out the attacks in the historic Old Quebec neighbourhood, near Parliament Hill.

Quebec stabbings Credit @JordanRaiden
Image: People have been asked to stay indoors. Pic @JordanRaiden

The first calls to police came in around 10.28pm, police said.

The suspect was detained shortly before 1am near the city's Old Port and police are asking those in the area to remain indoors. A possible motive for the attacks was not known.

Quebec City Police spokesperson Etienne Doyon told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation that the suspect is a man in his mid-20s. Mr Doyon said the suspect has been taken to hospital for evaluation.

He added: "On behalf of the Quebec City police, I want to offer my sincerest condolences to the loved ones and families of the people who died today."

More from Canada

Officers earlier said they were looking for a man in medieval clothes who had left "multiple victims", after being alerted to multiple attacks.

The investigation is ongoing.

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2020-11-01 07:33:40Z
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Sabtu, 31 Oktober 2020

Joe Biden blasted as ‘too old’ to be President by his British cousin days before US poll - Daily Express

Ralph Biden is a retired graphic designer in Surrey and has been identified as the cousin of the man President Donald Trump has called ‘Sleepy Joe’. But he is unsure whether his distant cousin is fit to take over the White House.

Ralph did not know he was related to Joe Biden until The Times approached him.

He told The Times: “In my heart of hearts he’s a little bit too old for the job, but then again Winston Churchill was about the same age when he was elected again after the war and he didn’t do a bad job, so who knows.”

Ralph Biden is the father of two children and grandfather of three children.

His own father was adopted and Ralph is said to be either the fourth of fifth cousin of Joe Biden, according to The Times.

He said: “I vote Conservative. Actually I was voting for Brexit at the last election.”

He added that his distant relative could do a good job in the White House but would face huge political polarization.

Ralph said: “I think he would make a good president, my question would be how long for? It’s got to be a very high-pressure job and the buck stops in the Oval Office, he’s going to inherit a country that’s going to be horribly divided.”

He added: “I thought I could be related to him when Joe Biden became vice-president but I didn’t really think it and just joked with a friend about it — that I was a distant cousin several times removed.

READ MORE: TRUMP VICTORY now looking likely says pollster

“The polls say Joe Biden has the edge but they were saying that Hillary Clinton had the edge last time and she lost.

“I think the pollsters run on a tendency for wishful thinking — keep the stopper in the champagne.”

Ralph and Joe Biden are related through their great, great, great-grandfathers James and William, according to The Times.

On Saturday, Joe Biden and former President Barack Obama visited Michigan in the last weekend of campaigning.

Mr Biden said the US was “done with the chaos” of Mr Trump’s administration.

In Pennsylvania, during a campaign trip at the weekend Mr Trump said there would be a “great red wave” of Republican victories.

Mr Biden has been leading the polls but has narrower advantages in swing states which could determine the election.

More than 85 million people have already voted early for the US poll.

Of those who have already voted, 55 million have sent their ballots by post.

The surge in early votes has put the US on course for the biggest turnout in over a century.

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2020-11-01 03:35:00Z
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Motown star power and political heft boosts Biden ahead of the big night - Sky News

Joe Biden has summoned up the Motown star power of Stevie Wonder and political heft of Barack Obama in a glitzy rally in Detroit as the US presidential campaign entered its final stages.

Obama appeared alongside his former vice-president for the first time in this year's race for the White House, at two drive-in rallies in the crucial swing state of Michigan.

And, in a performance of his classic hit Superstition, Wonder adapted the lyrics to urge the crowd that "Biden-Harris is the way".

Barack Obama speaks at a campaign drive-in, mobilization event for Democratic U.S. presidential nominee and former Vice President Joe Biden
Image: Former US president Barack Obama also spoke at the campaign event in Detroit

Biden has repeatedly invoked his eight years working alongside America's 44th president as part of his sales pitch to the American people to become its 46th.

In Michigan, Obama continued to mock his successor Donald Trump, especially for his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. He said Trump had "completely screwed it up."

"Trump cares about feeding his ego," Obama said. "Joe cares about keeping you safe and your family safe, and getting country moving again. That's why you've got to vote."

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Obama joins Biden on campaign trail

In the state that prides itself as the capital of America's car industry, there was something apt about Biden's drive-in rallies. Some sat on the bonnets and roofs of their cars, others popped their heads up through the sunroof into the near-zero temperatures.

More from Donald Trump

Even four years after he left office, it is clear Obama still has the energy and zeal for campaigning. No one needs reminding though of the muted impact his efforts for Hillary Clinton had in 2016.

Biden has also been hammering Trump's record but, like Obama, is focused on driving turnout on Tuesday to send a message to the president that "it is time to pack up and go home".

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Podcast: Will it be Biden or Trump?

"In three days, we can put an end to a presidency that has divided this nation. In three days, we can put an end to a presidency that has failed to protect this nation. In three days, we can put an end to a presidency that has fanned the flames of hate all across this nation," he said.

Four years ago, Democrats neglected Michigan in the last days of the campaign and paid the price when Trump won it by 10,000 votes. Supporters of the president believe a repeat is possible this time.

Sky News US election coverage
Image: Sky News US election coverage

At the Halloween drive-through trick-or-treat in Flint, while the minds of children were on the games and candy, the adults pondered what is at stake. The voters we spoke to were evenly divided politically.

In his "I Love Jesus" cap, Lee Williams said: "Trump has been out for himself. He has done what he was going to do, and he will have to face God in the end."

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2020-11-01 02:12:38Z
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US election 2020: Dermot Murnaghan's 7 things to watch on election night - Sky News

Benjamin Banneker was a self-taught African American surveyor, astronomer and horologist.

In 1791 - at the request of Thomas Jefferson - he assisted in the layout of modern Washington DC - the capital of a nation, currently undergoing the painful process of selecting its president and commander- in-chief for the next four years.

Banneker's contribution to the design of America's seat of power is now rather overlooked. His legacy is marked in a nondescript park beside an expressway south of the National Mall.

The son of a freed slave, Banneker was most celebrated in his lifetime for publishing an almanac between the years of 1792 and 1797 making remarkably accurate predictions about the year ahead, which became a staple of American homesteads.

Dermot Murnaghan examines the significance of Benjamin Brecker
Image: Dermot Murnaghan examines the significance of Benjamin Banneker

In the spirit of Banneker, but without attempting to emulate his prescience, I'm going to have a stab at seven pointers to watch out for in this most turbulent, bitter and crucial of elections.

1. America's oldest president

I'll start with a banker.

The US is going to install its oldest ever president - by quite a long chalk. Joe Biden would be 78 by inauguration day next January, Donald Trump 74.

The founding fathers (they were all men) when they were considering the age issue in the Constitutional Convention of 1787 were only concerned about the president being too youthful, not elderly. Therefore Article II of the US Constitution specifies a minimum age of 35, but no upper limit.

Previous oldest office holders were Donald Trump himself - he was 70 at his inauguration in 2016. Ronald Reagan was a shade younger at 69 in 1980, and William Henry Harrison was 68, on assuming power in 1841. And for the pub quizzers out there John F Kennedy was, of course, the youngest at 43.

2. Florida is going to be crucial - again

With the joint third largest electoral college haul - 29 - for a candidate, this swing state is the crucible of the battle for power.

Trump won the sunshine state by just over 100,000 votes in 2016. Previously Barack Obama captured it twice for the Democrats.

But the disputed result of 2000 looms in the background. It took several recounts and ultimately an adjudication by the Supreme Court to decide the outcome. George W Bush captured the state, and the presidency by a margin of 537 votes.

This time both parties have legions of lawyers standing by.

Voters casting early ballots in Florida, one of the states in which voters received emails
Image: Voters casting early ballots in Florida, one of the states in which voters received emails

Watch individual counties for early indicators on how Florida might go - Like Sumter county - it has a large postal vote (84% in 2016) amongst its elderly population, which officials start counting before polls close. If Sumter's results show Biden making inroads into the over-65 vote, it could be a good night for him.

If Trump loses Florida, his path to power becomes much more difficult. Other swing states to watch like a hawk: Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, North Carolina, Arizona, Iowa, Ohio and Georgia.

3. Don't expect either to do the decent thing

Watch out for reluctance by the candidates to concede.

The Democrats are haunted by that experience in 2000. They now believe it was a strategic error for Al Gore to originally concede the election to Bush after some US TV networks called Florida for the Republicans. A few hours later Gore retracted, but had lost the initiative.

If results are being contested, no one's going to be picking up the phone early this time, and Donald Trump has made it quite clear in advance that he believes the vote could be rigged - particularly the postal vote.

Hillary Clinton conceded to Donald Trump in the early hours the day after the election in 2016. But she's advised Joe Biden not to concede "under any circumstances." There's no requirement to do so. It's a convention. Don't expect anyone to do the decent thing early this time.

We're in uncharted territory here if Trump loses and refuses to respect the outcome. Will the right-wing Proud Boys and others take to the streets to support him? His first tweets in the wee small hours will reveal plenty about his thinking on that, no doubt.

If Biden finds the polls have ultimately flattered to deceive once again, will outraged AntiFa protesters and others vent their frustrations?

Sales of guns to worried suburban families are soaring. There are shortages of ammunition. And shops and offices are being boarded up in Washington as I write.

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4. Drowning in data

There's so much to absorb. So many straws in the wind. So many potential indicators. But if you fix one number in your mind make it 270.

That's the minimum number of electoral college votes a candidate needs to win.

There are 538 electoral college votes available from the 50 states plus Washington DC. Half 538 plus one - and you're the victor. Each state has a different number of votes allotted to it based on the size of its population. California has the most at 55. A swing state such as Pennsylvania has 20.

It's mostly winner takes all in a state, so even if a candidate wins narrowly they get all the electoral college votes - Trump won Michigan by 0.2% in 2016 but captured all its 16 votes.

Graphic

Who came up with this system?

Yep - those founding fathers again. They didn't really trust the voters to elect a president at all and were considering simply appointing one, but eventually decided to let the electors in individual states to get involved.

It's not ideal as the Americans admit, particularly when a candidate gets more votes than their rival nationally - but then loses in the electoral college because of the vote distribution. That was Clinton's experience in 2016. She got about 3 million more votes than Trump overall, but they were piled up in populous Democrat friendly states like California and New York, not where she needed them - Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania.

But look at the situation in the UK. We get no direct say at all in who becomes prime minister - the last two in a row, Johnson and May, were installed by their parties before they ever faced the electorate.

5. Acronyms

POTUS appoints ACB to SCOTUS to replace RBG.

Let me translate - and explain why it is so significant.

A week before election day the President Of The United States saw Amy Coney Barrett - a conservative judge appointed to the Supreme Court Of The United States to replace the liberal Ruth Bader Ginsberg who had died a month earlier.

Amy Coney Barrett was sworn in at the White House
Image: Conservative judge Amy Coney Barrett was sworn in at the White House

If legal disputes break out about the election as described above, and the Supreme Court gets involved, Donald Trump has a healthy six to three conservative majority in the court now. Amy Coney Barrett has refused to say whether she would recuse herself from any decisions about the election result.

6. Coronavirus

There's no getting away from it.

Its tentacles have reached into every aspect of the campaign - on health, the economy, foreign relations. Mask wearing has become a potent political signifier.

Masked up on your own outside? Probably a Democrat.

No mask, even in a group? Ardent Trumpite.

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Mask off: Trump back at White House

And there's something of a correlation between the swing states where COVID-19 is accelerating most and Biden's poll lead, particularly in the Upper Midwest. Watch for that when the results come in.

7. The urban spaceman

Or maybe ground control to Major Mark? This is the undercard so to speak to the main presidential event. The battle for the Senate.

Mark Kelly is a former astronaut running to join the Senate
Image: Mark Kelly is a former astronaut running to join the Senate

Any president faces huge obstacles in getting their programme implemented if the Senate is controlled by the opposition. At the moment there's a Republican majority. Which is why Trump was able to fast track the appointment of ACB to the Supreme Court.

Naturally the Democrats are trying to seize control, and have great expectations, which is where people like Major Mark Kelly come in.

A former Navy captain and NASA shuttle astronaut, he's in a highly competitive race against Republican Martha McSally for a seat in Arizona. If Kelly prevails he'd become the fourth former astronaut to make it into Congress.

The Democrats would also need to win three or four more races in states like Colorado, Maine and North Carolina to win control of the Senate, which would either be a consolation prize if they lose the race for the White House - or a massive boost for a President Biden?

Sky News US election coverage

So - a critical evening (and maybe longer) ahead for the United States and the world.

Just remember two things to keep front and centre - 270 and those swing states - we'll guide you through the rest with our incredible team of experts.

Our coverage starts at 10pm on Tuesday, 3 November. Do NOT miss it.

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2020-11-01 00:50:38Z
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