PITTSBURGH (AP) — Former President Barack Obama gave a blistering critique of his White House successor Donald Trump and urged Black men to show up for Kamala Harris as he opened a swing-state tour for the Democratic ticket.
The latest Times/Inquirer/Siena polls found Donald Trump with a six-point advantage in Arizona, and Kamala Harris with a four-point lead in Pennsylvania.
Republican U.S. Senate candidate David McCormick is narrowing Senator Bob Casey's lead, according to a new poll.
A federal judge is turning down third-party candidate Cornel West’s request to be put on Pennsylvania’s presidential ballot. U.S.
Vice President Harris and former President Trump are each vying to win the critical state of Pennsylvania, where the two candidates are polling neck-and-neck. Early voting data suggests that more Democrats are voting early than Republicans, meaning that Harris could have the edge among early voters.
Harris leads by 0.4 points in Pennsylvania in FiveThirtyEight’s polling average, Trump holds a slim 0.1 point lead in Real Clear Politics’ polling average and Harris is up 0.8 points in Nate Silver’s Silver Bulletin.
Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance is at a town hall in Reading, Pennsylvania, with less than a month left before the election.
Former President Barack Obama and Vice President Kamala Harris have a relationship dating back to his run for Senate in 2004.
Ms. Harris leads by four points in Pennsylvania, just as she did immediately after the final debate. Mr. Trump leads by six points in Arizona, about the same as the five-point lead he held three weeks ago.
Delaware, by contrast, is reliably Democratic in presidential politics. And anyway, it only has three electoral votes. But since Biden’s hometown area popularity stretches north, Biden’s status as a practical local just across the Pennsylvania state line, in Chester County, is a conspicuous electoral hole that Harris will have to fill.
What she has built feels larger than an electoral campaign and more like a movement that represents big ideas like freedom.”