At long last, it鈥檚 here: the week Americans finish casting their votes and then wait 鈥 with the world聽鈥 to learn who will inhabit the Oval Office in January.聽
Emotions are swirling. Plywood is going up on storefronts. The New York Times remarked on 鈥.鈥 Axios news 聽that we all 鈥渄o our part to minimize the drama.鈥 Historian Simon Schama explained what the riotous year 1965 could teach us, and why he聽
For Monitor journalists, it鈥檚 been a long stretch of shoe-leather reporting and navigating a breathtaking array of perspectives. And also of recording those lighter moments that happily punctuate the seriousness.
Peter Grier, who鈥檚 covered politics for decades, says he realized things were truly different this year when, in Maine, he saw a boat parade 鈥 on land. A large pickup was towing a commercial lobster boat flying a very large Trump flag.
Linda Feldmann, another campaign veteran, enjoyed learning a little about Colombian folk music during a Miami car caravan for Joe Biden. Noah Robertson, new to the political game, recalls taking notes on his phone at a press conference when a text popped onto his screen. 鈥淚 think I鈥檓 watching the back of your head on TV,鈥 his proud mother shared.聽
For Story Hinckley, grocery store parking lots 鈥 urban and rural, fancy and modest 鈥 tell an important story. The many voters she's buttonholed in them may differ on policies, she notes.聽But in the end there鈥檚 one thing they have in common: 鈥淭hey want good jobs, to feel safe, a promising future for their children.鈥