Barack Obama warned on Friday against rhetoric he said was
designed to sow fear as he campaigned in support of Democratic candidates while
President Donald Trump hammered a hardline anti-immigration message to energize
Republicans.
Twitter
Inc said it had deleted more than 10,000 automated accounts posting messages
that discouraged people from voting in Tuesday’s elections and wrongly appeared
to be from Democrats, after the party flagged the misleading tweets to the
social media company.
The
removals took place in late September and early October.
Obama
hit on a common theme of Democratic campaigns - defending the 2010 healthcare
law that was his signature domestic achievement, while urging Americans not to
embrace hostility and division in politics.
“We
have seen repeated attempts to divide us with rhetoric designed to make us
angry and make us fearful,” Obama said in Miami. “But in four days, Florida,
you can be a check on that kind of behavior.”
Obama
was flanked by gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum, who faces former
congressman and strong Trump backer Ron DeSantis, and Senator Bill Nelson, who
is being challenged by the outgoing governor, Rick Scott.
Trump’s
campaign stops were aimed at bolstering Republicans challenging incumbent
Democratic senators in West Virginia and Indiana, states he won in the 2016
presidential election.
“This
election will decide whether we build on the extraordinary prosperity that
we’ve unleashed ... or whether we let the radical Democrats take a giant
wrecking ball to America and to our future,” Trump said in West Virginia.
Opinion
polls and non-partisan forecasters generally show Democrats as having strong
chances of winning 23 additional seats and taking a majority in the House of
Representatives, which they could use to launch investigations into Trump’s
administration and block his legislative agenda.
Republicans
are generally expected to retain control of the Senate, whose powers include
confirming Trump’s nominations to lifetime seats on the Supreme Court.
Obama’s
speech was repeatedly interrupted by hecklers, prompting him to quip, “Why is
it that the folks who won the last election are so mad all the time?”
Surging
early voting
Interest
in the election has been unusually high in a year when Congress but not the
White House is at stake, according to early voting tallies. Twenty-seven states
plus the District of Columbia have recorded more early votes at this point in
the campaign than they did in all of 2014, according to The Election Project at
the University of Florida, which tracks turnout.
Texas
had already recorded more votes than it did in all of 2014, including Election
Day, the group said.
After
Miami, Obama was headed to Georgia to campaign for Stacey Abrams, a former
state legislator aiming to become the United States’ first black female
governor.
That
race pitting Abrams against Republican Brian Kemp, the state’s top elections
overseer, has become a flashpoint for allegations of voter suppression by
Democrats due to the state’s strict voter-identification law. Republicans
contend the law is necessary to deter voter fraud.
A
federal judge on Friday ordered the state to allow some 3,000 recently naturalized
citizens to vote after their registrations had been put on hold.
With
the race neck and neck, voter turnout will be crucial in determining who wins,
said Georgia State University political scientist Lakeyta Bonnette-Bailey.
Obama could energize Democratic voters and drive up turnout, she added.
“At
this point it’s going to be turnout,” she said. “How can he mobilize those who
are already registered to vote to go out and vote. And to tell their friends
and families to vote.”
The
final weeks of the campaign season have also seen a spate of violence including
the massacre of 11 people at a Pennsylvania synagogue and more than a dozen
package bombs sent to prominent Trump critics.
The
FBI said on Friday it had recovered a suspicious package addressed to
California billionaire Tom Steyer, a Democrat known for his ads calling for
Trump’s impeachment.
In
West Virginia, Trump’s third visit in three months was aimed shoring up Patrick
Morrisey, who is seeking to unseat Democratic Senator Joe Manchin.
Two
new polls this week showed Manchin’s once-comfortable lead over Morrisey
dwindling to 5 percentage points, which the Democrat’s supporters blame in part
on Trump’s repeated visits.
“I
know Trump coming so often is making an impact,” said Jim Hoyt, chairman of the
Morgan County Democratic Party in northeast West Virginia. Like other Democrats
in the state, he still expects Manchin to win.
Trump
also will go to Indiana to appear on behalf of Mike Braun, who is trying to
replace Joe Donnelly in the Senate.
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