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What's happening on the campaign trail today
- Vice President Kamala Harris is campaigning in three key states after she delivered what her campaign billed as her closing argument in a speech yesterday in Washington, D.C. She spoke in Raleigh, North Carolina, and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and she's now in Madison, Wisconsin.
- Former President Donald Trump traveled to North Carolina as well for remarks in Rocky Mount in the early afternoon. He then spoke at a rally with former NFL quarterback Brett Favre in Green Bay, Wisconsin.
- Harris' running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, also campaigned today in North Carolina, speaking in Greensboro, Charlotte and Asheville.
- Trump's running mate, Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, held a town hall in Bedford, Pennsylvania, with former Democratic Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, who has endorsed Trump.
Uncomfortable Nikki Haley backers weigh their options with Election Day looming
Harris' deployment of prominent Republican Trump critics hasnât convinced a new focus group of voters who backed Nikki Haley in the GOP presidential primaries.
But even if many of those Haley voters wonât cast their ballots for Harris, the constant controversy surrounding Trump may cost him votes â a dynamic typified by the almost universally negative reaction to the harsh and at times racist rhetoric at his weekend rally in New York City.
With the election less than a week away, many voters are still weighing key issues, including abortion rights. NBC Newsâ Laura Jarrett interviews a group of female voters in Sarasota, Florida, who are forming unexpected alliances to help galvanize support for the future of abortion rights.
Trump campaign releases video compilation of Black men backing him
The Trump campaign has released a video montage of Black men making their support for Trump clear while criticizing Harris.
âI believe Donald J. Trump is well-suited for the job because heâll bring back manufacturing to our country, create economic growth and more importantly preserve our traditional values,â said Henry Ike, a man featured in the video.
The video, titled âIâm Not With Her,â features roughly half a dozen men from across the country. Of the men who share their states of residence, none appear to be from battleground states.
The video is the latest effort by the Trump campaign to tout its support among Black men, a voting bloc it has been courting in recent months through barbershop roundtable events, Black church leader discussions and other community events. Allies of Trump have launched their own efforts, including bus tours in cities with large Black populations, in a bid to further solidify that support.
In an interview with the Breakfast Club this week, Harris dismissed the notion that Trumpâs efforts will result in a substantial shift in support from Black men.
âThe brothers arenât saying that,â Harris said. âI mean, I was just at the barbershop in Philly talking with very incredible and distinguished men who are leaders in their community and small business and education. And these men, these Black men, were talking about not only their support for me, but most importantly, their support from my perspective on what we can do that lifts up the community and taps into the ambitions and the aspirations.â
The Trump campaign released a video compilation this summer of Black women praising Trump, also titled âIâm Not With Her.â
Trump says he would protect women 'whether the women like it or not'
Trump insisted tonight that he would protect women whether they "like it or not," a comment that immediately drew criticism from the Harris campaign.
Speaking at a rally in Green Bay, Wisconsin, Trump indicated that his advisers had said they didn't think he should say he wanted to "protect the women."
"I said, 'Well, Iâm going to do it, whether the women like it or not,'" Trump added. "Iâm going to protect them."
The Harris campaign quickly highlighted his remarks on X.
"Donald Trump thinks he knows better than the women of America," Harris campaign spokesperson Sarafina Chitika said in a post. "To him, our choices donât matter, our decisions are his to control, and heâs going to ban abortion nationwide whether we like it or not."
Reached for comment on Trump's remarks, Trump campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said in a statement that Harris "may be the first woman Vice President but she has implemented dangerously liberal policies that have left women worse off financially and far less safe than we were four years ago under President Trump."
"Women deserve a President who will secure our nationâs borders, remove violent criminals from our neighborhoods, and build an economy that helps our families thrive â and thatâs exactly what President Trump will do," Leavitt added.
Polling shows a massive gender gap in voters' candidate preferences, while it indicates the overall race is extremely close.
Nikki Haley says Pennsylvania voters âcanât be emotionalâ and âhave to electâ Trump
Reporting from Warrendale, Pennsylvania
Nikki Haley told voters to put their feelings aside about ânoisyâ Trump and cast ballots for him during a pair of stops in swing-state Pennsylvania today.
Campaigning for Republican Senate candidate Dave McCormick in suburbs near Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, Haley, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and onetime GOP presidential candidate, told voters to âpull the emotion outâ and âfocus on the policies,â adding that âitâs not about usâ but about future generations.
A lot of state poll results show ties. So are they tied because of voters â or pollsters?
Recent polls in the seven core swing states show an astonishingly tight presidential race: 124 out of the last 321 polls conducted in those states â almost 39% â show margins of 1 percentage point or less.
In fact, the state polls are showing not just an astonishingly tight race, but also an improbably tight race. Even in a truly tied election, the randomness inherent in polling would generate more varied and less clustered results â unless the state polls and the polling averages are artificially close because of decisions pollsters are making.
The results of a poll depend on the opinions of the voters and the decisions of the pollster. Decisions about how to weight polls to match the expected composition of the electorate can move the results of a poll up to 8 points. That is true even if pollsters are making perfectly reasonable decisions about how to weight their survey data, as survey researchers have been forced to consider new methods and ideas for weighting and addressing falling response rates after polling misses in 2016 and 2020.
Walz says 'all votes matter' when asked about reports of lagging Black turnout in early N.C. voting
Walz pushed back in an interview that aired today during a discussion about reports that turnout among Black voters has lagged in North Carolina during early voting compared with 2020.
Asked whether the Harris-Walz campaign is resonating with Black voters, Walz said, "Well, it is, and all votes matter."
"What I think right now is, is folks have a little bit of fatigue because of Donald Trump, hoping to kind of suppress these votes," Walz told WSOC-TV of Charlotte. "Look, you can feel the energy. We know things are turning â weâre seeing that happening. Weâre seeing the numbers coming out. And the only thing that matters to us is making sure by Election Day we got the folks to the polls."
Early voting in North Carolina got underway on Oct. 17 and runs until Saturday. The state was rattled by Hurricane Helene this fall.
Asked earlier in the interview whether he was concerned about lower voter turnout among Democrats overall during this phase of voting, Walz responded: "No, the folks can vote early or they can vote on Election Day. They all matter at the end of the day."
Trump, who in 2020 suggested that early and mail-in voting were vulnerable to fraud, has offered support for early voting this time around while also delivering mixed messages about mail-in voting.
Abortion-related ads in Nebraska prompt tension between health department and doctors
Just a week before an election in which Nebraska voters will decide on two competing ballot initiatives related to abortion rights, the state health department sent doctors an alert about what it called âmisleading informationâ in radio and TV ads.
Nebraskaâs chief medical officer, Dr. Timothy Tesmer, wrote in the alert that recent ads had generated confusion about Nebraskaâs law restricting abortions after 12 weeksâ gestation, though he did not specify which ads.
He listed some exceptions to the policy, among them that Nebraska law does not prohibit removal of an ectopic pregnancy. Abortions in the state are allowed in cases of rape or incest, the advisory said, and when there is a threat to a womanâs life or a risk of irreversible harm to a major bodily function.
Walz voices support for Asheville after hurricane destruction
During his campaign trip to the hard-hit city of Asheville, North Carolina, Walz emphasized his support for the community after Hurricane Helene's destruction.
"You demonstrated that the spirit of Asheville is the spirit of this country. Tough, tenacious and never going down without a fight," Walz said.
Walz also said he and Harris "are not going to rest until you get all the support to rebuild this community."
He encouraged Americans to visit and spend money in Asheville to help it rebuild. Western North Carolina, where Asheville is located, is a tourism destination, but Helene caused flooding and destruction in the area.
Pa. Democrats accuse Erie County of failing to fix mail-in ballot issues
The Pennsylvania Democratic Party is accusing the Erie County Board of Elections of failing to urgently address issues related to mail-in ballots that "threaten to disenfranchise thousands of registered voters from casting ballots" this election, according to a complaint filed today.
State party officials contend that 10,000 to 20,000 voters who requested mail-in ballots "have not received or submitted such ballots" and that more than 300 voters even received two mail-in ballots, according to the party's filing in common pleas court in Erie. Of the two ballots a voter could receive, one might not correspond with local races the voter is registered to participate in, the filing adds.
The state Democratic Party said that even though the Board of Elections said it has sent notices to the affected voters, the party is unaware of any voters who've received such correspondence and that the board hasn't shared it with the party. The party also claims that some registered party members have said they still haven't received their mail-in ballots even though they were requested "weeks ago" and that the U.S. Postal Service can't account for having received 1,800 mail-in ballots from the county's vendor. The party believes those ballots have been "lost" and won't be delivered in time for voters to cast their ballots, according to the filing.
As part of its complaint, the party is requesting several remedies, including requiring the board to release the names of affected voters who have received duplicate or incorrect ballots and provide any correspondence it has given to affected voters. The party also wants its representatives and other major political parties to observe the opening of duplicate ballots.
Thomas Talarico, a lawyer for the Erie County Board of Elections, said a hearing is scheduled for tomorrow morning after the county's "attempt to resolve some of the disputes broke down last night."
Talarico said in an email that the board has already implemented much of what's asked for in the party's lawsuit, including contacting voters who requested mail-in ballots but haven't received them and advising them of their other options.
He added that the state Republican Party disagrees, "arguing that the mail-in voters who did not receive a ballot have only one option, to vote provisionally."
Ruben Gallego bashes Biden 'garbage' comment
Reporting from Phoenix
Senate candidate Ruben Gallego created some distance between himself and the White House today by criticizing President Joe Biden's response to a comedianâs racist joke at a Trump rally.
âNo politician should be talking about anybody that way. Doesn't matter who they are,â the Arizona Democrat told reporters before quickly moving on to his next campaign stop in a competitive race against Republican Kari Lake.
Gallego's remark came a day after Biden appeared to criticize either Trump supporters or comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who referred to Puerto Rico as a "floating island of garbage" among other racist jokes at Trumpâs Madison Square Garden rally on Sunday.
Sen. Mark Kelly, who was at the same event today with Gallego, also weighed in on Biden's comments.
"I think the White House clarified what he was trying to say,â said Kelly, in reference to a White House transcript that attempted to corroborate Biden's clarification that his comment was about the comedian's joke and not Trump's supporters.
Asked by NBC News if the White House should be taken at its word, Kelly said, "Yeah, I mean, I should, I mean, that's, that's what they said," before going on to praise Harris and contrast her character to Trump's.
Group of Syrian Americans endorse Harris in open letter
A group of nearly two dozen Syrian Americans endorsed Harris in a letter, obtained first by NBC News from a Harris campaign official.
"We are not only proudly integrated in every part of American life, but we have helped shape it," the letter said. "We intend to vote for a Harris-Walz administration precisely for that reason, to preserve freedom and democracy for our children."
Much of the letter zeroed in on policies toward Syria that they hope a future administration would maintain, including humanitarian and development aid in the country.
The signers said they want to work with a Harris administration to "bring a sense of justice to a people looking to the U.S. for leadership and compassion" as Syrians experience "suffering" due to Syria's dictator, Bashar al-Assad, during the civil war.
"To achieve our national security goals in Syria, we support the appointment of a strong diplomat who is knowledgeable of the Syrian conflict and the region, and is committed to engaging with all relevant stakeholders in support of U.S. policy, including a political solution," the letter says.
The letter also urges a Harris administration to end the war in Gaza, saying, "Americaâs support for this war is only losing the hearts and minds of people across the world."
Ten of the signers listed their hometowns as being in the swing states Michigan or Arizona. They also include Wa'el Alzayat, the CEO of the Muslim advocacy organization Emgage, which has already endorsed Harris; Zaher Sahloul, a co-founder of MedGlobal; and Shadia Martini, a Democrat running to be a state representative in Michigan.
Some Arab Americans and Muslims have expressed reluctance to endorse Harris over the White House's support for Israel in the war in Gaza. A Harris campaign official said the campaign did not organize the letter.
Pennsylvania Trump supporters weigh in on 'garbage' comments
Reporting from Pennsburg, Pennsylvania
Trump supporters at Republican Pennsylvania Senate candidate Dave McCormick's rally with former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley weighed in this afternoon about the debacle surrounding a comedian's racist joke about Puerto Rico at a Trump rally and Biden's apparent reference last night to Trump's supporters as "garbage."
Rick Sacks, a Republican, suggested "maybe he shouldn't have been at that event" when he was asked for his response to the backlash after Tony Hinchcliffe referred to Puerto Rico as a "floating island of garbage" at a Trump rally in New York over the weekend.
"Obviously that was, you know, an inflammatory statement," Sacks added. "But itâs not Donald Trumpâs view. Itâs one comedian that was there."
Trump said in a Fox News interview yesterday that he didn't know Hinchcliffe, and he tried to embrace Puerto Rico in remarks in Allentown, Pennsylvania.
Sacks also criticized Biden's comment, saying, "For Joe Biden to respond with calling all of us 'garbage' because of what the comedian said to me is just absurd."
Biden tried to clarify after he made the remark, saying he was referring to Trump's supporter when he made it, but Trump and his allies quickly seized on it to portray Harris and Biden as having enmity toward Trump voters.
Another Republican voter, Kim Henderson, similarly suggested that the comedian's comment didn't reflect Trump's point of view and chastised Biden's remark.
"I think weâve gotten really touchy in this country," Henderson said. "It certainly didnât represent President Trumpâs stance at all for sure."
Henderson said that while Trump didn't make the joke about Puerto Rico, Biden did disparage Trump's supporters and that "an elected official should represent all of the people and put politics aside."
Another Republican voter, Larry Stempel, said, "It's very embarrassing to have our sitting president be calling our supporters garbage."
Elon Musk ordered to attend $1 million voter lottery suit hearing in Philadelphia
Telsa CEO Elon Musk must attend an emergency court hearing in Philadelphia tomorrow to address a bid by the cityâs top prosecutor to stop him and his political action committee from continuing to award $1 million prizes to registered voters in the swing state of Pennsylvania, a judge ordered today.

Also today, Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner revealed in a new court filing that his lawsuit against Musk and America PAC had âtriggered an avalanche of [social media] posts from Muskâs followers,â many of whom âmade antisemitic attacks on Krasner.â
Krasner sued Musk and the PAC on Monday, accusing them of operating an illegal lottery and of trying to influence voters in the presidential election.
Trump takes questions from a garbage truck in an attempt to swipe at Biden
Upon landing in Green Bay, Wisconsin, Trump got off his plane and stepped into the passenger seat of a garbage truck on the tarmac, a jab at Biden's appearing to call Trump supporters "garbage."

Biden quickly tried to clarify after he made the remarks, saying he was not calling Trump supporters "garbage"; rather, he said, he was referring to "the hateful rhetoric about Puerto Rico spewed by Trumpâs supporter at his Madison Square Garden rally as garbage."

"Joe Biden should be ashamed of himself, if he knows what he's even doing," Trump said from the garbage truck.
Reporters asked Trump during the stop about his views of the comedian at his New York rally who referred to Puerto Rico as a "floating island of garbage."
"I don't know anything about the comedian. I don't know who his is. I've never seen him. I heard he made a statement, but it was just a statement that he made. He's a comedian. What can I tell you?" Trump said.
Harris campaign says over 700 writers have endorsed her
In a social media post, campaign staffer Victor Shi wrote, "*700+* writers across every genre and form have just endorsed VP Kamala Harris for president." People on the list include Rosie O'Donnell, Cyndi Lauper, Brené Brown, Glennon Doyle and Margaret Atwood.
"With the stakes in November so high, we are not sitting on the sidelines this election. For the sake of our lives, our families and friends, our neighbors, our democracy, and our shared humanity, we are proud to endorse Kamala Harris for President of the United States," the letter says.
The Harris campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Mike Johnson seeks to clarify his 'no Obamacare' remark
Reporting from Washington
House Speaker Mike Johnson sought to clean up a remark he made at a closed-door event Monday in Pennsylvania, which NBC News first reported, in which he criticized the Affordable Care Act and said âno Obamacareâ during a back-and-forth about the future of health care.
The Harris campaign seized on his comment to argue that Johnson, R-La., would try to wipe out the ACA if Republicans win the 2024 election.
âDespite the dishonest characterizations from the Harris campaign, the audio and transcript make clear that I offered no such promise to end Obamacare, and in fact acknowledged that the policy is âdeeply ingrainedâ in our health care system,â Johnson said in a statement.
âStill, House Republicans will always seek to reduce the costs and improve the quality and availability of health care for all Americans. Anyone who has been a patient or known a loved one who has struggled with health issues understands why this is so important," he continued.
He did not, however, say what kinds of reforms he would pursue.
Meanwhile, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., said at an event today in Lansing, Michigan, that voters shouldnât trust the GOP to protect the ACA.
âThe top Republican in the House said one of the first things theyâll do is repeal and get rid of the Affordable Care Act as we know it. This is still on their mind,â Jeffries said. âWe know theyâll do it, because Iâm convinced that if Roe v. Wade can fall, then anything can fall.â
Cornel West asks Supreme Court to require Pa. officials to notify voters he's a candidate for president
Third-party presidential candidate Cornel West has filed a long-shot emergency application at the Supreme Court asking for Pennsylvania to notify voters at every polling place in the key swing state that he is running.
State officials previously rejected attempts to gain access to the ballot by West, who is viewed as a spoiler candidate who could draw votes away from Harris. He made no headway in lower courts.
West is running as the candidate for the Justice for All Party. His lawyers asked the Supreme Court to require the state to post notices at all polling locations that he is a presidential candidate and that they can write him in on the ballot.
Harris attempts to use Biden's 'garbage' comment to remind voters about Trump's 'enemy from within' remark
Harris contrasted her approach with Trump's at a rally in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, this afternoon, trying to reassure people who hold different political beliefs that she would hear out their concerns if she is elected after Biden appeared to criticize Trump supporters.
âI pledge to listen to experts, to those who will be impacted by the decisions I make and to the people who disagree with me,â Harris said.
Republicans have argued Democrats are disparaging Trump supporters after Biden appeared to refer to Trump's supporters as "garbage" last night.
âTheyâre good, decent, honorable people,â Biden said, referring to the Puerto Rican community after comedian Tony Hinchcliffe called Puerto Rico âa floating island of garbageâ at Trump's Madison Square Garden rally.
âThe only garbage I see floating out there is his supporters," Biden continued. "His demonization of Latinos is unconscionable, and itâs un-American. Itâs totally contrary to everything weâve done.â
Harris said after Biden's remarks that she strongly disagrees with criticizing people based on whom they vote for.
She also tried to draw the contrast with Trump's suggestion this month that Democrats and others who have opposed him are a greater threat than some of the countryâs foreign adversaries.
âUnlike Donald Trump, I donât believe people who disagree with me are âthe enemy from within,ââ she said at the Harrisburg rally.
âHe wants to put them in jail. Iâll give them a seat at the table,â she said.
Cybersecurity officials stress resilience of U.S. election systems
Less than a week before election day, foreign adversaries have not been able to compromise the nationâs election system infrastructure, one of the nationâs top cybersecurity officials said today.Â
Jen Easterly, the head of the federal Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, told NBC News that there are no indications that Russia, China or Iran has been able to hack into U.S. election infrastructure.Â
âIn my view, that would not be possible,â she told NBC News in an interview. âI do not believe it would be possible for a malicious actor to tamper with our voting infrastructure in a way that would have a material impact on the outcome of the presidential election, certainly not without being detected.â
Easterly and other U.S. cybersecurity officials say their confidence regarding cyberattack vulnerability is in part because there is not a singular or central system to be hacked, as well as the wide range and combinations of hardware, software and communication systems used in state and local jurisdictions, and extensive technological reinforcement in all 50 states since the 2000 election.
âThis diverse, decentralized nature of our election infrastructure is actually a source of great strength, because it means no single technological point of failure.â Easterly said. While attempted cyberattacks or other efforts could slow down the process in some way, âA bad actor could not tamper with election equipment in a way that would have a material impact on the outcome of the presidential election. Itâs one of the reasons why I say election infrastructure has never been more secure.â Â
Easterly said that the greatest threat to American elections is what she described as a âfire hose of disinformationâ facing American voters.Â
âI think it is really irresponsible and unfortunate for anybody here in America, regardless of party or politics, to be spreading inaccurate information that undermines American confidence in the integrity and the security of the election process. Itâs corrosive to our democracy. It does the work of our foreign adversaries for them and oh, by the way, itâs creating very real, physical threats to election workers and election officials and their families.â
Former astronaut Buzz Aldrin endorses Trump
Former astronaut Buzz Aldrin endorsed Trump for president today, saying in a statement that he believes the country would be best served by Trump.
"Most citizens rightly consider it an honor to cast their vote for a leader they believe will best serve the Nation â our government by, for and of the people. For me, for the future of our Nation, to meet enormous challenges, and for the proven policy accomplishments above, I believe the nation is best served by voting for Donald J. Trump," Aldrin said in a statement.
Aldrin, 94, praised Trump's first administration, saying it prioritized human space exploration and reinvigorated efforts to return to the moon and travel to Mars.
"The Trump Administration also reinstituted the National Space Council, so leading voices could advocate for the importance of space to America," he continued. "Finally, under President Trump, the Nationâs defense was enhanced with the creation of the U.S. Space Forceâ increasingly important as space becomes a contested domain. At the same time, I have been enthused and excited by the great advancements in the private sector space economy, led by visionaries like Elon Musk."
Aldrin, who was part of the Apollo 11 mission to the moon in 1969, was the second person to walk on the moon after Neil Armstrong.
Haley declines to say whether she'll campaign with Trump
Campaigning alongside GOP Senate candidate Dave McCormick in Pennsylvania today, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley didn't respond to questions about whether she'd campaign with Trump in the final stretch of the campaign.
"Good to see yâall. Great to be out here with Dave. We are going to take Pennsylvania," she said in response to questions about whether she'd campaign with Trump.
Haley faced off against Trump in the GOP primaries and got thousands of votes. Now, many of her supporters are unsure whether to vote for Trump, even though Haley eventually endorsed him.
Earlier in her remarks at the Pennsylvania event, Haley called on voters to "take the emotion" out of the coming election.
"I think about what we should care about. Iâm going to ask all of you to take the emotion out of this election â we need to take the emotion out of this election and really think about the policy and what it means for our kids and the next generation. Thatâs our job. Itâs the next generation," she said.
In a statement responding to questions about whether Haley and Trump would campaign together in the next week, Trump campaign press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement: âPresident Trump is building a historic and diverse movement to make America great again. Heâs been endorsed by many respected leaders from Nikki Haley to RFK Jr., and Tulsi Gabbard. We welcome anyone who wants to secure our border, restore law and order, and end inflation to join our team.â
Representatives for Haley did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
White House says Biden will attend inauguration regardless of who wins
Asked whether Biden will attend the inauguration regardless of who wins, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said yes.
She added, âI mean, this president believes in the peaceful transfer of power, and thatâs what youâre going to see this president do."
"Itâs not about him. Itâs about the American people. Thatâs what the American people need to see, regardless of who wins," Jean-Pierre said. "Attending the inauguration, being there, being part of what is regularly done, a historic kind of process, he certainly is going to partake in that.â
Puerto Rican Dominican artist Nicky Jam walks back Trump endorsement
Nicky Jam, a Puerto Rican Dominican singer who endorsed Trump in September, has backtracked after Tony Hinchcliffe referred to Puerto Rico as a "floating island of garbage."
"Never in my life did I think that just one month later a comedian would show up and criticize my country, and speak poorly of my country. And for that, I revoke any support for Donald Trump and Iâm stepping aside from any kind of political situation. Puerto Rico is to be respected," he said on social media.
At a rally last month in which Nicky Jam endorsed him, Trump accidentally misgendered him, saying, "Latin music superstar Nicky Jam, do you know Nicky? She's hot. Where's Nicky?"
In his post today, Nicky Jam emphasized that he originally supported Trump because he thought he would be beneficial to the Latino population.
Anuel AA, another Puerto Rican artist who backed Trump at a separate rally in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, has not made any comment yet on the comedian's remarks.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez thanks Nicky Jam for pulling Trump endorsement
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., responded to Nicky Jamâs revoking his endorsement of Trump.
She wrote, âThank you for having the courage to show by example that itâs okay to change your mind and stand up for our community."
Trump and his allies ramp up election fraud allegations in Pennsylvania
Trump and his allies are seizing on routine election processes as signs of fraud in the critical battleground state of Pennsylvania, amplifying allegations, videos and litigation around purported voting irregularities that have drawn pushback from local officials days out from Election Day.
The playbook is familiar: Like in 2020, Trump campaignâs is spreading viral videos of supposed wrongdoing and promising its eager supporters a legal showdown, which experts fear could be used to contest the results of the election if he loses.
Trump supporters yesterday spread videos of long lines in Bucks County, where voters were waiting to request mail ballots in person. A social media post from Trump campaign political director James Blair said a line in one area was shut down early around 2:30 p.m.
âThis is suppressive and intimidating,â Blair wrote in a post on X seen by 1.8 million people. Elon Musk, the owner of X and a Trump supporter, replied: âWhy are they doing this?â
Pennsylvania doesnât offer in-person early voting. Election officials allow voters to request, fill out and return their mail ballots in person at county elections offices, casting mail ballots early.
As long lines have formed, officials have been shutting down the line midafternoon so the office can close as scheduled at 5 p.m., Bucks County spokesman James OâMalley said yesterday. Unlike on Election Day, thereâs no statutory requirement that county offices stay open late for voters in line.
Trump comments on Biden calling his supporters 'garbage'
Onstage in North Carolina this afternoon, Trump commented on Biden's referring to his supporters as "garbage," saying they are "far higher quality than crooked Joe."
"You canât lead America if you donât love Americans. You just canât. And you canât be president If you hate the American people, and thereâs a lot of hatred there," he said.
Biden made the comment on a media call yesterday, saying, âThe only garbage I see floating out there is his supporters," referring to comedian Tony Hinchcliffe's remarks about Puerto Rico at a Trump rally Sunday.
Harris backers say whether they would date a Trump supporter
NBC News asked eight Harris supporters whether they would ever date a Trump supporter. Seven said they wouldnât, and one said he would.Â
âIf youâre OK with, again, my family possibly being deported, racism comments, if youâre OK with me not having that right to an abortion or anything like that, just those beliefs, I just donât see myself dating that person,â said Andrea Ramirez, a 22-year-old communications specialist.
Destiny Tapia, 18, a student at Arizona State University, said itâs even hard for her to be friends with Trump supporters. âI feel like if youâre a Trump supporter, you just donât simply value women," she said. "And how could I date someone that does not value me as a woman?âÂ
Imelda Quiros, 57, said âthereâs no chanceâ sheâd date a Trump supporter and joked, âIâm gonna be single forever.âÂ
The only person asked who said heâd be open to dating a Trump supporter was Peter Ferry, a 33-year-old musician from Phoenix. âI donât live in a make-believe world where everybody agrees on everything,â he said. âI feel very strongly about these things, but weâre all people, and weâre all meaning to do the right thing in who we support.â
Trump campaign successfully sues to extend mail voting hours in Pennsylvania county
The Trump campaign won a court order to extend hours to receive and return mail ballots in-person in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, where long lines had drawn the campaignâs ire and allegations of voter suppression.
The county is now required to process in-person mail ballot applications through Friday.
Bucks County officials had said they couldnât accommodate the huge lines that formed outside election offices, because early, in-person voting isn't an option. There is an option to request, fill out and return mail ballots in person.
Nikki Haley says both political campaigns should end 'schoolyard' behavior
Today on her SiriusXM program, former GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley spoke out against President Bidenâs âgarbageâ comment and called for an end to âschoolyardâ behavior on both sides of the presidential campaign.
âIâm amazed in this election how they have not realized you donât demean the other side," she said. "To turn around and call, you know, Trump supporters âGarbage.â Iâm like, at what point does everybody not get, people are smart, they just want to know what youâre going to do to make their life better. They donât want to be called a name. This isnât a schoolyard."
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre says Biden remarks were not about Trump supporters
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said at the press briefing today that Biden's remarks that he came under fire for yesterday were not about Trump supporters.
âHe was not calling Trump supporters garbage, which is why he wanted to make sure that we put out a statement that clarified what he meant and what he was trying to say,â she said. âHateful rhetoric, hateful rhetoric that he hears and this is something that weâve done many times from here, weâll call that out.â
Earlier today, Harris reacted to Biden's remarks, saying that the president clarified his remarks but said, âI strongly disagree with any criticism of people based on who they voted for.â
Obama urges Americans to vote for Harris with an eye on the future
In an interview with barber and influencer Victor Fontanez, also known as VicBlends, former President Barack Obama made a closing pitch on behalf of Harris, arguing that this election, "is such a clear choice."
"[Trump] does not respect you. He does not see you. He does not think you are equal to him and the people that he considers to be quote unquote real Americans. And in that situation, that is something that, somebody who does not respect you should not represent you," Obama added, responding to a question from Fontanez about how to deal with "dehumanizing" rhetoric about immigrants.
He urged viewers to turn out and vote for Harris, telling them that they should vote with their eyes on the future.
"I do want everybody to vote and remind themselves that you know â the person whoâs leading this country is going to help shape the future of your kids and your grandkids," the former president said. "And having someone there who sees everybody, respects everybody, cares about everybody⦠that is gonna be really important in making sure that your kids, your grandkids grow up in the kind of America that I think we both believe in."
His appearance on VicBlends' show â which boasts a following of millions of young men, particularly men of color â comes as Republicans have spent days trying to distance themselves from comments one comedian made at a Trump rally over the weekend calling Puerto Rico "a floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean."
The comment has been condemned by both Republicans and Democrats in recent days.
New Harris digital ad leans on key Arab American politician in Michigan: 'The choice is clear'
As the Harris campaign continues to try to make overtures to Arab Americans amid criticism of America's handling of the conflict in the Middle East, a new digital ad running in Michigan shows how they're looking to a key validator to make the case.
In the new digital ad, Deputy Wayne County Executive Assad Turfe calls his vote "personal," as the camera pulls in on a necklace featuring the cedar tree at the center of the Lebanese flag.
"I want a president that will end the war in Gaza and in Lebanon. Kamala Harris is that leader. She's working to secure relief and peace," he says, before criticizing the "chaos" and "suffering" he believes Trump will bring, noting his push for a travel ban from a handful of Muslim countries during his first administration.
And the ad makes a direct appeal to those considering voting third party: "A vote for a third party is a vote for Trump."
The ad is airing in several Wayne County zip codes that have previously been targeted by the Harris campaign with ads painting her as sympathetic to civilian "suffering" in Gaza, as well as those from Harris critics likely aimed at driving a wedge between Harris and these voters. Wayne County has the second-highest share of people of Middle Eastern or North African descent, according to 2022 Census data.
Device on destroyed Portland ballot drop box under forensic review
An incendiary device found on a ballot drop box that was set on fire early Monday in Portland, Oregon, is undergoing a forensic analysis for "any unique writings or markings," a police spokesperson said today.
Police did not confirm what may have been marked on the device, but clarified that the mechanism was "attached" to the side of the box and not placed inside of it.
The box in Portland was one of two targeted around the same time, with the other ballot drop box similarly destroyed in neighboring Vancouver, Washington. While only three ballots were damaged in Portland, "hundreds" were potentially affected in Vancouver.
The search for a suspect, who is believed to be connected to both incidents, remains ongoing, and election officials have asked voters who may have used the drop boxes to contact their respective offices.
About 475 ballots were recovered from inside of the Vancouver ballot drop box that was targeted with an incendiary device, Clark County auditor Greg Kimsey confirmed today.
Officials have been able to process at least 100 of the votes after most of those voters had gotten replacement ballots. The election office said it will continue do so as more ballot replacements come in.
Elon Musk asks voters to brace for economic âhardship,â deep spending cuts in potential Trump Cabinet role
In the home stretch of the 2024 election, voters whoâve been weighing both campaignsâ proposals to tackle living costs are now hearing a new pitch from the Republican side: accept some short-term economic pain to rein in government spending.
That message has emerged from former President Donald Trumpâs wealthiest backer, Elon Musk, who says that the GOP nomineeâs plans to put the U.S. on firmer fiscal footing would likely entail âtemporary hardshipâ for ordinary Americans.  Â
At a virtual town hall event Friday held on Muskâs social media platform, X, the multibillionaire Tesla and Space X executive said he was âpraying for a victoryâ for Trump, so he could begin working in a high-level Cabinet role to axe federal spending.
âWe have to reduce spending to live within our means,â Musk said. âAnd, you know, that necessarily involves some temporary hardship, but it will ensure long-term prosperity.â
Chinese investors flock to speculative âTrump victoryâ meme stock
Reporting from Hong Kong
Chinese retail investors are flocking to the stock of a company whose name in Chinese alludes to a Trump election victory, sending share prices up to their daily limit for three days in a row.
Shenzhen-listed Wisesoft, which produces air traffic control software, is known in Chinese as âchuan da zhi sheng,â which sounds like âTrump victory.â Its shares have surged 10% every day this week and have almost doubled to 21.98 renminbi ($3.08) in the past month, growing far more rapidly than the overall CSI 300 Index. The company makes almost all of its revenue in China and has little connection with the United States.
This phenomenon isnât new for Wisesoft, whose stock also soared in June 2015 before Trump announced his first run for president and in July this year after a bullet grazed his ear at a rally in Pennsylvania. It has also affected other Chinese stocks such as acoustic components company Goertek, which rose dramatically after the assassination attempt and whose name in Chinese sounds like âcutting ears.â
Many of Chinaâs more than 200 million retail investors are inexperienced, which can make its financial markets highly speculative and volatile. Beijing's announcement late last month of a series of economic stimulus measures set off a stock trading frenzy that resulted in wild market swings.
Harris says she strongly disagrees with criticism of people based on who they vote for
Harris said she strongly disagrees with criticisms of groups of people based on the candidate they support. Her remarks came after President Joe Biden came under fire the night before for his reaction to a comedianâs racist joke at a rally for former President Donald Trump.
Speaking to reporters on the tarmac at Joint Base Andrews before leaving for campaign events, Harris said that Biden âclarified his commentsâ but added, âI strongly disagree with any criticism of people based on who they voted for.â
During a video call for Latino voter outreach on Tuesday, Biden appeared to criticize either Trump supporters or comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who referred to Puerto Rico as a âfloating island of garbageâ among other racist jokes at Trumpâs Madison Square Garden rally on Sunday.
âTheyâre good, decent, honorable people,â Biden said, referring to the Puerto Rican community. âThe only garbage I see floating out there is his supporters. His demonization of Latinos is unconscionable, and itâs un-American. Itâs totally contrary to everything weâve done.â
Wisconsin Democratic Party chair predicts 'a squeaker' there
During an interview on MSNBC's "Andrea Mitchell Reports," Democratic Party of Wisconsin Chair Ben Wikler predicted that the presidential race in his state would be "a squeaker."
âThis could be a squeaker, but I give us the edge for ground game energy,â Wikler said.
âI would rather be us than them in the Senate race and the presidentialâ because of âwhat weâre seeing on the Republican side is a 100% negative, massive, scorched earth, flood of ads," Wikler added.
He mentioned that ticket-splitting is "not uncommon" in Wisconsin in response to a question about whether ticket-splitting voters could hurt Democrats.
"A lot of the Republican strategy has been to get Trump-Tammy voters to switch over to Eric Hovde in the Senate race. Itâs not about persuading people who are voting for Democrats to vote for either Republican," Wikler said.
Rep. Nikema Williams, chair of the Democratic Party of Georgia, also joined the show and addressed racist comments made by speakers over the weekend at a Trump rally in New York City's Madison Square Garden.
Williams told Mitchell that people in her state people are not focused on one comment or one issue.
"Weâre focused on people being able to get ahead, not just get by in this economy. Weâre building multiracial coalitions, because that is our only path to victory," she said.
Justice Department says it disagrees with Supreme Court's ruling on Virginia voter rolls
The DOJ has now responded to the Supreme Court ruling that Virginia officials are allowed to remove 1,600 voters from the stateâs registration rolls less than one week before the presidential election.
"The Department brought this suit to ensure that every eligible American citizen can vote in our elections. We disagree with the Supreme Courtâs order," a Justice Department spokesperson said in a statement.
Malaysia responds to Tucker Carlsonâs inaccurate description of Harris as Malaysian
Reporting from Hong Kong
Malaysiaâs foreign minister has responded on social media to former Fox News host Tucker Carlsonâs inaccurate description of Harris as Malaysian.
âThank you for bringing this to our attention, Mr. Carlson,â Foreign Minister Mohamad Hasan said in a Facebook post today. âWe were not aware that a Malaysian was running for the office of US President. Should Puan Kamala win the race, we are delighted to invite her to #balikkampung and try some #nasigorengUSA.â
The Malay phrase âbalik kampungâ means âreturning to oneâs hometown,â specifically during the Islamic holiday of Eid al-Fitr, while nasi goreng is a beloved Malaysian rice dish.
Carlson incorrectly identified Harris as âSamoan-Malaysianâ as he made a series of disparaging remarks about her at a Trump rally at Madison Square Garden in New York on Sunday. Harris, who is the first Black and first Asian American vice president, is of Jamaican and Indian heritage.
Trump is considering halting federal grants to police that decline to participate in mass deportations
As Trump promises the largest mass deportation of undocumented immigrants in U.S. history if re-elected, his team is considering withholding federal police grants from local law enforcement agencies that decline to take part in the deportations, three sources close to the Trump campaign told NBC News.Â
The move could prompt legal challenges, as a similar policy did in the first Trump administration. The sources also cautioned that no plans are set in stone until Trump announces them himself.Â
The Trump campaign did not respond to requests for comment.
The three sources close to the campaign claimed that the tactic would survive legal challenges and pressure blue states, counties and cities into participating in mass deportations.Â
Machete-wielding teen arrested after group is accused of intimidating Democratic supporters at polling station, police say
Police arrested an 18-year-old wielding a machete with an 18-inch blade outside a polling station in Florida on Tuesday, and said he was part of a group of teenagers accused of intimidating Democratic supporters.
The teenager, Caleb James Williams, was arrested after 4 p.m. when officers were called to the Beaches Branch Library in Neptune Beach.
Williams was arrested on charges of aggravated assault for allegedly brandishing his weapon at two unidentified women, ages 71 and 54, and improper exhibition of a weapon, Neptune Beach Police Department said.
The local Democratic campaign said it was âdeeply concerned,â saying a group of young men waving signs supporting Trump had confronted a group holding signs promoting Harris.
Pennsylvania official debunks viral QAnon video claiming to show illegal ballot harvesting
A viral video posted by a popular QAnon X account, purporting to show evidence of illegal harvesting in Northampton County, Pennsylvania, is in fact video of a postal worker delivering ballots to the elections office.
In the video, the person behind the camera follows a postal worker into the county building asking about the box of ballots going through security. âThereâs someone here in Northampton County dropping off an obscene amount of ballots at the very last second after the office is closed,â the man taking the video says.
Northampton County Executive Lamont McClure told NBC News that the video showed Charles Narciso, a 25-year veteran of the U.S. Postal Service and the acting postmaster, lawfully bringing ballots into the election office. NBC News verified his identity with a photograph posted on a USPS-linked website.
âWho in their right mind would subject themselves to bringing in a big vat of ballots that was inappropriate and illegal with all of the cameras that we have on?â McClure said.
The video had been viewed at least 4.2 million times by this morning, according to X, and was shared by conservative influencers and conspiracy theorists. Alex Jones tweeted the video with the caption, âThey donât even try to hide it!â
McClure said the post officer was already being harassed over the video.
âI hope if you do a story that the story will be that this is incredibly stupid election misinformation,â McClure said. âAnd, you know, stop it.â
Arnold Schwarzenegger endorses Harris, says Trump would 'divide' the country
Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Hollywood superstar and former Republican governor of California, threw his weight behind the Harris-Walz ticket in a post on X this morning, urging voters to reject Trump's brand of "un-American" politics.
"I will always be an American before I am a Republican," Schwarzenegger wrote in a lengthy post. "Thatâs why, this week, I am voting for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz. Iâm sharing it with all of you because I think there are a lot of you who feel like I do. You donât recognize our country. And you are right to be furious."
Schwarzenegger, 77, said he doesn't like either of the major parties right now, criticizing Republicans and Democrats for driving up the deficit. "I hate politics more than ever, which, if you are a normal person who isnât addicted to this crap, you probably understand," he wrote. "I want to tune out."
But he urged voters to resist that impulse and defeat Trump at the ballot box, blasting the GOP nominee for denying the results of the 2020 election and stoking the mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
"We need to close the door on this chapter of American history, and I know that former President Trump wonât do that," Schwarzenegger wrote. "He will divide, he will insult, he will find new ways to be more un-American than he already has been, and we, the people, will get nothing but more anger."
"Vote this week," Schwarzenegger wrote in closing. "Turn the page and put this junk behind us."
Walz defends Biden over his response to racist remarks by pro-Trump comedian
Walz defended Biden in an interview this morning after the president came under fire for his reaction to a comedian who made racist and offensive remarks about the Puerto Rican community at Trump's Sunday rally.
"President Biden was very clear that heâs speaking about the rhetoric we heard at that [rally], so it doesnât undermine it," Walz said in an interview on "CBS Mornings."
"People are hungry to come back together. Theyâre hungry to find a unifying message. Theyâre hungry for us to find solutions, whether itâs prices or whether itâs reproductive care, they want to see solutions," he said.
In response to comedian Tony Hinchcliffe's remarks at Trump's Madison Square Garden rally Sunday, Biden defended the Puerto Rican community in a video call focused on Latino voters and appeared to either criticize Trump supporters or Hinchcliffe.
âTheyâre good, decent, honorable people,â Biden said about Puerto Ricans. âThe only garbage I see floating out there is his supporters. His demonization of Latinos is unconscionable, and itâs un-American. Itâs totally contrary to everything weâve done.â
White House spokesman Andrew Bates said in a statement that Biden âreferred to the hateful rhetoric at the Madison Square Garden rally as garbage.â
Stephanie Cutter, a senior adviser on messaging for the Harris-Walz campaign, suggested in an interview on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" this morning that people should focus their outrage instead on Trump.
"Spare me the faux outrage from Donald Trump, JD Vance, and his campaign. Even as theyâre trying to argue that President Biden is disparaging Trump voters, the president is calling the entire country a trash can," she said.
Supreme Court allows Virginia to purge voter rolls ahead of election
Reporting from WASHINGTON
The Supreme Court today allowed Republican officials in Virginia to revive a plan aimed to removing noncitizen voters from the rolls ahead of next weekâs election.
The justices blocked a federal judgeâs ruling that put the program on hold and required the state to restore 1,600 voters to the rolls.
The brief order noted that the three liberal justices on the court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, all dissented.
Civil rights groups, backed by the Biden administration, challenged the plan, saying it had led to some legal voters being removed from the rolls too. The Justice Department said that while states can review its voter rolls, it cannot do so right before an election.
President Joe Biden is taking the spotlight following comments in which he appears to refer to Trump supporters as âgarbage.â Meanwhile, Harris made her closing argument to voters yesterday at the Ellipse in Washington, the same site where Trump spoke ahead of the Jan. 6, 2021, riot. NBCâs Peter Alexander reports for "TODAY."
Harris supporters react to Biden's 'garbage' comment
In the immediate aftermath of his remarks, NBC News asked five Latina Harris supporters about President Joe Bidenâs âgarbageâ comment. Four out of the five did not agree with Bidenâs comment, though they offered nuanced responses.Â
âYou never treat people like that, even Trump supporters,â said Imelda Quiros, 57, who became a naturalized citizen in 2020.
âWe are human," she said, adding that people must "respect each other."
Destiny Tapia, an 18-year-old student at Arizona State University, added, âI think a lot of Trump supporters are not minorities and are not definitely people of color, so I think itâs easier for them to say things and it not be done to them."
Minerva Fernandez, a school counselor from Phoenix, said, âI wouldnât want to call people garbage, but I do want to say that I believe those beliefs or those behaviors are garbage.â
Paulina Soto, 18, a health student, said, âI think that, obviously, itâs too broad to say that all Trump supporters are awful people, but I think that a good portion of them donât value the rights that donât apply to them.â
Andrea Ramirez, a 22-year-old communications specialist from Phoenix, agreed with Bidenâs comment. âSomeone who is too invested in being a MAGA extremist? Yeah, I do agree with that comment,â she said. âI have met some people who are kind without knowing their political background. But you know, if I ended up discovering that, Iâm just like, 'Oh, OK, yeah, youâre weird,'" she added.
Biden has tried to clarify his comment on X, claiming he was referring to hateful rhetoric from Trump supports and writing: âEarlier today I referred to the hateful rhetoric about Puerto Rico spewed by Trumpâs supporter at his Madison Square Garden rally as garbage â which is the only word I can think of to describe it. His demonization of Latinos is unconscionable. Thatâs all I meant to say. The comments at that rally donât reflect who we are as a nation.â
Â
Walz declines to say whether there should be abortion limits in the third trimester
Walz declined to say this morning whether there should be abortion restrictions instituted for the third trimester of pregnancy, saying only that he and Harris want Roe v. Wade protections to be restored.
"The vice president has been very clear that making sure that we restore the right of Roe v. Wade, making sure that women and their health care providers, because these services are health care, making sure those decisions are made in the best interest of the health of the mother," Walz said in an interview on "CBS Mornings."
He continued, "Donald Trump gleefully talks about the beautiful thing that he's done, which means women having miscarriages in parking lots. I'm down here and was in Georgia yesterday where Amber Thurman died, and it was totally preventable had we not had a Donald Trump abortion ban. So we've been clear about that, restoration of Roe, that's what we're looking for."
Asked if there should be a federal abortion ban on the third trimester, Walz said, "'I'm going to go back again, Roe was very clear on what they did. We want the restoration of Roe, and that's the position we're taking."
The Roe ruling said that after the second trimester, the fetus would be considered viable and states could regulate or make abortions illegal in the interest of the potential life except when it was necessary to preserve the life or health of the mother.
Some Arizona voters arenât buying Kari Lakeâs stolen election claims â even when they believe Trumpâs
PHOENIX â Both Trump and Arizona GOP Senate candidate Kari Lake have repeatedly pushed false claims that their lost elections were stolen from them. But for some Arizona voters, only Trumpâs election denialism is resonating.Â
For John Giza, 66, a retired Walmart employee from Show Low, the idea that Trump lost the presidential election in 2020 is unfathomable. âI believe there was a great deal of rule changes because of Covid that allowed multiple duplicate voters and people who are not eligible,â Giza said outside a Trump rally in Prescott Valley on Oct. 13, parroting Trumpâs debunked claims.
But when it comes to Lakeâs failed bid for governor in 2022, when she lost to Democrat Katie Hobbs, Giza believes that election was legitimate. âI fought election fraud all my life. I donât think she didâ win, said Giza, who plans to vote for Lake.Â
Asked why he believes the 2022 governorâs race was legitimate but not the 2020 election, Giza said, âThey had already started working on the issues with people voting who werenât supposed to vote.â
In interviews with NBC News over the last few months, some Arizona voters who believe the 2020 election was rigged said they think Lakeâs 2022 loss was legitimate.Â
Inside NBC Newsâ Decision Desk: When will we know who won the presidential race?
Americans have two big questions as they head into another election with a deeply divided electorate: Itâs not not just who will win the presidency, but when will we know who has won the presidency.
In 2020, election week replaced election night: Joe Biden wasnât declared the winner until Saturday. This year, it could go either way. It may take as long as a week for the NBC News Decision Desk to project a presidential winner, or it could happen as early as Wednesday, even by Wednesday morning.Â
The truth is the Decision Desk cannot know until election night which scenario will unfold, regardless of how carefully we have analyzed the polls, early vote and other election-related data. The answer depends not only on how states count their votes, but also on the unknowable factor of how close the margins will be.
One thing is clear: The days of projecting a winner on election night itself are almost certainly over.
âDisruption and havocâ: Courtroom chaos of Trumpâs first term expected to return if he wins election
Speaking to a federal judge in July 2019, a flummoxed career Justice Department lawyer made a statement that summed up Trumpâs shoot-from-the-hip and often chaotic form of governance.
âThe tweet this morning was the first I had heard of the presidentâs position on this issue,â Joshua Gardner told Maryland-based Judge George Hazel.Â
Gardner was trying to explain to the judge why the Trump administration had completely reversed its legal position in a high-profile and ultimately doomed attempt to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census.
The previous week, the Supreme Court had issued a ruling that blocked the administration from seeking to add the question, and the Justice Department had appeared to concede that there was no way of revisiting the issue, with time running out for the census papers to be finalized.
But then Trump stepped in with one of his signature tweets, saying the administration was âabsolutely moving forwardâ with the plan.Â
The move put Justice Department lawyers in a quandary, led to the entire legal teamâs being replaced and still ended in defeat when, just days later, the administration backed down.
The incident was just one example of how Trumpâs impulsive leadership style and frequent controversial pronouncements played a complicating role in the administrationâs many court battles during his time in office. And there is little to suggest a second term would be any different.
Analysis: The 2024 election careens into its final, uncertain days
In many ways, the final week of a presidential campaign â for those of us who cover presidential politics â is akin to being in the eye of a hurricane. Thereâs an eerie calm that you know is about to disappear, but the anticipation is agonizing. Thereâs not a lot more to report or unearth. All you can do is wait (and continue to prepare).
That preparation includes running through every potential outcome and thinking about how the campaign might get there. For the purposes of this exercise, I want to essentially brain-dump everything Iâm thinking about how this campaign could end and let that serve as a guide for how Iâm watching the final days â and what Iâll be looking for on election night (or week).
For me, this endgame feels more like 2000 and 2004 than like any of former President Donald Trumpâs previous elections (2016 and 2020). Why do I say that? For one thing, the polls are indicating a much closer race this time than in 2016 or 2020. The last time the polls were collectively this close in the final month of a campaign was during George W. Bushâs two successful presidential elections.
And Iâd argue that in both of Bushâs elections, but 2000 especially, the campaigns ended in a sort of draw, in that both parties split the battleground states, rather than their being swept by one candidate. From 2008 through 2020, the winning candidate either swept or nearly swept the final six to eight battleground states.
This year, one could easily see the seven core battlegrounds splitting fairly evenly.
DNC runs full-page ads in 25 battleground state newspapers
In more than two dozen small newspapers across key battleground states today, voters will see a full-page ad from the Democratic Party reinforcing a central theme of Harrisâ speech last night on the Ellipse.
âUnhinged. Unstable. Unfit to lead,â the ad reads in bold text above Trumpâs mugshot. âUnfit to lead. Weâre not going back.â
The Democratic National Committee says the ads will run in 25 suburban and exurban newspapers, with more than half appearing in the midwestern battlegrounds Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. A spokesperson says itâs the largest coordinated small newspaper buy from the DNC in the last three presidential cycles.
âIn the final week of the election, Democrats are not leaving any stone unturned,â DNC Chair Jaime Harrison said in news release announcing what the party says is a five-figure buy. âReminding voters in key battleground states that their vote means the difference between chaos and revenge with Donald Trump, or a New Way Forward with Vice President Harris.â
The adâs messaging intentionally mirrors Harrisâ language from last night in a speech that her campaign called her âclosing message.â Standing on the Ellipse near the National Mall, with the White House behind her, Harris told a crowd of tens of thousands that she wanted to âturn the pageâ on Trump, who nearly four years ago âstood at this very spotâ and âsent an armed mob to the United States Capitol to overturn the will of the people in a free and fair election.â
âThis is someone who is unstable, obsessed with revenge, consumed with grievance and out for unchecked power,â Harris warned.
Progressive evangelical group rolls out ad narrated by George Clooney
In a new ad from the progressive evangelical group Vote Common Good, Oscar-winning actor George Clooney reminds male voters that âyou can vote any way you want â and no one will ever knowâ â including your Republican friends.
In the 30-second ad, first shared with NBC News, three men enter a polling place together, with one of them saying, âCâmon, boys, letâs make America great again,â nodding to Trumpâs campaign slogan. But when one of the men enters the ballot booth, he sees his young daughter nearby and decides to vote for Harris.
âWhat happens in the booth stays in the booth,â Clooney, a high-profile Democratic donor, says on the voiceover track. âVote Harris/Walz.â
Vote Common Good released a similar ad this week focused on women and narrated by Oscar-winning actor Julia Roberts, who describes polling places as âthe one place in America where women still have the right to choose.â
In that ad, a female voter in a Stars and Stripes baseball cap casts her vote for Harris. When she leaves the voting booth, a man who appears to be her husband asks: âDid you make the right choice?â She replies: âSure did, honey.â
Doug Pagitt, an evangelical pastor and the executive director of Vote Common Good, said the goal of both ads is to remind voters that they can break with Republican friends and family members.
âWe know the MAGA movement is putting increased pressure on people, but we also know the strong will of Americans when they stand in the voting booth,â Pagitt said.
Vote Common Good launched in 2018 as a progressive counterweight to Trumpâs political strength with conservative evangelical Christians, a demographic that voted for him in overwhelming numbers in 2016 and 2020.