US elections: How the race between Trump and Biden has divided America more than ever

A Donald Trump supporter, left, and a Joe Biden supporter, right, discuss political issues in front of Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn.
A Donald Trump supporter, left, and a Joe Biden supporter, right, discuss political issues in front of Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn. Copyright Mark Humphrey/Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved
Copyright Mark Humphrey/Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved
By Josephine Joly
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Any presidential election in the United States America is bound to divide Americans, but it seems like the country is more divided than ever. And getting there has taken years. But how did it happen? And how does America get out of it?

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Any presidential election in the United States is bound to divide Americans over who should be the next tenant of the White House, but the upcoming elections seem to have divided the country more than ever.

From signposts on front lawns, to the Black Lives Matter movement; from the abortion debate to the Coronavirus pandemic, it seems no one can fathom how deep America's divide is right now.

Police departments all over the country say they have never seen so many campaign yard signs being stolen so far out from election day itself.

Some even had to put warnings on their yard signs to stop future thieves from taking them away, as theft or vandalism of political signs is a crime in all 50 states.

"We have two parties that hate each other so much that they can't put the country in front of themselves," Jesse Kivenas from Racine, Wisconsin, told Euronews.

The impact of political opinion and gerrymandering

Personal political views and the practice of gerrymandering seem to be the root of the American divisiveness.

Gerrymandering is the power that state lawmakers have to re-draw state congressional districts to virtually ensure that their party stays in power in those districts.

Michigan for example is one of 14 states where government is divided. One party controls the Governor's office, the other party controls the state legislature.

In Wisconsin, local divisions are particularly strong. In March, the Democratic governor ordered a lockdown, and two months later, Republicans, who control the legislature, managed to get the order tossed out. Immediately, bars and restaurants filled up with mask-less customers.

Then the governor ordered bars and restaurants to be limited to 25 percent of their capacity -- but again Republicans got the order tucked away.

This never-ending circle of local battles between the two parties plays right up to the race between the Republican president Donald Trump and the Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden.

"There are very few undecided voters right now and the Venn diagram of the overlap of Biden and Trump doesn't exist. So you're either for him or against him," said Paru Shah, a Political Science professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

Will the 2020 presidential elections be able to unite Americans?

Unfortunately, the unification of American voters doesn't seem at all likely in the near future.

"It's going to take someone special to try to unite people together. I don't know if we've got that right now," Frank Dickinson of Port Huron, Michigan, told Euronews.

A Biden supporter even claimed that the violence observed before the election was very likely to repeat itself after the election.

"It's too frightening to think of the divisiveness," added Kathy Johnson, a Trump supporter.

Join Euronews.com for a live blog as the election unfolds on Tuesday evening all the way through the night.

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