Biden exchanged sharp criticism before the vote

TRUMP: Americans have the right to know the name of the winner on election day

  • Donald Trump: "Voting for Biden means giving control of the government to the communists and hypocrites."

  • Joe Biden: "Trump is weak, and we have a chance to write the end to a presidency that has divided the nation."

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US President Donald Trump considered that “Americans have the right to know the name of the winner” on election day, while visiting a Republican campaign center in suburban Washington.

"We have the right to know the winner on November 3rd," the Republican president said in Arlington, Virginia, noting that more Americans resorting to mail-order voting may delay the counting of the votes and subsequently announce the result.

Trump said he had not yet considered a speech admitting defeat or acceptance speech, during a speech to staff at his Arlington campaign headquarters.

"As you know, winning is easy," he added.

Losing is never easy.

Not so for me ».

"I feel very good," the current Republican president said, admitting that his voice was hoarse after holding several election rallies.

"There was love in those gatherings," he added.

For his part, his Democratic opponent, Joe Biden, said after Trump's statements: "We are in a battle for the soul of the nation."

This comes after the US President and his Democratic opponent, Joe Biden, exchanged harsh criticisms in the last days of the election campaign for the presidency of the United States, in the last days of the election campaign, the day before yesterday, and urged voters to participate in the polls in the states where competition is intense, while Prosecutors in eight states have warned that they will not tolerate voter intimidation.

Americans set a record in early voting, with about 96 million casting their votes in the elections, and this record constitutes 70% of the total number of respondents in the 2016 elections, and about 40% of all Americans who have the right to vote.

At a campaign conference in Fayetteville, North Carolina, Trump rejected the poll results that showed he was losing the race, and gave frightening warnings in the event Biden took office.

Trump said: "Voting for Biden means giving control of the government to the proponents of globalization, the communists, the socialists and the wealthy liberal hypocrites, who want to silence you, censor you, cancel you, and punish you."

In Cleveland, Ohio, Biden returned to the main topics driving his campaign, pledging to heal the nation's wounds, and attacking Trump's handling of the Corona virus.

Biden said: "We have an opportunity to write the end of a presidency that has divided this nation," describing Trump as "weak and stigmatized."

Despite nationwide polls showing Biden’s lead broadly, the race in swing states is fairly close, which allows Trump to collect the 270 votes needed to win a caucus.

Americans have already cast nearly 60 million votes in the mail, and counting these votes may take days or weeks in some states, which means that the winner may not be announced in the hours after polling ends in that way, yesterday.

Eight state prosecutors, representing Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, have warned that they will not tolerate voter intimidation.

"Voter intimidation is illegal in all states, whether it happens in person or from inside a car," North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein said in a statement. "Those who witness any disturbing behavior should report it to law enforcement immediately."

And despite polls showing Biden’s progress nationwide, the race is converging in swing states in a way that could allow Trump to collect 270 votes to win in the electoral college whose votes determine the winning candidate.

The 538 members of the Electoral College will meet after the presidential elections to determine the winner, and the presidential candidate must obtain an absolute majority of the body’s votes, or 270 out of 538 votes, to win.

96

One million Americans cast their ballots in the early presidential vote.

538

One person, the electorate, will determine the winner of the White House seat.

Trump: “Winning is easy. Losing is never easy.

Not so for me ».

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