5 Election 2012

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    5 Election 2012

    From VOA Learning English, welcome to THIS IS AMERICA in Special English. I'm Faith

    Lapidus.

    And I'm Christopher Cruise. This week our program is all about elections Tuesday in the

    United States.The Republican Party is expected to keep its majority in the House of Representatives in

    the next Congress. Republicans would need to gain four seats to take the Senate from the

    Democrats.

    The presidential race is very close right now. Barack Obama says he needs a second and

    final term to rebuild an economy that was broken when he came to office. Former

    Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney says his business experience has given him the skills

    to get the job done.

    Whoever wins will govern the world's largest economy for the next four years. The value of

    all goods and services produced in the United States -- the gross domestic product -- is

    about one-fourth of the world total. Desmond Lachman is an economist at the American

    Enterprise Institute.

    "We saw that clearly in the two thousand eight-two thousand nine great economic

    recession, events that occurred in the United States banking system reverberated right

    through the globe."

    Republican Mitt Romney says his economic plan includes taking a stronger position toward

    China.

    "On day one, I will label China a currency manipulator, which will allow me as president to

    be able to put in place, if necessary, tariffs where I believe that they are taking unfair

    advantage of our manufacturers."

    President Obama says the key to a strong economy is to bring manufacturing jobs back to

    the United States. He says Mr. Romney is the wrong person to do it.

    "Keep in mind that Governor Romney invested in companies that were pioneers of

    outsourcing to China. Governor, you're the last person who is going to get tough on China."

    But China is not the only issue. The debt crisis in Europe has reduced demand for

    American goods. Desmond Lachman says deepening problems in the countries that use the

    euro could further slow growth worldwide.

    "My expectation is that Europe, being the largest trading partner of the United States, isgoing to pose real challenges to the United States in the years ahead."

    Ninety-five percent of black voters supported Barack Obama in the two thousand eight

    election. Public opinion surveys suggest that the nation's first black president can again

    expect strong support among African-Americans, like Angela Jenkins.

    "As a person that was unemployed I was able to get health insurance for myself and my

    son because of his initiative."

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    But support for the president has weakened among some black voters because of the

    economic downturn. Andrew Marshall was out of work for two years.

    "I just recently got back to work about eight months ago, so the progress is very slow at this

    point and with people its more of a frustration factor where people like figure it should have

    been done maybe two years ago."

    "If you want a president who will make things better in the African-American community you

    are looking at him."

    Some voters say President Obama has not done enough to deal with concerns in the black

    community. Olga Wright lives in North Carolina. It is one of the few politically unpredictable

    "swing" states that could decide the election.

    "We have had an emphasis on the Latino population, we have had an emphasis on the gay

    population, but when it comes to African-Americans I dont see an initiative that was put in

    place to propel our issues."

    Next we turn to the issues of another group: small business owners. Larry Guinn owns a

    factory in North Carolina. He says he worries about the future.

    "I am not going to hire many people. I just see more and more unemployment in the

    country, and that is not good for America."

    Jeremy McKinney is an immigration lawyer in North Carolina. He thinks the country is

    headed in the right direction.

    "From our vantage point we see no reason to change the captain of the ship now."

    Mr. Guinn is a Republican who supports Mitt Romney.

    "If we do not get someone in there who knows and understands how businesses operate

    and what is required of them to be profitable and stay in business, I am not sure how much

    longer small businesses are going to be able to hang on."

    Mr. McKinney is a Democrat. He says his law office suffered its worst financial year in two

    thousand eight. But he says times are better now, and he credits President Obama's

    policies."Each year we have been able to climb back. And this year has been our best year ever in

    the history of this law firm. We can see that the president and this administration and its

    policies; were seeing this economic recovery in action."

    Mr. Guinn says Governor Romney's plan to cut business taxes will permit small business

    owners to hire more workers. But he worries that President Obama's health-care reform law

    will cost his company more. He currently does not provide health insurance for his workers.

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    "If I am at the point where I have to furnish insurance for all the employees that I would put

    on my solid payroll, I would almost have to use more casual [part-time] workers because I

    just couldnt afford the insurance program and still stay in business and make a profit."

    Mr. Romney wants to end the health care law. But Jeremy McKinney says the law will help

    his business by providing tax credits to reduce the costs of health coverage for hisemployees.

    "With less than fifty employees we pay a lot more for our health insurance than large

    employers. That will hopefully change in twenty-fourteen as we get to combine with other

    small businesses to negotiate health-care contracts with insurance companies."

    Both small business owners agree on at least one thing. They are both hoping for better

    economic times ahead.

    Barack Obama and Mitt Romney both say the countrys immigration system must be

    reformed. But they disagree about how to do it. Immigration was one of the issues

    discussed last month during the second presidential debate.

    Mr. Romney supports the idea of self-deportation -- illegal immigrants leaving the country

    voluntarily. But Katherine Vargas at the National Immigration Forum, a private group, says

    he needs to explain his immigration proposals in more detail.

    "He says he's pro-immigration solutions but we dont know what type of solutions. Self-

    deportation is not a solution, is simply make life as hard as possible for immigrants so they

    return to their countries. We know that he supports permanent residency for foreign

    students that graduate with science and technology degrees, but we dont know what hes

    going to do with the eleven million undocumented immigrants that are currently in the

    country."

    President Obama has been criticized for not keeping his campaign promise to present a

    broad immigration reform bill during his first year in office. Doris Meissner, a senior fellow at

    the Migration Policy Institute, and Ms. Vargas explain what that means.

    "What President Obama is saying is that he is four square in favor of comprehensive

    immigration reform, in other words, a generous package that combines enforcement

    measures with the possibility of legal status for the unauthorized population that's in the

    United States."

    "But even so we havent seen details on how he's going to accomplish that because he

    also promised it during his first presidential campaign, the most important thing we need toknow is how he will win the Republican support, because he needs those Republican votes

    to have a comprehensive immigration reform bill approved."

    Americans will not just be choosing a leader for the next four years. They will also be

    deciding, in effect, what role they want the federal government to play in their lives. Steve

    Smith, a political scientist at Washington University in St. Louis, explains.

    "The two camps do represent very different views of the role of the federal government.

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    The Democrats and the President Obama camp certainly believe that the federal

    government should have a strong, positive role in addressing the major challenges that face

    American society. The Romney-Republican camp believes that the federal government

    should stay out of many aspects of American life and that the overall role of the federal

    government should shrink. Along with that, taxes should shrink, in their view."

    George Nation is a professor of finance and law at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania. He

    says the differences of the two candidates are deeply philosophical.

    GEORGE NATION: "On the one hand you have President Obama who believes strongly in

    the power of government to improve peoples' lives directly. And I think in Governor Romney

    you have someone who believes in the power of government to allow people to improve

    their lives."

    Election Day is not until Tuesday, but many Americans have voted already. The National

    Conference of State Legislatures says two-thirds of states now let people vote early-- in

    some cases, as early as forty-five days before an election. President Obama broke with

    tradition and voted early, casting his ballot in Chicago on October twenty-fifth.

    But no matter when Americans vote for president, the popular vote does not decide the

    winner. On December seventeenth members of a group called the Electoral College will

    meet in each state to select the president and vice president. Under the Constitution, each

    state has a number of electors equal to its number of senators and representatives. Each

    state has two senators; the number of representatives is based on a population count every

    ten years.

    In forty-eight of the fifty states, the winner of the popular vote receives all of the state's

    electoral votes. In Nebraska and Maine the electors are divided among the candidates

    based on the popular vote in each congressional district.

    The District of Columbia has three electors, for a current total of five hundred thirty-eight in

    the Electoral College.

    The next president will need a simple majority of two hundred seventy electoral votes. If

    there is no majority, the Constitution calls for the House of Representatives to elect the

    president. This has not happened in more than two hundred years.