Harris and Trump will both make a furious last-day push before Election
Day
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[November 04, 2024]
By BILL BARROW
WASHINGTON (AP) — A presidential campaign that has careened through a
felony trial, an incumbent president being pushed off the ticket and
multiple assassination attempts comes down to a final push across a
handful of states on the eve of Election Day.
Kamala Harris will spend all of Monday in Pennsylvania, whose 19
electoral votes offer the largest prize among the states expected to
determine the Electoral College outcome. The vice president and
Democratic nominee will visit working-class areas including Allentown
and end with a late-night Philadelphia rally that includes Lady Gaga and
Oprah Winfrey.
Donald Trump plans four rallies in three states, beginning in Raleigh,
North Carolina and stopping twice in Pennsylvania with events in Reading
and Pittsburgh. The Republican nominee and former president ends his
campaign the way he ended the first two, with a late Monday night event
in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
About 77 million Americans already have voted early, but Harris and
Trump are pushing to turn out many millions more supporters on Tuesday.
Either result on Election Day will yield a historic outcome.
A Trump victory would make him the first incoming president to have been
indicted and convicted of a felony, after his hush-money trial in New
York. He will gain the power to end other federal investigations pending
against him. Trump would also become the second president in history to
win non-consecutive White House terms, after Grover Cleveland in the
late 19th century.
Harris is vying to become the first woman, first Black woman and first
person of South Asian descent to reach the Oval Office, four years after
she broke the same barriers in national office by becoming President Joe
Biden’s second in command.
The vice president ascended to the top of the Democratic ticket after
Biden's disastrous performance in a June debate set into motion his
withdrawing from the race. That was just one of a series of convulsions
that have hit this year's campaign.
Trump survived by millimeters a would-be assassin's bullet at a rally in
Butler, Pennsylvania. His Secret Service detail foiled a second attempt
in September when a gunman had set up a rifle as Trump golfed at one of
his courses in Florida.
Harris, 60, has played down the historic nature of her candidacy, which
materialized only after the 81-year-old president ended his reelection
bid after his June debate against the 78-year-old Trump accentuated
questions about Biden's age.
Instead, Harris has pitched herself as a generational change, emphasized
her support for abortion rights after the Supreme Court's 2022 decision
ending the constitutional right to abortion services, and regularly
noted the former president's role in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S.
Capitol. Assembling a coalition ranging from progressives like Rep.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York to Republican former Vice President
Dick Cheney, Harris has called Trump a threat to democracy and late in
the campaign even embraced the critique that Trump is accurately
described as a “fascist.”
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Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris speaks
during a campaign rally at Jenison Field House on the campus of
Michigan State University, Sunday, Nov. 3, 2024, in East Lansing,
Mich. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
Heading into Monday, Harris has mostly stopped mentioning Trump. She
is promising to solve problems and seek consensus, while sounding an
almost exclusively optimistic tone reminiscent of her campaign's
opening days when she embraced “the politics of joy” and the
campaign theme “Freedom.”
“From the very start, our campaign has not been about being against
something, it is about being for something,” Harris said Sunday
evening at Michigan State University.
Trump, renewing his “Make America Great Again” and “America First”
slogans, has made his hard-line approach to immigration and
withering criticisms of Harris and Biden the anchors of his argument
for a second administration. He's hammered Democrats for an
inflationary economy, and he's pledged to lead an economic “golden
age,” end international conflicts and seal the U.S. southern border.
But Trump also has veered often into grievances over being
prosecuted after trying to overturn Biden's victory and repeatedly
denigrated the country he wants to lead again as a “failed nation.”
As recently as Sunday, he renewed his false claims that U.S.
elections are rigged against him, mused about violence against
journalists and said he “shouldn't have left” the White House in
2021 — dark turns that have overshadowed another anchor of his
closing argument: “Kamala broke it. I will fix it.”
The election is likely to be decided across seven states. Trump won
Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin in 2016 only to see them flip
to Biden in 2020. North Carolina, Georgia, Arizona and Nevada add
the Sun Belt swath of the presidential battleground map.
Trump won North Carolina twice and lost Nevada twice. He won Arizona
and Georgia in 2016 but saw them slip to Democrats in 2020.
Harris’ team has projected confidence in recent days, pointing to a
large gender gap in early voting data and research showing
late-deciding voters have broken her way. They also believe in the
strength of their campaign infrastructure. This weekend, the Harris
campaign had more than 90,000 volunteers helping turn out voters —
and knocked on more than 3 million doors across the battleground
states. Still, Harris aides have insisted she remains the underdog.
Trump's team has projected confidence, as well, arguing that the
former president's populist appeal will attract younger and
working-class voters across racial and ethnic lines. The idea is
that Trump can amass an atypical Republican coalition, even as other
traditional GOP blocks — notably college-educated voters — become
more Democratic.
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AP White House Correspondent Zeke Miller contributed to this report.
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