U.S. election day: What you need to know and how to find results
One of the most divisive races for the White House in recent memory will come to an end on Tuesday as Americans head to the polls, tasked with choosing between two candidates who have each framed the election as fight for the nation’s character, democracy and security.
Unlike Canadians, Americans vote directly for who they want to see as president — their choices this year being Democratic nominee Kamala Harris, Republican nominee Donald Trump or a third-party candidate.
Poll opening times vary by state, and even by county, but generally will open first on the East Coast at 6 a.m. ET, while the last poll closes in Alaska at 8 p.m. local time (1 a.m. ET).
Voters had returned more than 80.5 million advance ballots as of Monday.
Harris, 60, said she had intended to vote early to show voters the different options available. Her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, did the same, casting his ballot last week in his home state. President Joe Biden also voted early in his home state of Delaware.
Trump, 78, had previously said he would vote before election day, but is now expected to vote on Tuesday.
How the candidates are spending the day
Harris planned to spend Tuesday doing radio interviews in all seven battleground states to make sure those final voters “who are on their way to work, on their way home, taking a lunch break — understand the stakes,” according to campaign communications director Michael Tyler.
She is expected to make the final argument of her campaign in Washington at the same spot where Trump spoke to supporters before they attacked the U.S. Capitol to block the certification of Biden’s electoral victory on Jan. 6, 2021. Harris spoke at the same site last week.
In turn, Trump will make his final remarks at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. An adviser characterized the speech as a “prebuttal” to Harris’s address in the capital.
As usual, each candidate will need 270 electoral votes to win the White House.
In the past, the results have been obvious within a matter of hours on election night. If the presidential race is extremely close and mail-in ballots become a deciding factor, there will be no clear winner on Tuesday night.
The next U.S. president will be consequential for Canada, too: The countries are top allies, side-by-side on the world stage, and one another’s largest customers with billions of yearly dollars in trade.
At his own event on the eve of the election on Monday, Walz said voters’ choice will have implications far beyond the next presidential term.
“The thing is upon us now, folks,” Walz said at a rally in La Crosse, Wis. “I know there is a lot of anxiety, but the decisions that are made over the next 24-36 hours when those polls close, will shape not just the next four years, they will shape the coming generations.”
Published at Fri, 01 Nov 2024 08:11:21 +0000
In northern Gaza, ‘hell is boiling’ for civilians who remain, Palestinian says
Mohammad Atteya has been separated from his family in the northern Gaza town of Beit Lahiya for two weeks since being evacuated to hospital with a head wound.
Now, he is torn by regret for leaving them in the epicentre of a massive Israeli military assault.
“They speak to me about their nights of horror, they tell me how every night they pray for their safety and they bid one another farewell. Hell is boiling there, I feel it inside my chest. I wish I hadn’t left,” he said.
While he waits in Gaza City’s Sheikh Radwan neighbourhood, only a few kilometres from home but unable to return, 23 members of his extended family are sheltering in one house with barely enough to eat.
“They are eating what is left of some canned food, no fresh vegetables or fruit, no meat or chicken and no clean water,” he said.
In the month since Israel launched a renewed campaign in the border town of Beit Lahiya, one of the first targets of last year’s ground assault, strikes have killed hundreds of Palestinians.
A hit on a residential building on Oct. 29 killed at least 93 people, health officials said. Israel’s military said it was targeting a spotter on the roof.
Thousands of Palestinians have been evacuated from Beit Lahiya and the nearby towns of Beit Hanoun and Jabalia, as the Israeli military roots out bands of Hamas fighters still operating from among the rubble.
The area has been cut off from Gaza City to the south, communication has been patchy, supplies of food are dwindling and the price of whatever is available has reached exorbitant levels.
It is unclear how many civilians remain in northern Gaza. The Palestinian Civil Emergency Service estimated 100,000 people remain in Jabalia, Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun, about half the number of people there at the start of the new Israeli campaign on Oct. 5.
The repeated bombardments have destroyed shelters and those remaining are huddled together in whatever structures still stand. “That is why every Israeli hit on a house leads to dozens of casualties,” said Atteya.
The Israeli military has disputed some of the casualty figures reported by Palestinian officials. Top United Nations officials say the situation in northern Gaza is “apocalyptic,” with the entire population at imminent risk of death.
IDF says north incursion expected to last ‘few’ more weeks
More than a year into the war in Gaza, the Israeli military believes Hamas — who led the attacks on communities in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages — has been depleted but not extinguished.
“We expect this campaign to last an additional few weeks at least. There is a lot of work to do there in order to dismantle Hamas’s capabilities in this region,” an Israeli military official said last week.
The army says it has killed or captured hundreds of Hamas fighters during the northern Gaza operation, and at least 17 Israeli soldiers have been killed in gun battles and ambushes in the wrecked streets or bombed-out buildings.
On Tuesday, Hamas’s armed wing said fighters in Jabalia had killed five Israeli soldiers at point-blank range a day earlier, in one of several such announcements the group has made in past weeks. The Israeli military did not immediately comment.
Access for reporters is restricted and communications are erratic, making independent verification of what is happening on the ground difficult.
Israel accuses Hamas fighters of hiding among civilians. In a night-time raid on the Kamal Adwan Hospital, one of the health facilities struggling to operate in the north, an Israeli military official said around 100 Hamas fighters were captured, some posing as medical staff, along with weapons and ammunition.
Evacuation is ‘worst feeling ever,’ says Palestinian
Hamas rejected the accusations. Eid Sabbah, the hospital’s director of nursing, described a terrifying raid in a voice note to Reuters. “The terrorizing of civilians, the injured and children began as they [the Israeli army] started opening fire on the hospital,” he said.
In advance of attacks, the Israeli military sends out evacuation orders to civilians in leaflet drops and targeted telephone calls.
“Evacuation is the worst feeling ever,” Atteya said. “You are told to run for your life, you try to ask the voice [Israeli caller], how much time do I have, he says ‘run.’ What can you take with you when you go running?”
A public servant, Atteya had dreams for his children, aged between two and 15, in Hamas-run Gaza before the war, which health officials in Gaza say has killed more than 43,300 Palestinians.
“I don’t say the Hamas government was ideal. They couldn’t improve economic conditions,” he said. “We had a life, a good one, not good enough, but we didn’t have the [Israeli] occupation’s killing machine tearing us up every day.”
The future is hard for Atteya to envisage. Many Palestinians believe the Israeli campaign is aimed at preparing the way for a return of Israeli settlers to postwar Gaza.
“They are making buffer zones, that’s why they are demolishing and bombing residential districts, and some of their fanatics want to return settlers in Gaza. This is how bad the situation is,” he said.
The Israeli military denies such plans and says the evacuation orders are meant to keep civilians out of harm’s way.
Published at Tue, 05 Nov 2024 15:01:53 +0000