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Huge turnout, fraying nerves: the story of election night so far

After months of nerve-jangling campaigning that at times appeared to be tearing the world’s oldest constitutional democracy apart, the US presidential election finally reached its climax and entered the comfortingly familiar bubble of TV news election night.

But there was nothing familiar about this election, not in pandemic 2020.

From the start of the night, presenters from CNN to Fox News had two words ringing in their ears as they tried to hold on tight to a long and nail-biting night: patience and caution.

Patience because of the vast pile of more than 100m early votes cast and caution because of the unprecedented stakes of the race. “The level of anxiety! The level of emotional fatigue!” said CNN’s Van Jones, expressing the heartfelt yearning of millions of Americans. “If you are a Muslim family, if you are from an immigration community, if you are vulnerable in any way, this has been an horrific four years, so people would vote for Hermit the Frog over Donald Trump at this point.”

Fox News recognised the exceptionally twisty nature of the night. “The results as they come in are going to be a little bewildering because we will be looking at a peculiar blend of votes that have and have not been counted,” said the channel’s senior political analyst Brit Hume. “We should prepare our audience to bear with us, because it’s getting very complex.”

At least Wolf Blitzer, the CNN anchor whose prime skill is making drying paint sound breathlessly like world-shattering news, kept in character, throwing all caveats to the winds. “It’s a bit of a surprise,” he screeched when results started coming in from Kentucky showing Joe Biden ahead.

Blitzer had to be gently nudged by a colleague, who pointed out that only 8% of votes were in at that time. Kentucky was soon after called for Trump, which was not a bit of a surprise – the state has clung to the Republican in every race since 1996.

Huge turnout

Even before election night began, the country had witnessed nationwide scenes of determined voting at astonishing levels. The sleeping giant of the US electorate – traditionally among the most laggardly at voting among the developed countries – had suddenly stirred.

From the critical swing state of Florida, through the rust belt states that in no small part delivered Trump his victory four years ago, amid a snow squall in New Hampshire, and right across to the vast Democratic stronghold of California, Americans turned out to vote in record numbers. The rate at which they did so was set to surpass all presidential elections since 1908.

After all the fears of armed intimidation at the polls, of militia groups descending on polling stations to wreak havoc, election day was overwhelmingly orderly and calm. Sporadic local squabbles over voting machine breakdowns and scurrilous spam calls were recorded, as they regularly are in US presidential races.

State after state broke voting records. Texas, which last voted for a Democratic presidential candidate in 1976, received more early votes than the entirety of the poll in 2016. Florida recorded 9m early votes, some 63% of the total – another jaw-dropping showing.


Source: US Politics - theguardian.com


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