Latest poll finds Harris ‘narrowly’ wins enough swing states to become first female president: Election live updates
Both Donald Trump and Kamala Harris campaigned in western battleground states on Thursday and will both be in Milwaukee on Friday
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Your support makes all the difference.The final poll from The Times and YouGov finds that Kamala Harris is set to narrowly win enough swing states to take the White House.
“We find that Kamala Harris very narrowly wins enough of those states to become America’s first female president,” Times US Assistant Editor David Charter said on Friday.
This comes as a Harris campaign official has said they “fully expect” former President Donald Trump to declare victory before all votes have been counted.
“It won’t work,” the official said during a press call.
“He did this before. It failed,” they added. “If he does it again, it will fail.”
With four days of campaigning to go in the 2024 race, Harris and Trump are making their final pitches, spending Friday hosting competing rallies in Wisconsin where they will attempt to appeal to “blue wall” voters.
Having already addressed two gatherings of his supporters on Thursday, the former president ended his day in a sit-down interview with Tucker Carlson on stage in Glendale, Arizona, at which he shockingly fantasized about former Republican congresswoman Liz Cheney being shot at.
Cheney has since hit back at Trump, calling him “a petty, vindictive, cruel, unstable man who wants to be a tyrant.”
Watch: Trump claims US is in a depression — it is not
Meanwhile, here’s a recent cover of The Economist, which called the US economy “The Envy of The World”, and endorsed Kamala Harris yesterday:
And, as we posted earlier, here’s a letter from more than 300 economists opposing Trump.
Reese Witherspoon endorses Harris
Reese Witherspoon, star of The Morning Show and Big Little Lies, has endorsed Kamala Harris.
In a post on Instagram, she wrote: “I voted today. ✅ Top of my mind, as I considered all candidates, is protecting women’s rights to medical privacy and reproductive choice.
“This is a critical time in our shared history to vote for the candidate that represents the future we want to see. That’s why I voted for Kamala Harris for President. For my daughter and for the millions of hard-working American women who value our freedoms. I want to protect democracy at all costs.
“I love my country and no matter what happens in this election, I’m here to move our great nation forward in a unified way. 🇺🇸”
At Vance event in Michigan, Trump supporters don reflective vests in homage to former president
RFK Jr posts 800-word explanation of comedian’s Puerto Rico ‘joke’
Robert F Kennedy Jr posted more than 800 words on X by way of explaining the now infamous “joke” about Puerto Rico made by comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who he says is his friend.
The post seeks to do damage control as Puerto Ricans and other Latino Americans expressed their disgust and dismay at the comment.
You can read the full post here:
The Kamala Harris campaign’s director of repaid response kept their response short:
Harris hits Trump over manufacturing and auto industry jobs
Vice President Kamala Harris tweeted: “Donald Trump’s track record for the auto industry was a disaster. As president, he promised that the auto industry would not “lose one plant” during his term. Then six auto plants closed.
“Yet another empty promise—typical for a person that is all talk and no walk.”
Watch: Trump claims he has 97% chance of winning as polls tip Harris
300 economists come out in opposition to Trump
Three hundred economists shared their opposition to the Trump campaign in an open letter.
“If we elect someone who tries to end democracy at every turn, as Trump did after losing the 2020 election, it really could end, just as it has in other countries,” they write.
They argued that voters concerned about the economy should not choose the former president, warning among other things that his tariff policy would be damaging.
“Just as Mexico didn’t pay for a wall in his first term, China will not pay for Trump’s tariffs if he’s given a second term. You will,” they added.
Harris campaign says undecided voters are breaking their way — but warns Trump will falsely claim victory
With less than a week before Americans head to the polls on Election Day, Vice President Kamala Harris’s campaign is feeling the wind at their backs after a series of unforced errors by Donald Trump may have helped push undecided voters her way.
According to senior Harris campaign officials, undecided voters are casting their ballots for the vice president by a significant margin and have been driven by Trump’s extreme rhetoric and offensive remarks made by his surrogates, including at his Madison Square Garden rally last weekend.
One official told reporters on Friday that voters in a focus group held in a swing state this week were turned off by the hateful remarks directed at Puerto Rico by a pro-Trump comedian during the rally.
Andrew Feinberg reports from Washington, DC.
Harris campaign says undecided voters breaking their way with days to go
‘Our internal data is telling us and showing us that we are winning battleground voters who have made up their minds in the last week,’ a Harris campaign official said
Watch: Trump defends comments about Liz Cheney facing firing squad
Arizona county that will play major role in deciding election is desperately searching for more vote counters
Maricopa County is seeking election workers following a record-breaking surge of early voters — four years after the Arizona county became the target of Donald Trump’s election fraud claims.
Dubbed the “nation’s ultimate swing county” by the Associated Press, Maricopa County could determine the presidential race. But first, they need to find more early voter tabulators as over one million people have already cast their ballots early, officials said.
The Maricopa County Recorder’s office “URGENTLY needs additional help processing early ballots,” an email from the Maricopa County Public Health Department said on Wednesday. The message read: “Temporary assistance needed for the Recorder’s Office to assist in counting early ballots. This position pays $16 per hour,” according to a reporter from 12 News.
Arizona county that will play major role in election is searching for more workers
Maricopa County ‘URGENTLY needs additional help processing early ballots,’ an email read amid a surge of early votes cast
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