US elections. In some of the key battleground states, Indian-origin voters are so large in numbers, that election trends can change within a fraction of a second if these voters decided on rooting for a certain party.
There are assumptions that Diwali celebrations in the US, which has seen major escalation this time, could be a last-minute attempt by the Democrats to give Kamala Harris an advantage in the polls. Biden celebrated Diwali on Monday at the White House in an event attended by more than 600 eminent Indian Americans, and this clearly depicted how serious POTUS was about Indian-Americans, which he repeated time and again in his speech.
The first Diwali celebrations in the White House were in 2016, but this time things were somehow upped a notch, and with the US elections knocking at the doors, things did not go much unnoticed, since Harris is an Indian-American, and also the Democrat candidate. Moreover, the Republican Hindu Coalition, which is a Hindu-American conservative interest group in the United States, has been garnering a lot of support from Indian Americans on behalf of Donald Trump, something that may be one of the crucial reasons why POTUS and the Democrats have suddenly turned up the 'Diwali heat'.
<div data-placement=«Mid Article Thumbnails» data-target_type=«mix» data-mode=«thumbnails-mid» style=«min-height:400px; margin-bottom:12px;» class=«wdt-taboola» id=«taboola-mid-article-thumbnails-114816814»>Is Diwali celebrated in US? Yes, Diwali is celebrated in a grand manner in the United States. This year, even the President of the US, Joe Biden, addressed a Diwali
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