Berliner Boersenzeitung - Why I voted -- Americans share what drew them to polls

EUR -
AED 4.015821
AFN 73.791892
ALL 98.68196
AMD 422.635149
ANG 1.97074
AOA 999.876216
ARS 1065.726922
AUD 1.623466
AWG 1.969923
AZN 1.846655
BAM 1.955028
BBD 2.207849
BDT 130.668435
BGN 1.955715
BHD 0.412167
BIF 3225.85649
BMD 1.093339
BND 1.430349
BOB 7.556053
BRL 6.104325
BSD 1.093478
BTN 91.803991
BWP 14.541395
BYN 3.578226
BYR 21429.435338
BZD 2.20413
CAD 1.504292
CDF 3143.347737
CHF 0.937321
CLF 0.036854
CLP 1016.902927
CNY 7.734601
CNH 7.742366
COP 4605.68859
CRC 564.684907
CUC 1.093339
CUP 28.973471
CVE 110.222007
CZK 25.348069
DJF 194.724937
DKK 7.460407
DOP 65.834923
DZD 145.504475
EGP 53.120956
ERN 16.400078
ETB 133.237149
FJD 2.430218
FKP 0.832642
GBP 0.83799
GEL 2.979342
GGP 0.832642
GHS 17.438198
GIP 0.832642
GMD 74.346871
GNF 9435.40597
GTQ 8.456701
GYD 228.770767
HKD 8.496104
HNL 27.167652
HRK 7.433621
HTG 144.064466
HUF 401.123493
IDR 17072.918601
ILS 4.115091
IMP 0.832642
INR 91.827973
IQD 1432.434721
IRR 46018.618806
ISK 148.70474
JEP 0.832642
JMD 172.783395
JOD 0.774851
JPY 162.687133
KES 141.051389
KGS 93.153183
KHR 4446.286037
KMF 493.587002
KPW 984.004064
KRW 1474.766056
KWD 0.33513
KYD 0.91124
KZT 542.355971
LAK 23912.813617
LBP 97914.095912
LKR 320.253619
LRD 211.04768
LSL 19.209014
LTL 3.228344
LVL 0.661349
LYD 5.233982
MAD 10.733613
MDL 19.330957
MGA 5023.063699
MKD 61.590695
MMK 3551.120922
MNT 3715.164302
MOP 8.753046
MRU 43.29151
MUR 50.386632
MVR 16.793608
MWK 1895.969138
MXN 21.257463
MYR 4.687114
MZN 69.837034
NAD 19.210419
NGN 1771.306976
NIO 40.244486
NOK 11.743516
NPR 146.888049
NZD 1.794756
OMR 0.420906
PAB 1.093468
PEN 4.073193
PGK 4.298363
PHP 62.612766
PKR 303.717123
PLN 4.302188
PYG 8527.71272
QAR 3.986845
RON 4.975898
RSD 117.005747
RUB 105.994789
RWF 1472.132519
SAR 4.105656
SBD 9.036473
SCR 15.092973
SDG 657.609842
SEK 11.36743
SGD 1.428026
SHP 0.832642
SLE 24.979837
SLL 22926.756843
SOS 624.95909
SRD 35.111435
STD 22629.900287
SVC 9.568224
SYP 2747.045806
SZL 19.204597
THB 36.455179
TJS 11.645498
TMT 3.826685
TND 3.370785
TOP 2.560708
TRY 37.493487
TTD 7.42407
TWD 35.180683
TZS 2979.347764
UAH 45.079922
UGX 4018.43259
USD 1.093339
UYU 45.441652
UZS 13972.486061
VEF 3960676.290518
VES 41.113255
VND 27137.755843
VUV 129.803348
WST 3.058574
XAF 655.704238
XAG 0.03507
XAU 0.000413
XCD 2.954802
XDR 0.813486
XOF 655.704238
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.770772
ZAR 19.139012
ZMK 9841.358739
ZMW 29.031543
ZWL 352.054563
  • RBGPF

    63.3500

    63.35

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    0.0600

    6.94

    +0.86%

  • SCS

    -0.4300

    12.6

    -3.41%

  • NGG

    0.0500

    65.68

    +0.08%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    24.59

    +0.28%

  • RIO

    0.4900

    66.84

    +0.73%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.74

    +0.1%

  • RELX

    -0.3500

    46.36

    -0.75%

  • GSK

    -1.0300

    39.21

    -2.63%

  • AZN

    -0.6350

    76.87

    -0.83%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    24.77

    +0.36%

  • BCE

    -0.4500

    32.86

    -1.37%

  • BCC

    -3.4400

    138.95

    -2.48%

  • BP

    0.3600

    32.34

    +1.11%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.22

    0%

  • BTI

    -0.3700

    35.11

    -1.05%

Why I voted -- Americans share what drew them to polls
Why I voted -- Americans share what drew them to polls / Photo: Scott Eisen - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP

Why I voted -- Americans share what drew them to polls

For some, it was a sense of civic duty. For others, it was a chance to voice anger at inflation or high crime. Still more savored the opportunity to send a message to Washington.

Text size:

Voters on Tuesday thronged to polling stations across the United States to express themselves on a wide array of divergent concerns.

Their choices will decide the control of the US Congress, as well as many governorships, state legislatures and local offices.

Here's what some voters said drew them to the polls.

- 'Exercise democracy' -

"I've tried to come first, make sure that I do my part, and then I can get to work," said Robin Ghirdar, coffee in hand at a voting site in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

"There's so much polarization and misinformation that I'd like to make sure that my voice is heard."

In Union City, a majority Black suburb of Atlanta, Georgia, 26-year-old attorney Kuanna Harris said history pulled her to the voting booth.

"A bunch of my ancestors, whether they were Black or women, were not able to vote, so I think God put me here at this particular time to carry on that torch for them."

And on the opposite side of the country, in Los Angeles, Luciano Gamiz says he was thinking of authoritarian nations that "eliminate the voice of the little people."

"As a first generation American, it's an opportunity to just exercise my freedom and my right to vote, so I love it."

- 2020 election denial -

At a polling site in Brooklyn, New York, retired police officer Kevin Flynn voted because of "the situation that happened on January 6th" 2021, when Donald Trump supporters stormed the US Capitol.

"Once an officer, always an officer... officers got injured" in the assault, said the 60-year-old. "It needs to be rectified."

Voter Donald Newton, 82, told AFP in Arizona's capital Phoenix that he believes Trump's unfounded claims of massive election fraud are the "truth."

He pointed to a discredited film's conspiracy theory about people smuggling illegal votes.

"It explains it all. And if you go and watch that, you'll be convinced this is the truth of what happened there: it was stolen, the election," he said.

In contrast, 30-year-old lawyer Alexandra Ashley, in Pittsburgh, said that "some people are trying to undermine democracy. And it's something that we can't lose."

And Susan Kwushue, a 50-year-old healthcare provider in Georgia, said having voted, she knew she "contributed in my own little way by voting to make sure that things get better."

- Abortion rights -

Reproductive rights are a banner issue for many voters, after the US Supreme Court overturned the right to abortion.

In Brooklyn, sustainability consultant Helen Rubenstein said that her motivation for voting was "first and foremost, my female reproductive rights, which are a healthcare issue."

Phoenix voter Mona Sablan, 56, said that for abortion, "it's the decision for the woman."

"I don't think the state -- I don't think the local, (or) federal (government) should have anything to say about this."

On the opposite side of the issue, 72-year-old Paul McMahon says he's opposed to abortion beginning at conception.

"Life is the most important thing to me," the retiree says outside a suburban Pittsburgh voting site.

- Toxic politics -

With growing political fissures in the United States, some voters said they are fed up with the hostility.

In Brooklyn, 39-year-old software engineer Quonn Bernard says "some candidates that have been up for office recently are into mud-slinging and negative campaigning."

"I just don't want those people representing me at the highest levels."

Pennsylvania voter Kay Georgopolous says she's opposed to Republican Senate candidate Mehmet Oz, whom she thinks is "just a salesman."

"Politicians, a lot of them are playing games to keep us fighting amongst ourselves, the little people," she said.

Joshua Beron in Ohio told AFP that "I really try to not think of myself as being part of one party but try to vote for the best candidate."

Analysts have also warned of the threat of violence around the elections.

Donna Audritsh, a voter in the Washington suburb of Fairfax, Virginia, says she hopes that the country can "have a civil discourse about whatever the result is and that we can move forward instead of getting mired in fighting and arguing."

One 64-year-old voter in McAllen, a city in Texas along the US border with Mexico, said he hopes that there will not be a repeat of 2020.

"My expectation is that everybody acts civilized, that... all the parties accept their winnings or defeats and that we all act as a country," said Enrique Ayala.

(T.Renner--BBZ)