Voters turn up in large numbers in New York, Washington regions

A 99-year-old voter is first to vote in Richmond despite Tim Kaine's arrival before time

Voters turned up in large numbers in Washington metro area and New York City Tuesday after a long divisive campaign and record early voting turnout that may prove critical to the outcome of White House race between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.

In Virginia – a swing state tilting toward Hillary Clinton with a margin 6 perrcentage advantage over Trump – voters queued up to vote in the morning.

In New York the secruity has been tightned as both presidential candidates — Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump — will be just blocks away from each other Tuesday election night.

“We’re in total coordination and consultation with the federal authorities,” New York Governor Andrew Cuomo told reporters, “and we are on a state of high alert for Election Day” — so we have more State Police, more National Guard, more soldiers on duty than ever before.”

Democratic Vice presidential candidate Tim Kaine voted in Richmond, arriving 15 minutes before ballot time but he could not be the first to vote as a 99-year old Minerva Turpin had the honor to be first to cast the vote.

In New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio and city authorities said some city streets have been closed to secure midtown Manhattan.

De Blasio and city officials said 5,000 police officers have been assigned to election duty, likening it to a show of force seen on New York’s Eve in Times Square.

Cuomo office said the increased security included New York’s cyber analysis unit and its information technology agencies coordinating with the state Board of Election and federal departments.

Nearly 90 million Americans are expected to vote today, in addition to more than 46 million who voted early or by absentee ballot.

Voters are being watched by thousands of federal monitors, voting rights advocates, conservative watchdogs and even international observers looking for anything from dirty tricks to acts of violence.

Liberal and conservative interest groups are being extra vigilant because the presidential race tightened in recent days, and because Trump urged supporters to watch polling stations in “certain areas” for signs of fraud.

Categories
2016 ElectionNew YorkVirginiaWashington D.C.

Iftikhar Ali is a veteran Pakistani journalist, former president of UN Correspondents Association, and a recipient of the Pride of Performance civil award
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