The battle of US elections is gaining momentum between Donald Trump and Joe Biden. Minnesota, a solidly blue state for the past half-century, turned out to be an unquestioned presidential battleground on Friday as President Donald Trump and Democratic competent Joe Biden fought for working-class voters in promotional events that marked the beginning of early voting. The candidates directed clear of the state’s most populated areas near Minneapolis to focus on rural and blue-collar voters, some of whom turned to Republicans for the first time in 2016. For the promotional campaign, Trump headed to Bemidji, about 200 miles (320 kilometers) north of Minneapolis, while Biden campaigned in a suburb of Duluth, on the banks of Lake Superior and close to the Wisconsin border.
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Biden rallied against Trump’s failure to control the pandemic, detailing the president’s hesitation to cover more serious social distancing safeguards as “negligence and selfishness” that cost a lot of American lives. At a carpenter union’s training hall, he also reiterated his plans to boost American manufacturing. "It’s time to reward hard work in America and not wealth,” Biden declared with roughly a dozen workers looking on.
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Former Vice President Senator stated, “When the government spends taxpayers’ money, we should spend that money to buy American products made by American workers and American supply chains to generate American growth.” He promised to invest $400 billion in federal money over his first term to ensure more products are made in America. A series of polls over the past week show Biden has built a steady lead in Minnesota.