Americans head to polls in crucial mid-term elections after Donald Trump makes final push for votes
Video report by ITV News Washington Correspondent Robert Moore
Americans are voting in crucial mid-term elections that could have dramatic consequences for Donald Trump's presidency.
The US president used his final pitch before the mid-terms to ask voters to help preserve “fragile” Republican victories that could be erased by Democratic gains in Congress.
On the eve of Tuesday's crucial vote, Mr Trump closed out a campaign season that has been defined by his racially charged rhetoric, hard-line immigration moves and scattershot policy proposals.
Acknowledging the stakes in the closing days of campaigning, Mr Trump stressed to voters that everything was on the line.
“It’s all fragile. Everything I told you about, it can be undone and changed by the Democrats if they get in,” he told supporters.
WHO NEEDS WHAT TO WIN
In the House of Representatives, where every seat is up for grabs, Republicans currently hold a 235-193 majority. Democrats need a net gain of 23 seats to take control.
In the Senate, 35 of the 100 seats are being contested. Republicans hold a narrow 51-49 seat advantage but 10 of the 35 seats being voted on involve Democratic incumbents in states Trump won in 2016.
Mr Trump has sought to distance himself from any potential blame if Republicans lose control of the House, saying: “My primary focus has been on the Senate.”
Whatever the outcome, Mr Trump made clear he knew his political future was on the line.
“In a sense, I am on the ticket,” he told a raucous crowd in Cleveland.
He warned supporters to get out and vote because “the press is very much considering it a referendum on me and us as a movement”.
Republicans are increasingly confident they will retain control of the Senate, but they face Democratic headwinds in the House.
In an election-eve interview, Mr Trump struck a gentler note with media conglomerate Sinclair Broadcasting, saying he regretted some of his caustic campaign rhetoric.
“I would like to have a much softer tone. I feel to a certain extent I have no choice, but maybe I do,” he said.
There was little of that on display as he spent his final hours on the trail on Monday in Ohio, Indiana and Missouri.
“The contrast in this election could not be more clear," Mr Trump said at his final rally in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. "Democrats produce mobs. That’s what’s happened. Republicans produce jobs.”
In a tweet on Monday, he warned that law enforcement was “strongly notified to watch closely for any ILLEGAL VOTING which may take place in Tuesday’s Election (or Early Voting).”
Mr Trump has falsely claimed that millions of illegal votes were cast in 2016, which he says deprived him of a victory in the popular vote, and has stoked concerns, without providing evidence, of rampant fraudulent voting.
Mr Trump has maintained a busy campaign schedule in the final stretch of the race, with 11 rallies over six days.
In the closing days he has brought out special guests to join him. Country singer Lee Greenwood performed Trump favourite God Bless the USA on Sunday in Chattanooga, Tennessee, and appeared with the president on Monday night in Missouri.
In Indiana and again in Missouri, Mr Trump invited White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders and adviser Kellyanne Conway on stage to speak along with his daughter Ivanka Trump.
Fox News personality Sean Hannity and conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh served as “special guests” at the final rally, according to Mr Trump’s campaign, although Mr Hannity insisted on Twitter he would only be “covering (the) final rally for my show”.
Mr Trump, however, did call Mr Hannity to the stage - and the Fox News host then described other media attending the event as "fake news".
At his rallies and on Twitter, Mr Trump’s closing argument has largely focused on fear — warning, without evidence, that a Democratic takeover would deliver the country into socialism, spurring an influx of illegal immigration and a wave of crime.
The president has also used the confirmation battle for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh to stir up his most loyal supporters, with his aides believing it to be one of the most effective arguments for bringing Republican voters to the polls.
“We energised the Republican Party with that,” he said in Missouri. “The Democrats overplayed their hand.”
Mr Trump plans to spend election day encouraging voters to get to the polls from the White House.