Spectrum News spent Sunday hitting cafes and farmers markets in Orange County, not to ask people who they're voting for, but what issue is making them vote for whichever candidate they are supporting.

"I'm by myself now. I was divorced last year," Orange County resident Tommy Meyers said when approached at the Warwick Farmers Market.

Meyers said that now that it's just him, his house and one income, his mind is on taxes.

He said he had a pleasant surprise earlier this year, and he wants to keep it that way.

“For my property taxes [rebate], I got a nice check this year, so it looks pretty good," he said. "Things are looking up."

A group of ladies on Warwick's Main Street said, without hesitation, that "services for senior citizens" are atop their minds.

"It depends on the town you're in," one of the women said of the varying quality levels of services offered to seniors. "It has to get better for all of them. That's what I wish for."

Most voters who spoke on Sunday, like farmers market vendor Mark Bailey, said their main motivation to vote on Tuesday is to restore kindness and decency to American culture — or in Bailey's cases, "just some semblance of sanity."

Bailey said he is voting to move past the division that has become wider over the past two years.

"Look at the 'nationalists' thing," he said, "and the fact that people are just spewing hate speech constantly and endlessly against people. You know, there's just so much to talk about."