As pandemic turns politics inside out, questions swirl around Democratic race
WASHINGTON — Movie theatres are shuttered, schools and universities unnervingly quiet, businesses and borders are turning people away and North America is bracing for the worst as the urgency surrounding the COVID-19 outbreak escalates, almost by the hour.
And yet voters in three states were still casting ballots in person Tuesday as the two-man battle to lead the Democrats back to the White House continued to rage, counter to the strenuous efforts of public health officials to keep people from gathering in large groups.
In Ohio, which was also supposed to be voting this week, polls were shut down late Monday after officials declared a health emergency. Voting went ahead in Illinois, as well as in Florida and Arizona — two states known as sanctuaries for seniors, who face the greatest risk from the virus.
“On one hand, we’re saying … people 65 and older should avoid contact with other people, as much as humanly possible. They should stay home as much as humanly possible,” Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, who unsuccessfully tried Monday to get the courts to postpone his state’s primary, said in an interview on Fox News.