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Early Voting Tally Across U.S. Reaches 70% of 2016 Total Turnout

 By noon Monday, more than 96 million Americans had already voted, either by mail or early and in person, according to the nonpartisan United States Election Project. That's more than twice the final early vote in 2016, and 70% of the entire vote in 2016. And when it comes to battleground states, the early turnout is even higher. In North Carolina, voters comprising more than 95% of the entire 2016 vote there had already cast ballots by midday Monday. In Florida and Georgia, the number was more than 94%. In Arizona, it was nearly 87%, and in Nevada, the number was more than 91%. Texas – a state that became a sleeper battleground this year, going from lean or likely Republican to toss-up status by several forecasting operations, voters are coming out in record drives: By Monday morning, 108% of those who cast ballots early or on Election Day in 2016 had already voted. In Montana, a state that is not a presidential battleground but where a hard-fought U.S. Senate race is being waged ...

When do we find out who is President? When will the new president be announced?

 This election is arguably the most important for America in recent history. In a country ravaged by coronavirus and civil unrest throughout 2020, this election will offer clarity on what American’s want for their deeply divided country. Donald Trump has been in power since 2016, when he took a shock victory over Hillary Clinton who was projected to win hands down. This time, the incumbent is up against Democrat Joe Biden and his running mate Kamala Harris. Mr Biden has pledged to be the unifying force who can “restore our soul and save our country” while Mr Trump focused on the economy, warning voters they have a choice between a "Trump super recovery” and “a Biden depression.” The former Vice President is currently leading on the incumbent in all national polls, and with only one day to go looks set to take the Electoral College and the presidency from Mr Trump. The results of the 2016 presidential election were announced a day after Election Day on November 9. The first states ...

Catholic lawmakers ‘have no basis’ to deny same-sex civil unions after Pope’s historic intervention, says Philippine president

 The 83-year-old Pope Francis made a major break from Catholic teachings in an interview for the documentary Francesco, which premiered on Wednesday (October 21). “Homosexuals have a right to be a part of the family,” the pontiff said. “They’re children of God and have a right to a family. Nobody should be thrown out, or be made miserable because of it.” He added: “What we have to create is a civil union law. That way they are legally covered. I stood up for that.” The announcement could soon see same-sex civil unions legalized in the Philippines, the home of the third largest Catholic population in the world after Brazil and Mexico. In a televised press briefing from Malacañang Palace, the seat of the Philippines’ government, a spokesperson confirmed that the “recognition of same-sex union has always been supported” by president Rodrigo Duterte. “That just depends on the priority of Congress,” spokesperson Harry Roque told reporters on Thursday. “But with no less than the Pope sup...

Chileans Vote to Draft a New Constitution: An End to the Chapter of Dictatorship

 SANTIAGO, Chile — The protests started over a small hike in metro fares, then exploded into a broad reckoning over inequality that shook Chile for weeks. Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators poured into the streets, calling for sweeping change in their society, with higher wages and pensions, better health care and education. The movement soon seized on a vehicle for their demands: Chile’s Constitution. The existing charter, drafted without popular input during the military dictatorship of Gen. Augusto Pinochet and approved in a fraudulent plebiscite in 1980, was widely blamed for blocking change — and seen as a lingering link to a grim chapter in Chile’s history. On Sunday, just over a year after the massive demonstrations swept the nation, Chileans voted to scrap the dictatorship-era document and write a new one — a process that could transform the politics of a country that has long been regarded as one of the most stable and prosperous in Latin America. With 100 percent of t...