Most polls show Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump neck-and-neck in key states with just about two weeks to go.
With the election right around the corner, NBC News’ Tom Llamas outlines the potential pathways that both candidates have to a 2024 presidential win.
Demographic changes are why Harris is trying to consolidate gains with white college-educated voters, while Trump focuses on Black and Latino voters.
Vice President Kamala Harris responded to a question on NBC about whether she’s prepared if former President Trump refuses to concede the presidential election.
Election Day is just 14 days out, and Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are hitting the campaign trail to make their final pitches to voters. Follow for live updates.
By David Kirton, Casey Hall and Ellen Zhang GUANGZHOU, China (Reuters) - If Donald Trump wins next month's U.S. presidential election, Mike Sagan's toy-making company will halve its China supply chain within a year.
Recent polling, including new surveys out Tuesday, shows that 2024 may produce something never seen before in American history: The House could flip from Republican to Democratic control, while the Senate may flip from Democratic to Republican control.
Recent polls continue to show a close race between Vice President Harris and former President Trump with Election Day just two weeks away. The new poll from UMass Amherst/YouGov found that Harris has a narrow lead over the former president as the two candidates attempt to woo undecided voters.
Today, we have 433 drop boxes and 365 voting centers open statewide — the most we have ever had in any election,” Secretary of State Jena Griswold said in a Monday news conference
State and local election officials around the country are taking major steps to keep poll workers and voters safe amid a hostile political environment.
It’s a replay of the 2022 election in the 68th Assembly district, where Assemblymember Avelino Valencia, faces Republican Mike Tardif, a retired businessman. Valencia, D-Anaheim, first elected to the state Assembly in 2022, previously served as Anaheim councilmember.