The situation, as many analysts would term it – is a wait and see. Opinion polls are floating from different angles with one candidate leading in one hour and his challenger in the next hour.
For President Barrack Obama, this is his golden moment to prove the man he was when first elected in 2008 trouncing Republican John McCain.
For his challenger Mitt Romney, it is a chance to display his political might and prove that he is much better in the country’s top leadership.
The unanswered question is, who will enjoy the long term benefits by ascending to the ladders of power?
On the final day of the White House campaign, opinion polls showed Romney trailing Obama in the Electoral College vote.
President Obama and his Republican challenger Romney made the last push for votes in states each believes critical to achieving the 270 Electoral College votes needed for victory.
On the elections eve, Obama campaigned in three swing states, while Romney had events in four key states.
The two candidates overlapped in Ohio at some point in their campaigns
Obama started the day in Madison, Wisconsin, the Badger State's capital, and aside from Milwaukee, one of the most Democratic-leaning areas in the state.
Then it was on to Columbus in all important Ohio for an afternoon rally.
Concluding his campaigns, Obama told the American electorate to choose between progress and backwards.
"Now, Ohio, tomorrow you've got a choice to make, although some of you already made the choice. How many have early voted around here? This is not just a choice between two candidates or two parties. It's a choice between two different visions of America. It's a choice between a return to the top-down economic policies that crashed our economy or a vision that says we've got to build a strong foundation based on a strong and middle class and opportunity for everybody, not just some," Obama told crowds in Ohio.
On the other hand, Romney challenged Americans to either chose between maintaining the status quo or challenge it.
"And so our choice tomorrow will lead us to one of two very different outcomes. And I realize the American people are going to have that choice. I hope they recognize that there are two different places these choices will end up, because if the president were to be re-elected, he will still be unable to work with Congress. He — he ignored Congress. He attacked the people there. He blamed them. And, you know, there's going to be another debt ceiling that's going to come up again and again, and there will be a threat of a shutdown or default. And when that happens, the economy shrinks; people lose jobs,"
Romney said while campaigning at the Patriot Center at George Mason University in Fairfax Country.
The average opinion polls show Obama heading into election day with a single-point lead among likely voters, standing at 49% to Romney’s 48%.
Although the opinion polls are flowing in large numbers and changing from time to time, Obama stands a better chance to escape elimination from the presidency after concluding his first time in White House.
Source: Koome Kimonye
For President Barrack Obama, this is his golden moment to prove the man he was when first elected in 2008 trouncing Republican John McCain.
For his challenger Mitt Romney, it is a chance to display his political might and prove that he is much better in the country’s top leadership.
The unanswered question is, who will enjoy the long term benefits by ascending to the ladders of power?
On the final day of the White House campaign, opinion polls showed Romney trailing Obama in the Electoral College vote.
President Obama and his Republican challenger Romney made the last push for votes in states each believes critical to achieving the 270 Electoral College votes needed for victory.
On the elections eve, Obama campaigned in three swing states, while Romney had events in four key states.
The two candidates overlapped in Ohio at some point in their campaigns
Obama started the day in Madison, Wisconsin, the Badger State's capital, and aside from Milwaukee, one of the most Democratic-leaning areas in the state.
Then it was on to Columbus in all important Ohio for an afternoon rally.
Concluding his campaigns, Obama told the American electorate to choose between progress and backwards.
"Now, Ohio, tomorrow you've got a choice to make, although some of you already made the choice. How many have early voted around here? This is not just a choice between two candidates or two parties. It's a choice between two different visions of America. It's a choice between a return to the top-down economic policies that crashed our economy or a vision that says we've got to build a strong foundation based on a strong and middle class and opportunity for everybody, not just some," Obama told crowds in Ohio.
On the other hand, Romney challenged Americans to either chose between maintaining the status quo or challenge it.
"And so our choice tomorrow will lead us to one of two very different outcomes. And I realize the American people are going to have that choice. I hope they recognize that there are two different places these choices will end up, because if the president were to be re-elected, he will still be unable to work with Congress. He — he ignored Congress. He attacked the people there. He blamed them. And, you know, there's going to be another debt ceiling that's going to come up again and again, and there will be a threat of a shutdown or default. And when that happens, the economy shrinks; people lose jobs,"
Romney said while campaigning at the Patriot Center at George Mason University in Fairfax Country.
The average opinion polls show Obama heading into election day with a single-point lead among likely voters, standing at 49% to Romney’s 48%.
Although the opinion polls are flowing in large numbers and changing from time to time, Obama stands a better chance to escape elimination from the presidency after concluding his first time in White House.
Source: Koome Kimonye