October 7, 2024, presidential campaign news

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Updated 11:59 PM EDT, Mon October 7, 2024
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Polls show where Harris and Trump stand in swing states weeks before the election
03:06 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

? Final campaign sprint: There is less than a month until Election Day, and the presidential race remains extremely close as former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris make their pitches to voters in key states and ramp up ad spending.

? Anniversary of October 7 attacks: The candidates are marking the anniversary of the October 7 Hamas attacks on Israel, which gave way to a year of escalating war in the Middle East that has shaped the 2024 campaign. Harris commemorated the anniversary with a memorial tree planting at her residence, while Trump delivered remarks at a remembrance event in Florida.

? Media blitz: Harris and running mate, Gov. Tim Walz, are participating in a multitude of interviews this week as the Democratic ticket races to reach voters. In an interview with “60 Minutes” that aired Monday evening, Harris spoke about immigration, the war in Ukraine and Liz Cheney’s endorsement.

? Election resources: Voting early and by mail is?already underway?in much of the country, visit?CNN’s voter handbook?to see how to vote in your area and read up on the?2024 candidates and their proposals on key issues.

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Trump to hold rally Friday in Aurora, Colorado, after claiming violent gangs have taken over apartment buildings

Donald Trump participates in a town hall in Fayetteville, North Carolina on October 4.

Donald Trump is expected to hold a campaign rally on Friday in Aurora, Colorado. The former president has repeatedly mentioned Aurora?in remarks around immigration and claimed without evidence that the notorious Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua has been running amok in the city and terrorizing a handful of apartment buildings.

During the presidential debate last month, Trump name-checked the city: “Look at Aurora, in Colorado. They are taking over the towns. They’re taking over buildings. They’re going in violently,” pointing to the city as a harbinger of what unchecked migration could bring to towns across America.

Aurora police say gang influence is “isolated,” and the city of Aurora has countered that the real problem has been abusive housing conditions. Residents living in one of the buildings in question told CNN they were unaware of organized crime taking over.

CNN’s Caitlin Stephen Hu,?Rafael Romo?and?Belisa Morillo contributed to this report.

Country star Jason Aldean shares Trump video message during Georgia concert, urging attendees to vote

Country music star Jason Aldean shared a video message from former President Donald Trump urging attendees at his Sunday concert in Macon, Georgia, to vote.

“Well, that’s not all. I also had a friend of mine who wanted to try and be here today but unfortunately?couldn’t so he sent this instead for you guys,” Aldean told the crowd according to a?clip posted to X?by senior Trump campaign adviser Dan Scavino.

Trump then went on to say that the “most important election in the history of our country” is a month away. “It’s bad, and we’re going to change it around. And so, I just say November 5th,?get out and vote. You can vote early if you like, but the main thing is to vote,” Trump said.

“I wish I could be there myself and listen to that incredible music, but Jason has really been a true American patriot, one of the greatest entertainers of our time,” the former president added.

Aldean called Trump “my guy” before starting to perform his controversial song “Try That in a Small Town,” the clip showed.

Aldean, a vocal supporter of Trump, previously attended the Republican National Convention in July and sat with Trump in his VIP box.

Takeaways from Kamala Harris’ one-on-one interview with "60 Minutes"

Vice President Kamala Harris appears in an interview on "60 Minutes" that aired on Monday, October 7.

Vice President Kamala Harris?faced tough questions?about how she’d pay for her economic plans, whether Democrats were too slow to enact border security measures, how she’d confront Russia over its war in Ukraine and more in a wide-ranging?“60 Minutes” interview that aired Monday.

The Democratic presidential nominee’s sit-down with CBS comes amid a media blitz that is putting Harris in front of friendlier interviewers with more targeted audiences. Her interview on the popular “Call Her Daddy” podcast went live Sunday. On Tuesday she’ll visit ABC’s “The View,” sit down with Howard Stern and appear on CBS’ “The Late Show” with Stephen Colbert.

Here are five takeaways from Harris’ sit-down with “60 Minutes”:

Immigration: Harris maintained migration is a “long-standing problem” when asked about the Biden administration’s approach to immigration policies and refused to answer whether officials should’ve cracked down sooner.

Ukraine: Harris said she would not meet bilaterally with Russian President Vladimir Putin to negotiate a solution to end the war in Ukraine, saying, “Ukraine must have a say in the future of Ukraine.”

Cheney: The interview at one point featured the vice president in Ripon, Wisconsin — claimed to be the birthplace of the Republican Party — with former Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, who endorsed Harris and spoke at a rally in the key swing state last week.

Walz: Harris’ running mate was also featured in the interview. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, who has faced questions about past statements, said Harris told him to be more careful with his words.

Trump: Harris criticized Donald Trump for backing out of his “60 Minutes” interview. The former president’s campaign backed out after scheduling a sit-down at his Mar-a-Lago estate, CBS correspondent Scott Pelley said at the start of the nation’s most-watched newsmagazine’s broadcast.

Read more about the interview here.

Trump accuses the Department of Justice of setting "terrible precedent" by charging him with crimes

Former President Donald Trump accused the Biden administration and the Department of Justice of setting a “terrible precedent” because he has been charged with multiple crimes after leaving office.

In an interview taped last week that aired Monday, Fox News’ Laura Ingraham asked the former president how he’d restore faith in the US justice system, with the host adding, “A lot of people will say, ‘Well, he’s just going to do to them what he they did to him back at them.’”

“A lot of people say that’s what should happen, right?” Trump said.

When Ingraham raised Trump’s past comments that “my revenge will be success,” the former president said, “Well, I do believe that, but I will say this, they have started a terrible precedent.”

“We’ve never had this. We do have that in Third World countries, banana republics, a lot in South America, where they go after somebody politically that’s an opponent,” he said.

There is no evidence that President Joe Biden or Vice President Kamala Harris personally orchestrated any of the cases against Trump, and the former president has never presented evidence for that claim.

“But you’re not going to do that. When you get into office, you’re going to look at all your political enemies,” Ingraham said.

“No, I want to make this the most successful country in the world. That’s what I want to do,” Trump replied.

Liz Cheney says she would have endorsed Harris 4 years ago if she knew constitution would be “under threat”

Former Republican Congresswoman Liz Cheney appears in an interview  on “60 Minutes” with Vice President Kamala Harris following a campaign event in Ripon, Wisconsin.

Republican former Rep. Liz Cheney said she would have supported Vice President Kamala Harris four years ago if she knew then that “our Constitution is going to be under threat” ahead of November’s election.

Asked by “60 Minutes” — in an interview released Monday and taped shortly after Cheney formally endorsed the vice president at a campaign event in Wisconsin last week — if she would have thought she’d be campaigning alongside Harris four years ago, Cheney said she would have agreed to back Harris “because she’ll defend the rule of law.”

Cheney’s formal endorsement in Wisconsin last week was part of an aggressive push by the Harris campaign to sway moderate Republicans who disagree with former President Donald Trump. During her remarks, Cheney sharply criticized Trump for his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

Asked on “60 Minutes” whether she’d imagined campaigning alongside Cheney four years ago, Harris responded warmly.

“That’d be great,” Harris said, as both her and Cheney laughed.

“She’s really diplomatic,” Cheney joked.

Harris says she’s against meeting bilaterally with Putin to negotiate an end to war in Ukraine

Vice President Kamala Harris appears in an interview on “60 Minutes” that aired Monday, October 7.

Vice President Kamala Harris said she would not meet bilaterally with Russian President Vladimir Putin to negotiate a solution to end the war in Ukraine, saying that “Ukraine must have a say in the future of Ukraine.”

The vice president avoided answering whether she would support the effort to expand NATO to include Ukraine, instead saying it’s an issue she would “deal with if and when it arrives at that point.”

Harris met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky last month at the White House, where she reiterated her “unwavering” support for the country.

Harris says immigration is a "long-standing problem" in "60 Minutes" interview

Vice President Kamala Harris maintained that immigration is a “long-standing problem” and refused to answer whether the Biden administration should’ve cracked down on the issue sooner during an interview with “60 Minutes” that aired Monday.

From the outset, the Biden administration faced record migration in the Western Hemisphere, driven in part by the Covid-19 pandemic. Over the last three years, US officials grappled with migrant surges at the US southern border, prompting fierce criticism from Democrats and Republicans.

Asked why the administration didn’t crack down earlier, Harris cited an immigration bill proposed to Congress in early 2021 and slammed Republicans for tanking a recent bipartisan border bill after former President Donald Trump scuttled the measure.

“But there was an historic flood of undocumented immigrants coming across the border the first three years of your administration. As a matter of fact, arrivals quadrupled from the last year of President Trump. Was it a mistake to loosen the immigration policies as much as you did?” CBS’ Bill Whitaker asked.

“It’s a long-standing problem. And solutions are at hand. And from Day 1, literally, we have been offering solutions,” Harris said.

Pressed on the record number of border crossings and whether more should’ve been done sooner, Harris refused to answer, focusing instead on recent action that has resulted in a drastic drop in crossings and putting the onus on Congress to act.

“We need Congress to be able to act to actually fix the problem,” she said.

Trump says RNC is working to make voting "convenient" in hurricane-hit North Carolina

Former President Donald Trump appears in a pre-taped interview that aired on Monday, October 7, on Fox News.

Former President Donald Trump said his team and the Republican National Committee are working to make it “convenient” for people hit by Hurricane Helene in North Carolina to cast their ballots.

“Lara [Trump] is working on it,” Trump told Fox News in an interview that aired Monday, referring to the RNC co-chair and his daughter-in-law. “Other people are working on it, and we’re trying to make it convenient for them to, but they just lost their house.”

Election officials in Georgia,?North Carolina?and Florida are working quickly to ensure voters can still securely?cast early ballots, despite the?devastating impacts of Hurricane Helene?that have left people without power, water and cell service.

Trump said he expects to do “great” in North Carolina, arguing that the Biden-Harris administration’s response to the hurricane has been “horrific.”

He said that despite the Republican areas of the state getting “hit very, very hard,” he believes that “they’re going to go out and vote if they have to crawl to a voting booth.”

Some context: Trump over the last week has made several false claims related to the hurricane, including that the Biden-Harris administration’s response has received “universally” negative reviews. While the White House’s response has certainly received criticism, it has also been praised by various state and local leaders — including the?Republican?governors?of some of the affected states.

Walz says Harris told him to "be a little more careful" after repeated false statements

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz appears during an interview on “60 Minutes” on Monday, October 7,

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said in an interview aired Monday that Vice President Kamala Harris told him to “be a little more careful” with how he speaks.

When asked on “60 Minutes” what disagreements he and Harris have had since he became her running mate, Walz said the vice president “probably disagreed” with his phrasing on some things but did not elaborate.

“She said, ‘Tim, you know, you need to be a little more careful on how you say things,’ whatever it might be,” Walz said.

Since joining the campaign, Walz has faced scrutiny for falsely saying he carried assault weapons “in war,” wrongly suggesting his children were conceived through in vitro fertilization (Walz and his wife used a different fertility treatment), and saying that he was in Hong Kong during the 1989 pro-democracy protests in Tiananmen Square.

Despite the history of false statements, Walz said he believes he’s earned the trust of voters. When asked whether he can be trusted to tell the truth, the Minnesota governor said, “I think I can.”

“I will own up to being a knucklehead at times, but the folks closest to me know that I keep my word,” he said.

New Harris?digital?ad attacks Trump’s handling of natural disaster?relief

Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign is launching?a new digital ad campaign?featuring two former?Donald Trump administration officials criticizing the former president’s handling of natural disasters while in office.

The ad, titled “Withhold” and obtained first by CNN, is a response to Trump’s recent attacks on the federal response to Hurricane Helene, including?his false claims?that Harris spent “all her FEMA money”?on housing “illegal migrants” and unsubstantiated claims that the Biden administration and Democratic leaders abandoned certain Republican communities in North Carolina out of partisan bias. The ad comes as Hurricane Milton, a Category 5, is set to make landfall in Florida on Wednesday.

Olivia Troye, who served as an aide to former Vice President Mike Pence, and Kevin Carroll, a former Trump Homeland Security official, claim in the ad that Trump, while president, suggested wanting to withhold disaster relief funds from Democratic states.

“He would suggest not giving disaster relief to states that hadn’t voted for him,” Carroll says in the ad.

Both Carroll and Troye say in the ad that they plan to vote for Harris. Troye previously endorsed Harris and delivered a speech during the Democratic National Convention in which she sharply criticized Trump.

The Trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment.

Read more about the ad here.

Fact check: Walz makes false claim about state of economy when Trump left office

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz speaks at a rally at York Exposition Center UPMC Arena on October 2 in York, Pennsylvania.

Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz on Sunday made a false claim about the state of the economy when former President Donald Trump left office.

Walz?said?in an interview with Fox News that residents of Ohio, a state he visited Saturday, “understand when (Trump) left office, we had more people unemployed, percentage-wise, than the Great Depression.”

Facts First:?This is false. The?unemployment rate?was 6.4% when Trump left office in January 2021, down from a pandemic-era peak of 14.8% in April 2020. Conversely, the unemployment rate was?above 20% for years?of the Great Depression, which lasted from roughly?1929 to 1939, and it was?above 10%?for almost the entire 1930s.

Vice President Kamala Harris made a similar but more modest?false claim?during her debate with Trump in September, saying that “Donald Trump left us the worst unemployment since the Great Depression.” Even with the significant “since” qualifier, that wasn’t true; the unemployment rate was higher than 6.4% as recently as 2014.

The Harris-Walz campaign declined to comment.

Vance says he is worried about voter motivation following Hurricane Helene

Sen. JD Vance speaks during a vice presidential debate hosted by CBS News, with Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz on Tuesday in New York.

Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance said he is worried about voter motivation following the devastation caused by Hurricane Helene, especially in places such as North Carolina.

“I think that we’re actually in a good shape for what we need to ensure that people are able to vote in North Carolina. What I worry about more is actually motivation,” the Ohio senator said Monday on “The Vince Coglianese Show.”

“You’ve got hundreds of families who are grieving a loved one, even those who are not in quite that bad of a shape, they’re rebuilding their homes. Everything that they have and possessed has been destroyed,” he added.

Some background: Election officials in Georgia,?North Carolina?and Florida have been working to ensure voters can still securely?cast early ballots, despite the impacts of Hurricane Helene?that in some cases left them without power, water and cell service.

And North Carolina’s election board unanimously passed a resolution Monday to?grant the counties most affected by Hurricane Helene?flexibility to change polling places, schedules and other aspects of voting.

Harris slams Trump for spreading misinformation in wake of Hurricane Helene

US Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris speaks after Iran launched around 200 missiles on Israel, at the Josephine Butler Parks Center in Washington, DC on October 1, 2024. In her remarks, Harris pledged 'unwavering' commitment to Israel's security. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP) (Photo by BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)

Vice President Kamala Harris criticized former President Donald Trump on Monday for pushing “mis- and disinformation” in the wake of Hurricane Helene.

Harris said Trump has been spreading misinformation about what resources are available to people who survived Helene, saying that it is “extraordinarily irresponsible. It’s about him, it’s not about you.”

On Friday, Trump falsely claimed?“a billion dollars was stolen from FEMA to use it for illegal migrants.” Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell said Sunday that the idea FEMA funds have gone to immigrants or that Republican states are being ignored is “frankly ridiculous and just plain false.”

Trump also falsely claimed the federal government is giving only $750 to people who lost their homes. In an attempt to make clear those payments are just a first step and one kind of assistance, FEMA launched a?special website to combat?such rumors.

Harris also lambasted Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who CNN reported earlier Monday declined to return calls from her office in the aftermath of Helene. She said “playing political games” is “just utterly irresponsible, and it is selfish.”

DeSantis told reporters in Florida on Monday he didn’t know he’d missed calls from the vice president. “No, I didn’t know she called me. I saw that, but I was not aware of that,”?the Republican governor?said at a news conference in Tallahassee.

China has targeted at least 10 down-ballot US races with influence operations, intelligence shows

Chinese operatives are trying to shape at least 10 US congressional, state or local election races with covert social media campaigns and other activities, a United States intelligence official told reporters Monday.

The Chinese influence operations are focused on political candidates “perceived by Beijing to threaten its core interests, especially in relation to Taiwan,” the official from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence said at a news briefing. Chinese operatives have been “denigrating particular candidates with a range of social media and other online influence activities,” the official said.

Unlike Russia or Iran, China has not mounted a concerted effort to influence the presidential contest between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris, US intelligence officials said. Russia is once again trying to boost Trump’s candidacy, while Iran prefers Harris, according to US intelligence.

The new US intelligence assessment suggests that Beijing is also not alone in its focus on down-ballot races.

Russia has used a “wide range of influence actors” to try to influence congressional candidates, with a focus on undermining US aid to Ukraine, the official said. Additionally, Cuba “almost certainly has considered influence operations targeting some candidates,” the official added.

Harris reflects on humanitarian toll in Israel and Gaza on anniversary of October 7 attacks

Vice President Kamala Harris, right, and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff plant a tree to mark the one year anniversary of the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks on Israel, at the Vice President's residence at the US Naval Observatory in Washington, DC, on October 7.

Vice President Kamala Harris delivered remarks from her residence at the Naval Observatory on Monday, marking the one-year anniversary of Hamas’ attacks on Israel by planting a pomegranate tree, which is often used to mark Rosh Hashana, the Jewish new year.

In her Monday remarks, Harris acknowledged the difficult balance the Biden-Harris administration has sought to walk, calling for the release of hostages still being held by Hamas while expressing concern over the humanitarian toll the conflict has taken in Gaza.

The Democratic vice presidential nominee pledged “to always ensure that Israel has what it needs to defend itself” and that “I will never stop fighting for the release of all the hostages, including the American citizens living and deceased.”

Harris was joined Monday by her husband, Doug Emhoff, who’s made fighting antisemitism a central focus of his portfolio as second gentleman. In his remarks, he said the vice president “is the one who encouraged me to use my platform I have to fight against antisemitism and hate.”

Fact check: Walz falsely says Trump is "asking for a nationwide abortion ban"

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, the Democratic vice presidential nominee, made a false claim over the weekend about former President Donald Trump’s stance on abortion.

In a Sunday interview on Fox News, Walz was asked about Minnesota’s abortion law. After discussing that subject, he pivoted to Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, saying, “Donald Trump’s asking for a nationwide abortion ban.”

Facts First:?Walz’s claim is false. Trump is not “asking for” a nationwide abortion ban. Trump has?said?since the spring that he wants abortion policy to be set by each individual state, not set by the federal government for the whole country. Trump also promised last week to veto any federal abortion ban that Congress passed.

As a 2016 presidential candidate, Trump?did support?a federal abortion ban at 20 weeks of pregnancy (with exceptions for rape, incest and when the life of the mother is at risk), and he reiterated his support for that policy as president. But he is not supporting a federal ban during his current campaign.

Trump?hinted?in March that he might announce support for a federal ban at 15 weeks. Instead, however, he?announced in April?that he wanted abortion policy left to the states.

He has held to that position since. And he has repeatedly?said?since April that he would not sign a federal ban; he?did so again?during last month’s presidential debate.

The Harris-Walz campaign declined to comment.

Vance: "We want to give Israel the right and the ability to finish what Hamas started"

Sen. JD Vance speaks during a Philos Project October 7th Memorial Rally at the Washington Monument on October 7 in Washington, DC.

Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance vowed that a second Trump administration would give Israel the right to “finish what Hamas started” in remarks at an event in Washington, DC, marking the one-year anniversary of Hamas’ October 7 attacks on Israel.

Vance accused the Biden-Harris administration of doing nothing to bring Israeli hostages home and said the only way the conflict ends is if Hamas “gives up its arms” and releases the hostages.

“It is disgraceful that we have an American president and vice president who haven’t done a thing. Vice President Harris, our message is: Bring them home. Use your authority to help bring them home. We can do it. We just need real leadership,” Vance said.

In a statement today, Biden said, “My Administration?has?negotiated for the safe release of more than 100 hostages, including Americans. We will never give up until we bring all of the remaining hostages home safely.”

The Biden administration has worked for months to reach a ceasefire and hostage release deal, but the talks have yielded only limited progress.

Trump marks anniversary of October 7 attacks with New York visit, Florida event

The family of Edan Alexander pray alongside former President Donald Trump at Ohel Chabad Lubavitch on October 7 in New York City.

Former President Donald Trump visited Ohel Chabad-Lubavitch in Queens, New York, on Monday, the first anniversary of the October 7 Hamas attacks in Israel.

The ohel is the final resting place of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the leader of Judaism’s Chabad-Lubavitch movement who died in 1994.

Later, Trump will host an October 7 remembrance event at 6:30 p.m. ET at his Doral resort in Miami.

Florida will not extend Monday voter registration deadline ahead of Hurricane Milton

A Supervisor and Elections office staff member runs sample voting ballots through voting machines during a test run at the Supervisor of Elections Office in Tampa, Florida, on October 3, 2024.

Florida is not planning to extend its voter registration deadline as parts of the state brace for Hurricane Milton and continue to recover from the devastation caused by Hurricane Helene, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis said Monday, rejecting calls from voting rights groups to provide more time to residents in the storm-battered state.

Though the governor is urging residents in the Tampa Bay area to heed evacuation orders ahead of Milton’s expected landfall Wednesday, he said there’s “nothing inhibiting” unregistered voters from registering before the Monday deadline.

Voting rights groups have for days been calling for the governor to extend Monday’s deadline until October 15. A letter sent by more than two dozen organizations to DeSantis last week with that demand was sent again to him Monday, according to?the League of Women Voters of Florida, one of the groups behind the push.

“It is unfair to disenfranchise newly arrived Floridians, people who have just reached the legal age to vote, and others who need to register to vote in Florida due to the impacts of natural disasters that are beyond their control,” the group said in a?statement Monday.

CNN?previously reported?that in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, which had a devastating impact on parts of Florida, Georgia and North Carolina, election officials in those places have begun to work quickly to ensure voters can still securely cast early ballots.

Candidates in key Senate races announce large third-quarter fundraising hauls

Sen. Sherrod Brown speaks at a campaign rally on October 5 in Cincinnati.

Candidates in several key 2024 Senate races have announced large third-quarter fundraising hauls, offering a snapshot of their resources heading into the critical final stretch of the election.

In Ohio, Sen. Sherrod Brown — among Democrats’ most vulnerable incumbents this year —?announced?a blockbuster third-quarter fundraising haul of $30.6 million. It’s a quarterly record for Ohio federal candidates, and a crucial injection of resources for what’s become the?most expensive?congressional race on record by advertising.

Brown’s GOP opponent, Bernie Moreno, has not yet announced his third-quarter fundraising total. But Moreno, with a net worth in the tens of millions, has the advantage of being able to inject some of his personal fortune into his campaign to keep pace with Brown.

In Arizona, Rep. Ruben Gallego, the Democratic Senate nominee, also announced a large third-quarter haul of $21.7 million, more than double his Q1 haul. Gallego is well-positioned to continue outraising GOP opponent Kari Lake, who has not yet announced her third-quarter fundraising totals.

In Michigan, home to another key open-seat race, Rep. Elissa Slotkin?announced?a strong Q3 fundraising total of $18 million, the most the Democratic nominee has raised in a quarter for her Senate bid. Her GOP opponent, former Rep. Mike Rogers, who has also trailed Slotkin in fundraising throughout their race, has not yet announced his Q3 totals.

Meanwhile,?Texas Sen. Ted Cruz announced a third-quarter fundraising total of $21 million, another strong haul in a race that’s been flooded with campaign money. Cruz’s Democratic challenger, Rep. Colin Allred, is a powerhouse fundraiser himself and had, through September, significantly outspent Cruz on advertising. Allred’s campaign has not yet announced his Q3 totals.

Trump suggests undocumented immigrants who commit murder have “bad genes”

Former President Donald Trump listens to a question from the audience during a town hall-style campaign event at the Crown Center Arena October 4 in Fayetteville, North Carolina.

Donald Trump suggested Monday that undocumented immigrants who commit murder have “bad genes,” in the latest example of the former president using dehumanizing rhetoric as he tries to stoke fears about those in the country illegally.

In a radio interview on “The Hugh Hewitt Show,” Trump?again distorted statistics on immigration and crime?to attack Vice President Kamala Harris as he falsely claimed she was “allowing people to come through an open border, 13,000 of which were murderers.”

“You know, now, a murderer, I believe this – it’s in their genes. And we got bad, a lot of bad genes in our country right now,” Trump said.

CNN has reached out to the Trump campaign for comment.

Some background: The comments marked the latest instance of Trump using dehumanizing and disparaging rhetoric as he targets undocumented immigrants and vows mass deportations if he’s reelected. Trump has?made curbing illegal immigration a central part of his 2024 campaign message and regularly uses degrading language when describing undocumented immigrants.

Last fall, Trump?said in an interview that undocumented immigrants were “poisoning the blood of our country,” using language that is often employed by White supremacists and nativists in comments that drew rebuke from civil rights groups.?Trump has also spread?false rumors?about Haitian migrants eating pets in Springfield, Ohio.

White House response: The White House forcefully condemned the?comments?from Trump later Monday, calling the former president’s language “hateful” and “disgusting.”

“That type of language is hateful, it’s disgusting, it’s inappropriate and has no place in our country,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters.

This post has been updated with a response from the White House.

Walz visits exhibit honoring victims killed at Israeli music festival on October 7

Tim Walz on Monday visited a Los Angeles installation honoring the victims of the October 7, 2023, terrorist attacks in Israel who were killed while attending a music festival, according to reporters traveling with the Minnesota governor.

Walz, who is in Los Angeles for interviews and private meetings, commemorated the one-year anniversary of the attack by visiting the Nova Exhibition, an exhibit retelling the events at the Nova music festival in southern Israel one year ago.

The Democratic vice presidential nominee took a tour of the exhibition, which includes remnants of the festival in the wake of the attack, including a “Lost and Found” section featuring personal artifacts of festival attendees.

North Carolina board passes resolution to give counties damaged by Hurricane Helene more voting flexibility

Absentee ballots are prepared to be mailed at the Wake County Board of Elections on September 17, in Raleigh, North Carolina.

North Carolina’s election board unanimously passed a resolution Monday to grant the counties most affected by Hurricane Helene flexibility to change polling places, schedules and other aspects of voting.

Elections infrastructure and postal service in 13 counties “remains severely disrupted” due to the storm’s damage, the election board’s general counsel, Paul Cox, said at a?meeting?Monday. Cox explained that the resolution requires county election boards vote on how to implement the permitted changes.

The resolution allows for those counties to add or remove early voting sites, adjust the schedules for those sites, permit displaced voters to drop off absentee ballots at another county boards of election where they have relocated and further empowers “multipartisan assistance teams” to help voters with absentee ballots, among other measures, Cox said.

Karen Bell, the executive director of the elections board, said all county offices are now open in North Carolina, though she said challenges persist.

“Many of the counties still are facing personal struggles, working in our county offices in these affected counties without power or water in their homes still, maybe even having difficulty with cell service,” Bell said.

Bell said the state remains committed to open early voting on October 17, as planned.

“It may look a little different in these affected counties, but we fully intend to offer early voting,” she said.

Walz marks October 7 anniversary by repeating calls for ceasefire and hostage release deal

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz marked the one year anniversary of the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks in Israel on Monday by reaffirming Israel’s right to self-defense in the wake of the attacks while reiterating his call for a ceasefire and hostage release deal that would ensure Israel’s security and grant Palestinian people “their right to dignity, freedom, and self-determination.”

The Democratic vice presidential candidate also strongly condemned the Hamas attacks and expressed solidarity with American Jews in the wake of the attack in a statement released by the campaign.

“Today, I join Vice President Harris, President Biden, and all Americans to again condemn Hamas’s brutality and reaffirm our unwavering commitment to Israel’s security and to the safety and security of the American Jewish community,” Walz said in the statement.

“Our prayers are with the loved ones of the victims as we mark one year since the deadliest day for the Jewish people since the Holocaust. The people of Israel must never again face the terror that Hamas caused on October 7,” he added.

Walz met with families of Americans held hostage by Hamas last month.

Voting will proceed in North Carolina’s Buncombe County despite Helene’s devastation, election official says?

The Arts District, along the French Broad River, in Asheville, North Carolina, begins clean up during the aftermath of flooding caused by the remnants of Hurricane Helene.

Despite the devastation left by Hurricane Helene in western North Carolina, the local official in charge of elections in the Asheville area reassured citizens Monday that Buncombe County is prepared to move forward with voting in the 2024 election.

The county elections office doesn’t have running water, but it has power, and Duncan said the office would be open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. local time. She encouraged volunteer poll workers to contact the office.

“Our office and equipment were spared. We’re working with our emergency team and the State Board of Elections to strategize and modify plans,” Duncan said. “We are assessing what voting locations are available.”

Early voting begins in North Carolina on October 17, and absentee by mail is happening now.

Absentee voting is available to any North Carolinian but must be requested by October 29.

Visit?CNN’s voter handbook?to see how to vote in your area.

Trump’s proposals would add $4 trillion more to national debt than Harris', study finds

A Metrobus approaches a bus shelter at 18th and K St's NW where a poster and electronic billboard displays the current US national debt on August 8 in Washington, DC.

Both Vice President?Kamala Harris?and former President?Donald Trump?are rolling out ever-growing lists of promises to voters — from making housing and health care more affordable to supporting manufacturers to providing tax relief to millions of Americans.

But?those proposals?come with hefty price tags, and the candidates have not laid out how they would fully cover the costs, a new analysis has found. As a result, the national debt would soar by trillions of dollars more regardless of who wins the election, further compounding the country’s fiscal problems.

Harris’ plan would boost the debt by?$3.5 trillion over the next decade, while Trump’s platform would cause it to spike by $7.5 trillion, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget’s report, released Monday.

The priciest item in the vice president’s platform is extending the?2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act?provisions for those making less than $400,000 a year — which would cost $3 trillion, according to the committee. The law’s individual income and estate tax provisions are expiring at the end of 2025.

That’s followed by expanding the?child tax credit?and earned income tax credit, which come with a $1.4 trillion price tag, and extending the?enhanced Affordable Care Act premium subsidies, which adds $550 billion.

Trump wants to extend nearly all the provisions of the 2017 tax cuts law, one of the signature achievements in his first term. But he would add to the price tag with certain other measures, such as eliminating the $10,000?cap on state and local tax deductions?and restoring companies’ ability to immediately deduct investments in equipment and research. Altogether, this would cost?nearly $5.4 trillion.

Trump has also promised to end?taxes on tips,?overtime pay?and?Social Security benefits, as well as reduce the?corporate tax rate?to 15% for domestic manufacturers. These measures would reduce revenue by $3.8 trillion.

Read more here about he proposals.

Trump says he thinks he "should get 100% of the Jewish vote"

Former President Donald Trump said Monday, the anniversary of the October 7 attacks against Israel, that he thought he should get “100% of the Jewish vote” and argued, “nobody’s done more for the Jewish people than I have.”

Trump called in to the radio show “Sid & Friends” in the morning and again claimed the attacks “would’ve never happened” if he were president.

“Nobody’s done more for the Jewish people than I have. Nobody’s done more for Israel as a president, maybe beyond being a president,” Trump said.

Trump said of he thought in Israel, “I could run for prime minister, although Bibi’s doing a lot better right now, I think he’s doing pretty good, maybe not.”

Trump also said Monday he thought Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was “not listening at all” to Biden, as the president counsels Israel to take a proportional response to Iran launching ballistic missiles at Israel and not strike Iran’s nuclear sites.

“What you have to do with them is sort of listen to it, because you always have to listen to a president, and then you have to do whatever you want,” Trump said in an interview with Hugh Hewitt as he again criticized Biden’s position that Israel shouldn’t strike the nuclear sites.

Trump said he thought Netanyahu, “was held up a little bit because psychologically, you know, you have a president, he probably maybe would’ve been further along, but he’s pretty far along. He’s not listening at all, you know that, they don’t even speak.”

This post has been updated with more of Trump’s remarks.

Supreme Court Justices are back on the bench today and are bracing for possible post-election mayhem

The afternoon sun shines on the US Supreme Court on August 25, in Washington, DC.

The Supreme Court returns to its bench Monday with an agenda that?includes cases on guns, pornography and?transgender medical?care,?as the justices brace for a slew of last-minute election fights and a new presidential administration that could drag the court deeper into politics.

Of the 40 appeals the high court has agreed to decide so far, only a handful are the kind of screaming political controversies that dominated its caseload in recent years. While the lineup may allow the justices to keep their heads down for now, there are signs the relative calm may be short-lived.

A contested election between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump could thrust the 6-3 conservative majority into a political maelstrom at a moment when?polls show trust in the court?near record lows. A new president could reshuffle the cases already granted. And Trump is all but guaranteed to resurface at the Supreme Court in coming weeks to clarify the sweeping criminal immunity?the court bestowed on him in July.

All of that will be on the minds of the nine justices when they take their seats Monday for their first oral arguments of a new term that will run until next summer.

“As matters stand now, this feels like the court is keeping its powder dry in case the election explodes,” Carter Phillips, a veteran Supreme Court litigator, told CNN early last week. “Not a lot of cases and very few high-profile ones.”

Read more about the Supreme Court’s coming workload?here.

Harris will mark anniversary of October 7 attacks with tree planting at her DC residence

RIPON, WISCONSIN - OCTOBER 3: Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a rally at Ripon College on October 3 in Ripon, Wisconsin.

Vice President Kamala Harris will mark Monday’s one-year anniversary of the October 7 attacks in Israel at her Naval Observatory residence, where, along with second gentleman Doug Emhoff, she’ll plant a memorial tree, according to a White House official.

Second families have traditionally planted trees on the grounds of the vice president’s residence. Monday’s planting of a pomegranate tree — which, among other things, represents hope and righteousness in Judaism — will mark the first for Harris and Emhoff while they’ve been at the residence, according to the official.

The escalating violence in the Middle East has been one of the thorniest issues for Harris as she’s taken over the Democratic ticket this year. Arab American advocates and leaders have pushed for the vice president to distance herself from President Joe Biden’s Israel policy, including?during a meeting in Michigan on Friday.

Harris has maintained that Israel has a right to defend itself while also?acknowledging the heightened emotions?surrounding the?humanitarian crisis?in the region.

She’s also previously spotlighted the violence that unfolded on October 7. In June, she?hosted a White House event?focused in part on the Israel-Hamas war?as part of an effort to highlight conflict-related sexual violence.

Harris and Emhoff, who is Jewish, are also expected to deliver remarks to reporters Monday. The vice president will reflect on October 7 and reaffirm her commitment to the security of Israel and of the Jewish people, the official said.

Vance claims Harris has pursued policies that have prolonged Israel's war in Gaza

Sen. JD Vance speaks during a campaign event in Lindale, Georgia on Friday.

Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance claimed that Vice President Kamala Harris has pursued policies that have prolonged Israel’s war on Hamas and criticized her inability to call Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a close ally of the United States.

“If you actually want peace in the region, if you want to preserve civilian life. And most importantly, if you want to enable Israel to build the kind of long-term security for itself in the region, then you have to support policies that will get the war over as quickly as possible,” Vance told Fox News.

“On things like holding back precision guided weapons that would both destroy Hamas, the bad guys, but also minimize civilian casualties, Kamala Harris has sort of been at the forefront of threatening to stab our allies in the back, and because of it, we have a war that has gone on for much longer than it should have,” he continued.

Vance said he believed the conflict would have been over “months ago” if the Israelis were able to “do what they do best,” but instead Iran is emboldened and encouraged by the “weak leadership” of the vice president.

Harris told “60 Minutes” the US and Netanyahu have “an important alliance,” but would not call him a close ally.

Harris and Biden released statements this morning commemorating the anniversary of the October 7 attack and reiterated their support of Israel, even as they called for a ceasefire and hostage deal to end the fighting in Gaza, and a diplomatic solution to Israel’s conflict with Hezbollah.

In "60 Minutes" interview, Harris discusses funding economic plan via raises in long-term capital gains tax

Vice President Kamala Harris discussed how she plans to fund her economic plan, which includes adding tax relief for small businesses?and a tax proposal that’s meant to target the wealthy.

Pushed by journalist Bill Whitaker on how her economic agenda would be funded, Harris pointed to hiking taxes for big corporations and wealthier Americans. Harris?announced last month?that she would raise the long-term capital gains tax rate to 28%, up from the current 20%, for those who earn $1 million or more.

Harris’ proposals would require congressional approval, which would be a significant hurdle if Capitol Hill remains as divided as it is currently.

Harris’ plan, which she refers to as an “Opportunity Economy,” also includes a federal price ban on price gouging, an expansion of the child tax credit, housing support, affordable healthcare and cutting taxes on tips.

North Carolina emerges as top advertising battleground, with GOP set to seize edge in Pennsylvania

With four weeks and a day to go before votes are counted, Democrats continue to lead Republicans in overall advertising for the presidential race, though the contest is closer in the swing states.

In the first week of the final month, North Carolina is emerging as a top battleground; and looking ahead, Republicans have seized a narrow lead in future bookings in the critical battleground state of Pennsylvania.

Meanwhile, both campaigns are?shifting the issues?they are highlighting in their ads.

During the first week of October (October 1 – October 7), Democrats spent a total of $75.6 million on ads, while Republicans spent about $46.2 million, according to AdImpact data, for a total of more than $121 million in presidential ad spending in just seven days, including the campaigns and their allies.

It was closer across only the battlegrounds, with Democrats leading by about $53.8 million to $43 million, with the party’s overall lead padded by about $22 million on national ads and digital ads not in the swing states.

Analysis: The election is just weeks away. Here's what to watch out for in this final campaign stretch

It’s the final month of the?2024 presidential election, an affair that has felt bonkers for months.

Americans witnessed the sitting Democratic president drop out of the race, the Republican nominee narrowly escape assassination attempts and the rise of the first woman of color on a national ticket.

Where are the candidates spending money?

Money isn’t everything in politics, but it’s certainly not nothing. Where the campaigns — and the super PACs that support them — spend funds is, if nothing else, a good indicator of where they see opportunity.

CNN’s David Wright who tracks spending, has noted how the Harris campaign focused her spending in the first week of October on the critical “blue wall” states of Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin. Trump has been looking to the Sun Belt, but also spent the most on ads in Pennsylvania, proving it’s a linchpin to both sides’ strategies.

How are the two sides getting out the vote?

The policy proposals have been rolled out, and the candidates have tried to define each other. Now it’s time to get voters to the polls or the mailbox.

Voting early and by mail is?already underway?in much of the country, although early voting is not expected to reach the same level as it did in the Covid-19 pandemic election of 2020. Trump remains a mail-voting skeptic, but Republicans are embracing the practice in key states this year in an effort to keep pace with Democrats.

Who is on the campaign trail?

Harris has supporters to the left and supporters to the right, from popular high-profile Democrats like former President Barack Obama to disaffected anti-Trump Republicans like former Rep. Liz Cheney.

Trump will get bold-face support from the world’s richest man, Elon Musk, but overall has fewer surrogates to turn to.

Read more here on what to watch for.

Harris calls for ceasefire and hostage deal as she marks one year since October 7 attacks

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks to the press after meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the Vice President's ceremonial office at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building in Washington, DC, on July 25.

Vice President Kamala Harris and President Joe Biden marked one year since the deadly October 7 attacks in Israel with statements commemorating the “solemn” anniversary and calling for a ceasefire and hostage deal.

“We will not stop working to achieve a ceasefire deal in Gaza that brings the hostages home, allows for a surge in humanitarian aid to ease the suffering on the ground, assures Israel’s security, and ends this war. Israelis and Palestinians alike deserve to live in security, dignity, and peace,” Biden wrote in a written statement.

He also said: “On this solemn anniversary, let us bear witness to the unspeakable brutality of the?October 7th?attacks but also to the beauty of the lives that were stolen that day.”

Harris and Biden also both called for a diplomatic solution amid the now-expanding war between Hezbollah and Israel.?And both leaders reiterated US support for Israel’s right to defend itself in the face of attacks by Iran.

And the vice president said she is “devastated” by the loss and pain felt since the October 7 attack, which launched the war in Gaza.

“We will not forget, and we will not lose faith. And in honor of all those souls we lost on October 7, we must never lose sight of the dream of peace, dignity, and security for all,” she wrote.

Harris and Trump are shifting their TV advertising with just one month until Election Day

The campaigns of?Kamala Harris?and?Donald Trump?made strategic adjustments to the content of their TV advertisements between August and September, a CNN analysis of ad tracking data?shows, amid a contentious fight to define the transformed race?for the White House.

Emphasis of key issues, including abortion, immigration and crime, shifted, with the Harris campaign moving away from defensive ads that stressed the vice president’s law enforcement background, and the Trump campaign leaning into economic appeals – the top issue for voters in this election.

The ad tracking firm AdImpact catalogs the issues that are referenced in broadcast TV campaign ads and tracks the amount of money behind those spots. Comparing changes over the past two months illustrates how each campaign is tailoring its message, and it shows the share of campaign resources spent highlighting various issues.

Keep reading here about the candidates’ ad spending and see below how they compare.

Here's how the candidates are marking the anniversary of the October 7 attacks today

Today marks one year since Hamas launched deadly attacks in Israel, and the 2024 candidates are commemorating the day with a series of events.

Former President Donald Trump will be hosting a remembrance event at 6:30 p.m. ET at the Trump National Doral this evening in Florida, where “Jewish community leaders will gather to honor the 1,200 lives lost after being taken hostage and killed on that fateful morning one year ago. “The event will also remember the victims of antisemitic violence that has continued to afflict communities worldwide since that tragic day,” according to the former president’s campaign website.

Trump’s running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, is set to speak at a memorial rally and march in Washington, DC.

Vice President Kamala Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff will plant a memorial tree and deliver remarks at 4 p.m. ET on the grounds of the vice president’s residence in Washington, DC.

At 8 p.m. ET, CBS’ “60 Minutes” will air a primetime special featuring a taped interview with Harris.

Analysis: How the October 7 attacks became a turning point for US politics

After rushing to comfort Israel as it grieved the worst attack on Jews since the Holocaust,?President Joe Biden?last year pledged America would stand with the country in its dark days and the good ones he insisted would come.

At the time, no one knew the international and domestic political consequences of his promise. An ensuing war has proved the existential role the US plays in Israel’s survival but also severely strained the alliance. It has also exposed and widened some of America’s most profound political divides ahead of an already tumultuous election between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President?Donald Trump?next month.

The October 7, 2023, Hamas terror attacks, which killed 1,200 people, did not just transform the Middle East’s strategic balance as Israel confronted Hamas, then Hezbollah, and traded fire with their sponsor, its archenemy, Iran.?Like the September 11 attacks in 2001, the Hamas horror set off a chain of events that affected countless lives, unleashing political disturbances thousands of miles away.

Militarily, the United States and its allies have twice staged unprecedented operations to protect Israel from a barrage of missiles and drones from Iran. The US has also repeatedly bombed Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen who have launched attacks on international shipping in the Red Sea in the wake of October 7. Amid fears in Washington of a full-on Middle East war, the vulnerability of US troops in the region was tragically driven home in January when three US service personnel?were killed in an attack?on a base in Jordan.

At home, the fallout of the Hamas attacks has coincided with the toxic politics of a presidential election year.?Campus protests?underscored the splits in the Democratic Party, which soon saw unprecedented political upheaval with Biden abandoning his reelection bid and backing Harris just months before the election. In the new race between Harris and Trump, events in the Middle East continue to set off reverberations that could influence the outcome of the election. A horrifying?wave of antisemitism, meanwhile, has left many Jews wondering whether they are safe in America.

Read Collinson’s full analysis on how the attacks have shaped US politics.