President Biden votes in Delaware
President Joe Biden cast his ballot for Vice President Kamala Harris and other Democratic legislators on Monday, joining hundreds of youthful voters in his home state of Delaware, only one week before the US Presidential Elections.
Biden expressed his pride in voting for Kamala Harris, Tim Walz, Lisa Rochester, and other Democrats on social media site X after submitting his early vote.
In addition, he said that there was “too much on the line” to stay away from this election and encouraged everyone to vote.
Along with a few first-time voters, I was honored to cast my support for Kamala Harris, Tim Walz, Lisa Rochester, and other Democrats up and down the list. In a post on X, Biden said, “People, there is too much at stake to miss this election.”
According to the New York Times, the president greeted first-time voters, smiled for pictures, and helped a voter in a wheelchair as they waited in line at the polling place in New Castle, Delaware, which is near his birthplace of Wilmington and is in a heavily Democratic region.
Biden voted for himself four years ago with his wife, Jill Biden, at his side. However, the first lady did not vote with her husband in Delaware on Monday. Her itinerary indicated that she was also campaigning for her husband’s Democratic Party successor in Michigan and Wisconsin.
In this hotly fought presidential campaign, more than 20 million Americans have already cast their ballots during early in-person voting.
Up until July, President Biden was the front-runner for the Democratic Party. He only withdrew from the campaign after his dismal debate performance against former President Donald Trump, which heightened worries about his advanced age. Kamala Harris, his deputy, quickly gained the required support and the party’s nomination when he backed her for the position.
On November 5, Vice President Kamala Harris will face off against Republican contender and former US President Donald Trump in the US presidential election.
Vice President Kamala Harris wants to make history by becoming the first female president of the United States, while former US President Donald Trump hopes to return to the White House following his harsh leave the last time.
According to a recent New York Times and Siena College survey, Trump and Harris were deadlocked for the same 48 percent of the popular vote. Even after three months of the most turbulent months in US political history, the two leaders are still deadlocked.