WASHINGTON, Nov 5 – The United States will hold a presidential election on Tuesday, with Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump running neck and neck in what is considered to be the closest election in the country’s recent political history, reported Sputnik/RIA Novosti. 

According to the latest data from the Real Clear Politics (RCP) poll aggregator, Trump has a 0.1 percentage point (pp) lead in national polls and a slight edge in most of the battleground states, including Pennsylvania (0.3 pp), North Carolina (1.5 pp), Georgia (1.9 pp), Arizona (2.6 pp) and Nevada (one pp), while Harris is ahead in Wisconsin (0.3 pp) and Michigan (0.9 pp). However, considering that most polls have a margin of error of three percentage points, it is hard to be sure what the actual result will be. The University of Florida’s Election Lab said that over 78 million people had voted early in this election.

Apart from deciding who will be the president, voters will also decide the composition of the House of Representatives and of one-third of the Senate, which is important since without the support of Congress, it will be quite difficult for either Trump or Harris to implement their policies.

At the moment, the Republicans have the House, while the Democrats control the Senate. Per the RCP’s generic congressional vote average, the GOP has a 0.4 per cent lead. The key Senate races this election are said to be in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, Montana, Nevada and Arizona.

For Trump, a businessman and reality TV star, this election has been a chance to prove to the nation that his defeat by President Joe Biden in 2020, a loss that he still disputes, was a fluke, and that many in the country still buy into his combination of strong border and immigration control, departure from the principles of free trade in favour of economic protectionism, as well as scepticism towardd traditional approaches to foreign policy.

And while the former president still commands the support of the GOP grassroots, many voters, including some within his own party, are put off by his bombastic style, as well as his role in the events surrounding the Jan 6 riots.

Harris, for her part, inherited the Democratic nomination after Biden withdrew his candidacy this summer due to a dismal performance in the first campaign debate against his Republican rival.

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