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C in the air from November 5, 2024, guests and summary – This Tuesday and like every evening on France 5, Caroline Roux invites you for a new, unique number of “C dans l’air”. Who are the guests and the summary of the show today? We tell you everything.
See you from 5:40 p.m. on France 5 or on france.tv for the replay.
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C in the air from November 5, 2024: the summary
⬛ Trump/Harris: the moment of truth
This Tuesday, November 5 marks the last day of voting for the American presidential election. Across the United States, polling stations are open, and millions of citizens are joining the more than 80 million voters who have already voted early or by mail. Who will be the 47th President of the United States, Kamala Harris or Donald Trump? The polls, at the end of a particularly tense and indecisive campaign, cannot predict this.
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In these last hours, the two candidates have redoubled their efforts, increasing the number of meetings in key states. Kamala Harris traveled to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where she rallied thousands of supporters. “This election could be one of the closest in history. Every voice counts,” she said, galvanizing the crowd. Before her, Lady Gaga spoke to encourage voters to support Harris. “For more than half of the history of this country, women had no voice… but tomorrow, women will have a decisive role,” said the singer, in front of an audience largely made up of young people and women, two groups particularly targeted by the Democrats, in a campaign marked by issues on women's rights and immigration.
Voting intentions show an unprecedented divide between men and women: the majority of men would lean for Trump, while the majority of women would lean towards Kamala Harris. We met the Mormon community in Arizona, representing 7% of the electorate in this state, generally supported by the Republicans, but part of which this time supports Harris, tired of the excesses of Donald Trump.
Donald Trump, for his part, is seeking revenge after his 2020 defeat and has chosen to end his campaign in Grand Rapids, Michigan, as in 2016. For his supporters, the victory seems obvious and any other outcome would be suspect , fueling distrust of the results, echoing the challenges to the election of Joe Biden in 2020.
This tense atmosphere weighs on electoral staff: alert buttons have been installed in certain polling stations, and snipers will monitor sensitive sites, such as in an Arizona county. The count will be closely monitored, and if the results look as close as expected, it is possible that the winner will not be known in the next 24 hours.
Find a new, unique issue of “C dans l’air” this Tuesday, November 5, 2024 at 5:40 p.m. on France 5. Rebroadcast at 11:55 p.m.