As the Russian army slowly advances in eastern Ukraine, it’s driving a tide of human suffering before it.
With two months to go before a change of administration in Washington, Ukraine is wrestling with two problems: how to stem the advance, and how to prepare for Donald Trump.
At a shelter in Pavlohrad, about 60 miles (100km) west of the slowly shifting front line, evacuees are constantly arriving from villages and towns overtaken by the war.
Anastasiia Bolvihina, 31, is there with her two sons, Arseniy and Rostyslav. The family cat lies sleeping among the few belongings the family have managed to bring with them from the village of Uspenivka, just outside the besieged city of Pokrovsk.
The family hung on in their house as long as they could, but with explosions all around, shops closed and roads cut off one by one, they finally bowed to the inevitable. They packed up a few bags, locked the door and left.
“We hoped the war would pass us and end soon,” Anastasiia tells me.
Now, after two months without electricity or the internet, she has her laptop open on the bed and is catching up with the news.
“We hope things will be better and the war will end,” she replies when I ask about political changes far away in the US.
“I hope the new president will be better than the current one.”