Reporting on early voting is scattered and varies greatly in the battleground states. So Harris’s national lead should be taken with a grain of salt.
Donald Trump’s campaign event Sunday at a McDonald’s in Pennsylvania highlighted his battle with Kamala Harris to court a coveted group of working-class voters who have the potential to decide the outcome of the presidential election in a critical swing state.
Both the Harris and Trump campaigns are ramping up their activity here again after the storm. Trump has three North Carolina stops Monday, including a visit to see storm damage in Asheville. Former President Bill Clinton appeared last week with Harris’ running mate, Tim Walz, and followed with several visits in eastern North Carolina.
A new advertisement from the Harris campaign depicts a Black man being rejected on a fictional dating show after he tells potentially interested suitors that he isn't voting.
The new USA Today/Suffolk University poll found that while Harris and Trump remain neck-and-neck, Trump has been gaining momentum among Black and Latino voters. USA Today reported that Harris “lost ground” among both Black and Latino voters since the poll was last conducted in August.
Harris often cites accurate figures but omits that the pandemic caused manufacturing job losses in Trump's final year in office.
The vice president will be having moderated conversations with Republican Liz Cheney in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin.
Shuttered factories and trade deals helped turn working-class Midwesterners against Democrats. Will the high cost of housing do the same in the Sun Belt?
Vice President Kamala Harris and former Republican Congressperson Liz Cheney launched a three-state campaign tour in Chester County, Pennsylvania, on Monday.
As the Democratic establishment, including four presidents, rallies behind Harris, Republican old guard ignores Trump, or works against him.