Reporter's Notebook: What My Uber Drivers Say About the Presidential Candidates

Most are leaning toward Hillary -- but not all are excited about it.

My Uber drivers.

The men and women who work for the ride-share service aren't necessarily the type who attend political rallies, but they all seem to have a lot to say.

The father who drove me in Raleigh, North Carolina, who wished Americans could just start all over again and pick new presidential nominees.

Each of these drivers gave me insight into what ordinary Americans are thinking about this tumultuous election.

I wanted to hear more, and so recently broke away from the daily grind of the campaign trail to travel on my own to battleground states to interview Uber drivers.

I took 25 Uber rides in Ohio, Florida, North Carolina and Pennsylvania over the past week. What I found through my admittedly unscientific reporting is a diverse group of people largely leaning toward voting for Clinton over Trump. But most of them aren't excited about it.

Here's some of what they had to say.

PHIL HARRISON, 64, COLUMBUS, OHIO
African-American, retired garbage truck driver.
“I’m a male chauvinist to a certain degree … I listened to the debates and I was swayed towards Hillary. She ain’t no saint. She done dirt in her life, too. She’s just the best of the two evils.”
VOTING FOR: Clinton

KISHA, 31, CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA
African-American woman.
“I watched the last debate and it was crazy. I was like ‘Oh my God, can you stop being kids?’… I feel like the only reason why I feel a little more comfortable about voting for [Hillary Clinton] is because her husband, and I thought he did good in office. But with her, I feel like she’s a little sneaky and I think it definitely has to stem from her emails and all the things that’s come out with the emails situation.”
VOTING FOR: Clinton

BILLY, 55, CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA
African-American truck driver who has 14 kids.
“If [Trump] gets some experience behind him and knows exactly what he’s talking about and can control his temper, he’d make a great president. But not right now.”
VOTING FOR: Clinton

LUKE ICARD, 27, HARRISBURG, NORTH CAROLINA
White musician and engineer who supported Bernie Sanders in the Democratic primary.
“I’m definitely ready for the election to be over, to be honest, because it’s all I ever see on TV -- the slander and the commercials. I’ll tell you, I did watch the final debate, but honestly both of them are just full of so much B.S. I don’t even know if I’m going to vote for either one of them … I think a lot of people are going to fall for Hillary’s talk, but I don’t think she’s actually going to do anything.”
VOTING FOR: Nobody/Undecided

CATHY ELLER, 40, PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA
White, former union activist.
“I would just really like to see a woman elected ... I’m 40 years old so, you know, when I was a kid I couldn’t even play on boys’ teams. I wanted to play like football or hockey or something and I wasn’t even allowed. So, to see a woman become president, it just means a lot.”
VOTING FOR: Clinton

DAVID FREEMAN, 48, COLUMBUS, OHIO
White, information technology consultant.
“I just don’t think we have a good choice between the two candidates right now. But I think of the two, Trump scares me the most. If I wasn’t in a swing state I’d vote for Jill Stein.”
VOTING FOR: Clinton

TERRY, 59, ROCK HILL, NORTH CAROLINA
African-American, full-time Uber driver.
“It’s the stupidest thing I’ve ever seen out of grown people."
VOTING FOR: Nobody