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    Swing state voters weigh in on key issues for them in US election

    By Camille CAMDESSUSJEFF KOWALSKYFrederic J. BROWNElijah NouvelageVALERIE MACONMichael MathesJim WATSON,

    10 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=040Fg0_0vtlLfyy00
    John Ladd, 69, of Palominas, Arizona, wants Trump to become president again so he can 'finish' his border wall /AFP

    The US presidential election set for November 5 is likely to be determined by voters in a handful of swing states across the country, from Pennsylvania to Georgia, Arizona to Michigan.

    Will voters pick Democrat Kamala Harris or Republican Donald Trump? And why do they support each one?

    Here are what voters in these "swing states" have to say about their picks just one month before Election Day.

    - Trump, to 'finish' his wall -

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2Ywwg8_0vtlLfyy00
    John Ladd says he will vote for Donald Trump as he hopes the Republican will finish building his wall on the southern US border with Mexico /AFP/File

    John Ladd, a 69-year-old cattle rancher in the southwestern US state of Arizona, has already made his choice for the November election.

    "I'm voting for Donald Trump," he resolutely told AFP.

    Ladd said he was concerned about the economic situation in the United States, as well as the influx of migrants, which he claims to see on a daily basis on his ranch, located very close to the Mexican border.

    "Since Biden’s been president, it's been every day, around the clock," he said, noting nearly 30 arrests happen daily near his property.

    He hopes Trump will return to the White House to "finish" the border wall.

    - Trump, to rein in crime -

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4EN3Qn_0vtlLfyy00
    Milwaukee resident Martin Kutzler, 60, says he supports Donald Trump for his vow to lower crime /AFP/File

    Martin Kutzler, 60, lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, along the shores of Lake Michigan.

    A self-described "traditional Republican voter," Kutzler said he will also vote for Trump, who has a "boldness" he finds admirable.

    He said his primary motive for supporting Trump is the former president's promise to fight crime.

    "Living in a major city, I can see crime has risen," he told AFP, saying the number of carjackings and break-ins is obvious when "walking downtown and seeing broken glass in the street."

    - Harris, to see the 'first female president' -

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2uELf8_0vtlLfyy00
    Atlanta is the largest city in southern US state of Georgia, one of the main 'swing states' in the 2024 presidential election /AFP/File

    Tricia Harris, an African American woman who lives in Atlanta, the largest city in the southern US state of Georgia, said she will be voting for Harris on November 5 -- and not only because they share a last name.

    "A first female president would be extraordinary," said the 47-year-old, who added that she is "incredibly enthusiastic" about Harris's candidacy.

    She said she also fears the return of "racism and hostility" she noticed during the years Trump was in office.

    - Harris, for her 'perspicacity' -

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1GhIRi_0vtlLfyy00
    Before she was in national politics, Kamala Harris was a prosecutor with the district attorney's office of Alameda County in California and the state's attorney general /AFP/File

    "Trump is so extraordinarily awful," said Michael Cooperman, a 55-year-old man in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

    "He's divisive, chaotic and corrupt," he added, in reference to Trump's legal woes, including a criminal conviction in May.

    "I'm not saying the Democrats are perfect," said Cooperman, who teaches English to immigrants in Pennsylvania's largest city.

    But Harris's "perspicacity" and "intelligence," as well as her background as a prosecutor, convinced him to support the Democratic candidate in November.

    The only thing that gives him pause? "I'm not sure I'm in lockstep with her on foreign policy," said Cooperman.

    "I'm Jewish and quite pro-Israel" he explained, calling the vice president "an untested entity" on the issue.

    - Neither Trump nor Harris, due to Gaza -

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2eGx2h_0vtlLfyy00
    Soujoud Hamade, an Arab-American resident of Dearborn, Michigan, said she is not voting for Kamala Harris or Donald Trump this election /AFP

    On the flip side, Soujoud Hamade, 32, criticizes Harris for supporting Israel and the "genocide" she accuses the country of carrying out in the Gaza Strip.

    "This is the first time I'm not voting for a Democrat in the general election," the resident of Dearborn, Michigan told AFP.

    "She has made no statement to condemn the horrific acts that Israel has committed," said the Arab-American lawyer, who instead plans to vote for third-party candidate Jill Stein.

    Harris's attitude toward Israel dropping bombs in Lebanon has "sealed her fate" for her, Hamade said.

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