The hope of the Democrats for the moderates and the effort of the Republicans to strengthen their position

According to IRNA’s report on Monday, the Washington Post wrote that the Republican candidates in their election campaigns have focused on messages that show cultural differences and can cause racial differences, including Trump’s campaign rallies in Florida and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis. .
In these campaign gatherings, Nikki Haley, the former ambassador to the United Nations, took one of the sharpest positions, and in a campaign in Georgia, she called for the dismissal of Raphael Warnock, the Democratic senator of this state, who is also an American citizen.
At the same time, many Democrats are trying to highlight moderate positions and ignore the extreme left of their party, and candidates such as former US President Bill Clinton, Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg and Senator Amy Klobuchar are entering the campaign field. that are attractive to moderate voters.
The race for Tuesday’s election is fierce, with pollsters and executives from both major US parties being careful with their predictions, and the messages focused in the final days of the race are typically on issues that can swing the vote. Attract more donors.
Democrats try to present themselves as moderates, they emphasize voters’ concerns about issues such as crime and the economy and offer ways to manage them.
Clinton, who was campaigning for Democratic New York Gov. Kathy Hochul on Saturday, told the crowd that inflation was “disturbing” and highlighted some high-profile cases of crime.
He tried to make the Republicans appear radical and said that the Republican candidate “Lee Zeldin” has radical positions in this field and if you want to have a state with radical positions in New York, vote for him.
This media added that some rhetoric of the Republican Party is worrying.
Groups affiliated with former Trump adviser Stephen Miller have also bombarded voters in recent days with ads that show the Democratic Party is “anti-white” because it’s trying to help black Americans. Other messages target Asian-American or Latino voters, arguing that they have little Democratic support.
Democrats and civil rights leaders are growing increasingly concerned about potential Election Day tensions. Critics say that they are particularly worried about the apparent political violence caused by the January 6 attacks on the Congress and the violent attack on Paul Pelosi, the wife of Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the US House of Representatives, at his residence.
Amy Klobuchar, who became a well-known figure in the 2020 presidential election, has been on a promotional tour in 15 US states, and her messages have mainly focused on lowering drug prices and protecting social security and other programs.
Democrats need union votes to win Congress
Calvin Newman, a Republican voter in Ohio, plans to vote for Democratic candidate Tim Ryan in this year’s Senate elections, the Washington Post wrote.
As a union steelworker, Newman said Ryan’s support for the freighter is the same approach that led him to vote for Trump.
But he says he doubts other union members will vote for the Democratic candidate, and they are more likely to vote for the Republican candidate.
If Democrats hope to take control of the Senate, they need more voters like Newman in hotly contested states like Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Nevada, the Washington Post wrote.
In 2019, Trump won these states except for Nevada because he fared better among union voters than Mitt Romney and John McCain. Biden’s performance was better in these states except for Ohio, but he could not do as well as Barack Obama in the 2008 and 2012 elections with the unions.
Which candidates union members vote for on Tuesday could play a decisive role in which party controls the next Congress.
How much does inflation hurt Democrats?
Many union leaders say they don’t think Democrats have done enough to convince voters. The Democratic-controlled Congress passed the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill, providing hundreds of billions of dollars in the Deflation Act and hundreds of billions more for new high-tech manufacturing in the Chips Act.
The Washington Post wrote that Democrats can still win union votes, but they won’t succeed if they ignore the economic pain of the working class.