Feelings about President Trump 鈥 both positive and negative 鈥 are fueling unusually intense interest in today鈥檚 vote. As many see it, the nation鈥檚 values and very identity are on the line.
Church. Church. And now this: a gym attached to a former school. 鈥淲hich precinct?鈥 the poll worker asks. I can never remember my precinct, so I point to the one with the long line. She chuckles. Of all the places I鈥檝e voted, this is the biggest 鈥 so big that it houses two voting lines: Precinct 1 (the busy one) and Precinct 2 (where hardly any voters seem to show up).
There鈥檚 something soothing about a polling place, as if after all the frenetic campaign debates and attack ads the nation lets out a collective sigh of relief. Democrats, Republicans, and independents gather here, not to yell, but to cast their ballot. Election officials are helpful, even smiling. I still remember the dignity and kindness of election officials in the small Pennsylvania church where I voted years ago.
By now, the line stretches out the door. A man with a blue paper steps in front of me. He hasn鈥檛 voted for so long he鈥檚 had to fill out the blue form and have his identity checked. By the time I finish, 80 people have voted and the polls haven鈥檛 been open an hour. Is it a strong turnout? 鈥淪teady,鈥 the poll worker says. 鈥淧recinct 1 always turns out.鈥 I wonder how many elections have taken place within these gymnasium walls and what issues past voters grappled with: Vietnam? Watergate? 9/11? Somehow, the nation got through the vitriol of those years to reach a better place. If Precinct 1 is any indication, there鈥檚 reason to believe we will do so again.
Here are our five stories for today, including a look at how Monitor writers are seeing the election across the country.