Anxious Americans brace for Election Day with faces masked, stores
boarded up
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[November 03, 2020]
By Nathan Layne and Jonathan Allen
MCCONNELLSBURG, Pa. (Reuters) - Millions of
Americans will cast ballots on Tuesday in an Election Day unlike any
other, braving the threat of COVID-19 and the potential for violence and
intimidation after one of the most polarizing presidential races in U.S.
history.
In and around polling places across the country, reminders of a 2020
election year shaped by pandemic, civil unrest and bruising political
partisanship will greet voters, although more than 90 million ballots
have been already submitted in an unprecedented wave of early voting.
Many will wear masks to the polls — either by choice or by official
mandate — with the coronavirus outbreak raging in many parts of the
country.
Some voters in major U.S. cities will see businesses boarded up as a
precaution against politically motivated vandalism, an extraordinary
sight on Election Day in the United States, where voting is typically
peaceful in the modern era.
The tensions surrounding this year's presidential election were in the
air on Monday in the gun section of the Buchanan Trail Sporters store in
the small town of McConnellsburg, Pennsylvania.
"No matter who gets in they have a feeling there will be some civil
unrest," Sally Hoover, the shop's co-owner, said as half a dozen
shoppers browsed the cases filled with weapons and bullets.
Hoover is supporting President Donald Trump, a Republican, as he fights
for a second term against the Democratic candidate, Joe Biden, a former
vice president who is ahead in the polls.
"These people around here aren't going to go looking for the fight,"
Hoover said. "But if the fight comes to them, they are going to defend
their property and way of life."
TENSIONS FROM TIMES SQUARE TO TEXAS
The American Civil Liberties Union and other civil rights groups said
they were watching closely for signs of voter intimidation.
The ACLU's Georgia affiliate deployed around 300 lawyers across the
state at about 50 potential "hot spots" for voting trouble on Tuesday,
including 15 polling places in Atlanta.
"We have poll observers who are looking out for any voter intimidation,"
Andrea Young, ACLU Georgia's executive director, told reporters. "We
don't know exactly what will happen, but we want to be as ready as
possible."
The U.S. Justice Department's Civil Rights Division is deploying staff
to 18 states to monitor for voter intimidation and suppression,
including in some battleground counties and in cities shaken by civil
unrest this year.
Police and business owners said they were taking precautions to protect
property, with memories still fresh of sometimes violent protests over
racial injustice in many cities over the summer.
In New York City, the Macy's department store and the skyscraper that
houses the Trump-favored Fox News channel were among the buildings that
were boarded up. On Rodeo Drive, one of the most expensive shopping
streets in California's Beverley Hills, staff stripped the display
windows at Tiffany & Co. and Van Cleef & Arpels of their jewels.
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People vote during the U.S. presidential election in the gymnasium
of the Victory Park Recreation Center during the outbreak of the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Pasadena, California, U.S.,
November 2, 2020. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
"Hopefully this is all for nothing," Kathy Gohari, vice president of
the Rodeo Drive Committee, the merchants association, said on Monday
as she watched workers nail plywood over luxury storefronts.
Still, fists, eggs and expletives have already flown in New York
City's Times Square in recent days among ardent Trump fans,
Democrats and adherents of the anti-fascism movement known as antifa.
An alleged plot by an anti-government militia group to kidnap
Michigan's Democratic governor, uncovered last month, has
highlighted the potential for political violence on Election Day.
Police in Graham, North Carolina, doused a group of anti-racism
activists with pepper spray as they were marching to a polling
station on Saturday.
On a Texas highway on Friday, in a spectacle reminiscent of the
movie "Mad Max," a convoy of pickup trucks mounted with billowing
Trump flags surrounded a Biden-emblazoned bus filled with campaign
staffers in what seemed an attempt to force the bus off the road.
Trump praised the pickup drivers as "patriots," and expressed
impatience with his Federal Bureau of Investigation when the agency
said it was looking into the matter.
In the New York City area and elsewhere, convoys of vehicles with
Trump flags stopped on highways and bridges, according to local
media, snarling traffic in a defiant show of support for the
president.
Even once votes are cast, Americans from the president down have
expressed anxiety over what could be a protracted ballot count.
As the United States has suffered through the deadliest coronavirus
outbreak on the planet, many states have expanded early voting to
reduce contagion-spreading crowds at polling stations.
A record-setting 97.7 million early votes had been cast either
in-person or by mail as of Monday afternoon, representing about 40%
of all Americans who are legally eligible to vote.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in McConnellsburg, Pennsylvania and
Jonathan Allen in New York; Additional reporting by Gabriella Borter
in Toledo, Ohio; Lucy Nicholson in Beverley Hills, California; Rich
McKay in Atlanta; Sarah Lynch in Washington; Barbara Goldberg in
Maplewood, New Jersey; Writing by Jonathan Allen and Frank McGurty;
Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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