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The question remains as it does every four years: can we have an idea of the outcome of the US presidential election on November 3? Before answering it, you have to think back to what happened in 2016 and try to learn some lessons.
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On November 8, 2016, Donald Trump was going to vote in Manhattan under the whistles. Four years later, the unpopularity of the New York businessman in his hometown turned into open war, with verbal battles, budget cuts and multiple legal attacks.
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In the home stretch before the November 3 election, Barack Obama is back on stage to support his former right arm and win his camp. And the former President of the United States is happy to ridicule his successor.
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Donald Trump attacked postal voting again on Tuesday. Twitter has flagged its post as 'misleading' and will reduce its reach.
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Joe Biden last night seemed to forget who the president was, noting that he was fighting against 'four more years of George.'
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The preservation of jobs, the relocation of industries, the renegotiation of international treaties, all against the backdrop of a great protectionist turn with a strong populist tone, allowed the Trump candidate to win in 2016, especially in key highly industrialized states such as those of the United States. Michigan or Ohio. Four years later, will Trump II be able to serve the same recipe again without firing a shot? The point in three questions.
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Former President Barack Obama on Wednesday, October 21 called on Democrats not to be complacent and to mobilize en masse to allow Joe Biden to win against Donald Trump.
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Less than ten days before the US presidential election, 'Exclusive Investigation' offers a dive into 'The World According to Trump', a documentary aired Sunday, October 25 at 11:10 p.m. on M6. An oppressive revisit of the first (and last?) Term of the 45th American president.
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The 'New York Times', which has already lifted the veil on President Trump's tax returns, has just revealed that he has a bank account in China that he had never mentioned.
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According to US intelligence services, Russia and Iran attempted to influence next month's presidential election in the United States using information obtained from the electoral roll. For the experts questioned by the American press, Tehran and Moscow thus seek to undermine the confidence of citizens in democratic institutions.