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New Yorkers Stand in Polling Unit for Hours to Cast Early Votes

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Voters wait in line to cast ballots on the first day of early voting in New City, a New York City suburb, New York, U.S., October 24, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Segar

 

Long lines formed before polls opened across New York City and Long Island, videos on social media showed.

New Yorkers also joined a flood of more than 56 million Americans across the country who have cast early ballots at a record-setting pace.

Saturday was the first time that voters in New York, a reliably Democratic state where Democrat Joe Biden has a wide lead in polls over Republican President Donald Trump, have been allowed to vote early in a presidential election.

A majority of New York voters haven’t supported a Republican candidate for president since Ronald Reagan’s re-election in 1984. Early in-person voting will continue in the state until Nov. 1.

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Vanessa Reilly, 38, a computer programmer, cast an early vote for Biden at the Barclays Centre arena in Brooklyn. She said she wanted to be sure her vote was counted.

“I just want to avoid all the chaos on Election Day itself,” Reilly said, adding that a lot of people were showing up to register their opposition to Trump.

“Given this year and given the current president we need to send a clear message that his policies don’t work, that they’re offensive, that they don’t represent American values,” she said.

About 56.5 million Americans already have cast early ballots across the country either in person or by mail, a pace that could lead to the highest voter turnout rate in more than a century, according to data from the U.S. Elections Project.

The rush to vote is a sign of intense interest in the contest between Trump and Biden, as well as concerns about avoiding crowded polling places on Election Day and reducing the risk of exposure to the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed more than 224,000 Americans.

The high level of early voting has led Michael McDonald, the University of Florida professor who administers the U.S. Elections Project, to predict a record turnout of about 150 million, representing 65 per cent of eligible voters, the highest participation rate since 1908.

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