Trolling Trump huh Obama before elections

While there are still a few hours to hold Tuesday's congress and Senate elections, held in half of the US mandate, the race is turning into a war between the two presidents. The current White House leader is struggling to maintain control of Congress. He's also at war [...]
Donald Trump, 45th president of the United States and Barack Obama, the 44th president, decided to take the stage Sunday. Their first gatherings of this day were 750 miles apart, but as far as content and vision, they distinguished them by thousands of years of light from one another. Trump addressed supporters in Georgia.
He attacked the Democrat candidate, Stacey Abrams, who is aiming to become the first colored governor in any US state. If you bring Stacey to power, you will turn your country into Venezuela. She wants to turn your wonderful country into shelters for criminals, leaving innocent families to the mercy of criminals and robbers”, he said.
On the other hand, Obama visited the state of Indiana. He said the basic threat stems from his successor. Although he did not mention Trump by name, he said that today's domestic politics are dystopic and are being led by a man who is not deterred by lies and by human fears. “What kind of policy do we want? What we've seen so far are politicians who lie openly and shamelessly. They just make things”, he said.
Obama taunted the focus of Trump's campaign on the central American asylum seekers convoy, which have headed towards the US border. Two weeks before the elections, they are telling us that the single biggest threat for us is a handful of poor and hungry refugees who are a thousand miles away from us”, Obama said. “Anyway, caution should be taken because these methods of intimidation of people and fiction sometimes work”, he added.
When polling stations open Tuesday at 6am, both parties will have much to win and lose. Available for candidates will be 435 seats in the House of Representatives.
The Democrats aim to take 23 more seats to regain control and thus curb Trump's ambitions. On the other hand, the Democratic Party will face a much more challenging race in the Senate, where they currently have 26 seats, while the Republican Party has only nine and this advantage may narrow down, writes the Guardian”.












