Anonymous ID: 9abe65 Oct. 28, 2024, 6:23 a.m. No.21847347   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7368 >>7487 >>7611 >>7675

America (lefties)Is (are) Having a Panic Attack Over the Election - WSJOct. 27, 2024

 

Early voting began in Georgia nearly two weeks ago.

CLARKSTON, Ga.—The sun was shining. Bruce Springsteen was strumming an acoustic guitar. Yet beneath the peaceful surface, the stadium packed with thousands of Democrats practically thrummed with anxiety.

“I’m honestly legit kind of terrified,” said Rebekah Williams, a 46-year-old Atlanta resident wearing a T-shirt that read “pro science, pro choice, pro wrestling.” The thought of trying to get through the next couple of weeks until the election had her on edge, not to mention what might happen afterward. To get through it, she was counting on “a lot of marijuana.”

 

With little more than a week to go in what could be the closest presidential election in American history, the nation is on edge. Partisans on both sides are paralyzed with suspense and apprehension as they look to white-knuckle it through the coming days. The candidates have amped up their appeals to an apocalyptic degree as the campaigns frantically work to turn out the vote. As Donald Trump and Kamala Harris both campaigned in this crucial swing state, voters broadly said this election feels different than those that came before—less a regular democratic exercise than a national panic attack, a twilight clash that could end democracy for good.

“I can remember elections where it felt like things would be OK regardless of the outcome,” Phillip Appiah, a 50-year-old contractor from Stone Mountain, said as he waited in line for a food truck on the stadium turf. “That feeling is absent this time.”

 

Bruce Springsteen was among celebrities appearing before a packed stadium Thursday at a rally for Kamala Harris in suburban Atlanta.

The angst is widespread across the political spectrum. In a Wall Street Journal poll released last week, 87% of voters said they believe America will suffer permanent damage if their candidate loses. Among Harris’s voters, 57% said they would feel “frightened” if Trump is elected, while 47% of Trump voters said they would feel frightened if Harris wins; smaller percentages expected to feel the milder reactions of anger or disappointment. At least half of voters said they think violence is likely if either Trump or Harris wins, and 53% say America’s divisions will keep growing regardless of the election’s outcome.

The same poll found Trump narrowly ahead within the margin of error—essentially a tie, similar to the results of numerous other recent national and swing-state polls. Even the polling guru Nate Silver, who rose to fame on predicting the outcome of elections, says he can’t predict which way this one will go (though his “gut saysDonald Trump”). It is anybody’s guess, as if the nation’s deep divisions had come to rest in a tense and unstable stalemate.

The political professionals don’t know what to think. In interviews, Democratic and Republican strategists oscillated between confidence and uncertainty as they considered the many factors that could shift the result of a race on a knife’s edge. Are the polls undercounting Trump’s voters as they have in the past—or overcounting them, as pollsters try to compensate? Could there be an undetected surge of new women voters animated by abortion—or of men drawn to Trump’s unconventional appeals? Would Democrats’ superior field organization put them over the top, or would Elon Musk’s sudden investment do the same for the GOP? In a race this close, nearly anything—a weather event in Wisconsin, a late-breaking scandal—could be decisive.

Many Republicans are projecting confidence, but privately admit they can’t be sure. “It wouldn’t shock me if there’s some kind of sleeping giant out there,” said one Republican strategist—an under-the-radar electoral force that polls aren’t picking up. “It wouldn’t shock me if Trump ends up overperforming expectations in key voter groups. I also wouldn’t be shocked by Harris winning every swing state.”

 

“I don’t have emotions anymore. I can’t let politics make me emotional,” said Lauren Groh-Wargo, a Georgia Democratic strategist who runs the Fair Fight Action voter-mobilization group founded by former gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams. “These races are so close, you just have to do what you can and focus on what you can control.”

 

A Democratic lobbyist in Washington put it more succinctly: “There are not enough gummies I can take to soothe the angst!”…

 

(This whole article is propaganda.)

 

https://archive.is/C6mki

Anonymous ID: 9abe65 Oct. 28, 2024, 6:28 a.m. No.21847371   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Replay of Lies for HRC in 2016No ones buying it except the panicked lefties!

 

Inside with Jen Psaki

@InsideWithPsaki

 

.@jomalleydillon on early voting data: “We really like what we’re seeing… The folks that we’re focused on, those lower propensity voters that don’t always vote… they’re showing up at a higher level in support of the vice president.”

 

KEK

 

12:32 PM · Oct 27, 2024

·881.8K

Views

https://x.com/InsideWithPsaki/status/1850576298839621806

Anonymous ID: 9abe65 Oct. 28, 2024, 6:33 a.m. No.21847399   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7401 >>7408 >>7487 >>7611 >>7675

Charlie Kirk

@charliekirk11

 

John Fetterman describes the extraordinary connection Trump has with the people of Pennsylvania:

 

"Anybody who spends time driving around, and you can see the intensity. It's astonishing."

 

Trump War Room

12:42 PM · Oct 26, 2024

·683K Views

https://x.com/charliekirk11/status/1850216346262630851

 

 

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