While his predecessor, Donald Trump, exhorted voters to fight a "growing left-wing dictatorship" on the penultimate Sunday before midterm elections that might shift Washington's balance of power, President Joe Biden castigated Republicans across the board as election deniers who delighted in political violence.

At a rally in the evening at Sarah Lawrence College in Yonkers, New York, Biden backed Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul to cap a four-day, five-state campaign trip. Rep. Lee Zeldin, who wants to become the state's first Republican governor since George Pataki stepped down in 2006, is in a close contest with her.

The president said hundreds of Republican candidates for state, federal, and local office are “election deniers, who say that I did not win the election, even though hundreds of attempts to challenge that have all failed, even in Republican courts.”

Biden said that for the deniers, “There are only two outcomes for any election: either they win or they were cheated.”

More than 39 million people have voted early in Tuesday’s races, which will decide control of Congress and key governorships — the first national election since a mob overran the Capitol. Earlier Sunday, as Trump addressed supporters in Miami, a reference to the House speaker prompted chants of “Lock her up!” — a stark reminder of just how far apart each side is.

Trump is hoping that a strong GOP showing on Election Day will generate momentum for the 2024 run that he is expected to launch this month.

“I will probably have to do it again, but stay tuned,” Trump said, teasing an event he has with Republican Senate candidate in Ohio, JD Vance, for Monday. “We have a big, big rally. Stay tuned for tomorrow night.”

Trump also told the crowd that “every free and loving American needs to understand that the time to stand up to this growing left-wing tyranny is right now,” while calling on his supporters to reject the “radical left-wing maniacs” and adding that Hispanics would show up strong for GOP candidates.