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Harris and Trump campaign in battleground states in final sprint to election

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Updated 7:40 PM EDT, Mon October 21, 2024
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Cheney: Unprecedented number of Trump's former staff say he's unfit for office
02:20 - Source: CNN

What we're covering

? Election Day countdown:?Vice President?Kamala Harris?and former President?Donald Trump are campaigning through key battleground states today as they make their final pitches to voters in the 15-day sprint to?Election Day.

? On the campaign trail: Harris joined GOP former Rep. Liz Cheney in Blue Wall states —Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin — to court undecided independents and Republicans. Trump is holding three events in North Carolina, including visiting areas impacted by the hurricane, a rally on the economy and remarks to faith leaders.

??Early voting underway:?Early in-person voting kicked off in Texas today and several other states. Read?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. Send?us your questions about the election here.

? En?espa?ol: Sigue nuestra cobertura de la campa?a presidencial aquí.

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Cheney tells Republicans to "vote your conscience" in pitch for Harris in Michigan

Former Rep. Liz Cheney urged Republicans and others who may not typically back Democrats to “vote your conscience” during her second swing state stop on Monday with Vice President Kamala Harris.

At a town hall in Oakland County, Michigan, Harris said she’s seen “a lot” of Republicans go up to Cheney and thank her, though “they may not be doing it publicly.” The vice president praised Cheney for showing “extraordinary courage” since January 6.

“There’s something, an undercurrent that is violent in terms of the language and the tenor, and for her to show the courage she has shown is extraordinary,” she said.

Cheney said it “wasn’t scary at all” for her to decide to publicly endorse Harris and speak out against Trump because the former president is “doing everything he can to try to get people to forget about what he did” on January 6.

Highlighting Trump’s comments about potentially having to mobilize the military to deal with “the enemy from within,” in reference to the political left, Cheney said, “the response that we all have should not be to be so afraid we don’t act. It should be vote him out.”

What Trump and Harris are saying to voters in battleground states on Monday

Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump campaigned through key battleground states on Monday.

Harris was joined by former GOP Rep. Liz Cheney at a series of events while Trump was in North Carolina.

Here’s what they have been telling voters today:

Trump

Harris

  • In an event with Cheney in Pennsylvania, Harris vowed that her administration “will not be a continuation” of President Joe Biden’s.
  • She said that voters who find Trump’s antics and personality humorous need to fully understand the stakes of the election and called it “brutally serious” as she warned about threats to democracy. Harris also said Russian President Vladimir Putin will be “sitting in Kyiv,” Ukraine’s capital city, if Trump is elected.
  • The vice president attacked Trump after he declined to answer a question about whether the federal minimum wage should be increased. Trump avoided the question during a stop at a McDonalds over the weekend. Harris said she does believe minimum wage should be more.
  • Harris, in a written statement, also touted a newly announced proposed administration rule that would require private insurance plans to cover over-the-counter contraception without a prescription at no cost.

Other key headlines to know:

Walz in New York: The Democratic vice presidential candidate said on “The View” that “the guardrails are off” when it comes to Trump. He was responding to a question about Trump’s recent statements that he would use the National Guard?against an “enemy from within.” He also said that under a potential Harris administration, Medicare expansion and home care benefits for seniors would be handled differently compared to the Biden administration.

Early voting continues: Early in-person voting?kicks off in Texas today and several other states after?officials reported a strong early voter turnout?last week in?the swing state of?Georgia.

Ad spending ramps up: Republicans have about?$43 million worth of ad time?booked in Pennsylvania from tomorrow through Election Day, while Democrats have about?$38 million reserved, according to AdImpact data. And in North Carolina, Republicans are set to outspend Democrats by?about $2.2 million?for the final 14 days.

What to watch for tomorrow: Biden and Vermont Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders will hit the road together in New Hampshire on Tuesday to promote the administration’s efforts to lower the cost of prescription drugs, according to the White House.

Follow along until Election Day: You can explore the political landscape and dive into what can be learned from previous presidential elections with CNN’s new Magic Wall feature in the CNN app. Learn how you can get it on your phone or tablet here.

Prominent Georgia pastor says "misogyny is still real" in conversation about Harris

Pastor Jamal Bryant introduces US Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris during a church service at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Stonecrest, Georgia, on October 20.

When New Birth Missionary Baptist Church Senior Pastor Jamal Bryant got the call less than a week ago that Vice President Kamala Harris wanted to spend her 60th?birthday at his Georgia church, he said it felt like “a?dream?come?true.”

As Harris looked on from the audience, his Sunday sermon included an appeal to one of the most scrutinized parts of the electorate this election cycle: Black men.

The message was strikingly similar to the calls from other Harris surrogates including comments Harris’ brother-in-law Tony West made to members of the Milwaukee NAACP last month.

Though Bryant later told CNN, the overwhelming majority of Black men are supporting Harris and he rejects efforts to “separate and divide,” he also thinks misogyny should be addressed.

“We’ve?got?to?be?able?to?know?that?misogyny?is?still?real?in?our?community. We’ve?got?to?address?it?head?on and not?act?like?it?doesn’t?exist,” he said.

Judges reject RNC lawsuits challenging some overseas ballots in Michigan and North Carolina

Judges in Michigan and North Carolina resoundingly rejected lawsuits brought by the Republican National Committee and others that challenged overseas ballots cast by voters abroad who never resided in the states.

The rulings in two separate cases on Monday are setbacks in efforts by Republicans to target the overseas votes, which has long seen as sacrosanct because of its tie to the military, but now could be a crucial bloc for Democrats as the pool of civilian expats now eclipses military voters outside the country.

Former President Donald Trump and his GOP allies have heralded the cases as essential to securing the integrity of the 2024 election — but their arguments fell flat in court.

What the judges said: Judge Sima Patel of Michigan’s Court of Claims said that Republicans were too late in filing their lawsuit, calling it “11th hour attempt to disenfranchise” spouses and children of former Michigan residents who now live abroad.

In North Carolina, Wake County Superior Court Judge John W. Smith denied the RNC’s request for an emergency court order that would require election officials to set aside ballots from overseas voters who hadn’t themselves lived in the state.

Smith said that the RNC was challenging voting policies that were passed with bipartisan support by the North Carolina legislature and that the Republicans “have presented no substantial evidence of any instance where the harm that plaintiffs seek to prevent has ever ‘fraudulently’ occurred.”

Some more context: In both states, the policy of accepting ballots from those overseas voters have been on the books for several years. But starting in 2016, civilian voters abroad began outnumbering the military voter overseas — which itself is not as conservative as it once was. Democrats announced earlier this cycle a six-figure investment into turning out eligible Democrats abroad, particularly those who can vote in battleground states.

Harris on how the campaign is affecting her: “I wake up in the middle of the night”

Vice President Kamala Harris said the stakes of her race against Donald Trump keep her up at night with 15 days to go until Election Day.

But Harris added that she tries to keep a routine: “I work out. I try to eat well, you know. I love my family, and I make sure that I talk to the kids and my husband every day.”

“These days, my family keeps me grounded in every way,” Harris said.

The vice president added: “we cannot despair.”

Harris attacks Trump after he avoids answering whether he'd raise federal minimum wage

Vice President Kamala Harris attacked former President Donald Trump after he declined to answer a question about whether the federal minimum wage should be increased.

Harris told reporters ahead of a campaign stop in Birmingham, Michigan, that she believes “we must raise minimum wage” and contrasted her position with Trump, who declined to directly answer whether the federal minimum wage should be increased during a stop at a McDonald’s location in Pennsylvania on Sunday.

She said this is one of the areas where there is a “big difference” between her and Trump and that she believes “that hard-working Americans, whether they’re working in McDonald’s or anywhere else, should have at least the ability to be able to take care of their family and take care of themselves in a way that allows them to actually, be able to sustain their needs.”

The vice president didn’t say exactly what the new minimum wage should be.

“I think everyone knows that the current federal minimum wage is $7.25 an hour, which means that the person who is working a full day and working full weeks will make $15,000 a year, which is essentially poverty wages,” Harris said.

Harris says Putin "will be sitting in Kyiv" if Trump is elected

Russia's President Vladimir Putin attends a press conference in Moscow, Russia, on July 5.

Vice President Kamala Harris on Monday said Russian President Vladimir Putin will be “sitting in Kyiv,” Ukraine’s capital city, if Donald Trump is elected in just over two weeks.

Some context: The former president declined last month to say whether he wants Ukraine to win the war, and has?described Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as a “salesman” who “should never have let that war start.”

Trump says “we have to go back to 1798” as he vows to invoke Alien Enemies Act

Former President Donald Trump on Monday said “we have to go back to 1798” as he vowed to invoke the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 and expedite the removal of undocumented gang members if reelected.

Trump first said he would invoke the act during a trip to Aurora, Colorado, as he made false and sensationalized claims about Venezuelan gangs taking over swaths of Colorado.

Stoking fears about undocumented immigrants is central to Trump’s campaign message and he has ramped up his dehumanizing and degrading language of immigrants in the final stretch before Election Day.

Harris says people who find Trump funny need to “understand how brutally serious this is”

Vice President Kamala Harris said on Monday that voters who find former President Donald Trump’s antics and personality humorous need to fully understand the stakes of the election.

Someone in the audience appeared to shout for Trump to be jailed. Harris responded: “The courts will take care of that. We’ll take care of November.”

“But it is brutally serious because … anyone who has openly said, as he has, that he would terminate the Constitution of the United States should never again stand behind the seal of the President of the United States,” Harris added.

Former Trump aide Steve Bannon to be released from prison next week

Steve Bannon gets into his car before reporting to Danbury Federal Correctional Institution on July 1 in Danbury, Connecticut.

Steve Bannon, the right-wing podcaster and former Donald Trump aide, is set to?get out of federal?prison next Tuesday despite repeated attempts he and his legal defense team have made for him to?be released?early.

The Bureau of Prisons said in a letter to Bannon on Monday that his release date will remain October 29, as originally set.?That means he will serve his full 120-day sentence behind bars.

Since learning in recent days he may be eligible to move to home confinement, Bannon has accused the BOP of political interference, and his attorneys have been advocating both in court and?to prison officials?for leniency.

The acting warden of the low-security Federal Correctional Institution in Danbury, Connecticut, wrote to Bannon’s lawyers on Monday?that?there wasn’t enough time?to arrange?for?Bannon?to move to home confinement in Washington, DC. Home confinement?was?a possibility for the former top White House?adviser?because of?a provision for some first-time federal offenders?under?the Trump-era First Step Act.

Bannon was convicted in 2022 for not complying with a subpoena?from?the now-defunct House Select Committee that investigated January 6, 2021. His appeal of the conviction is ongoing even as he concludes his prison sentence.

Why this matters: His release from prison?will come?at a critical time. The longtime Trump ally is a staunch supporter of the former president’s reelection bid. His popular “War Room” podcast has continued to air without him during his time in prison, and Bannon is?likely to re-emerge as a voice of inflammatory political rhetoric ahead of the November presidential election.

Abortion rights will be on the ballot in these 10 states

This November, voters in at least 10 states will take to the polls to determine the future of abortion access in their state, after a nationwide effort by organizers to secure a wave of ballot measures aimed at restoring or protecting the right to an abortion — and some aimed at restricting it.

Abortion rights advocates hope the effort will restore the issue of reproductive health access to the people, after the Supreme Court’s?Dobbs decision?overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, eliminating the national right to an abortion.

Most of the proposed ballot measures aim to enshrine the right to an abortion in state constitutions.?They follow a series of restrictive?trigger laws?that went into effect following the Dobbs decision, along with abortion policies that were handed down by politicians or decided by state supreme courts since the decision.

Anti-abortion organizers backed a handful of initiatives aimed at restricting abortion access, though?similar restrictive measures have failed?in the few states where votes have been held in the past couple of years.

Ten states —?Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New York and South Dakota — have already secured abortion measures on the 2024 ballot.

Read more about the states with abortion rights on the ballot.

Trump claims without evidence that Democrats are trying to cheat in the election

Former President Donald Trump attends a rally at Williams Arena at Minges Coliseum in Greenville, North Carolina, on October 21.

Former President Donald Trump again accused Democrats without evidence of trying to cheat in the 2024 election on Monday.

Trump, who lies constantly about the result of the 2020 election he lost, has repeatedly tried to sow doubt about the integrity of the 2024 election and made claims without evidence about Democrats trying to cheat. Trump?continues to promote false claims and conspiracy theories about widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election that did not occur.

Trump, in his speech, claimed that Democrats are trying to cheat the 2024 election, “but they’re not going to get away with it.”

Trump pointed to Republican National Committee Chair Michael Whatley and asked, “How are you doing, are they cheating Michael? They’re trying, but are they, they’re not going to get away with it, right?”

Trump then turned back to the crowd: “He said no. That’s why I had him. They didn’t get away with it in this state. They got away with it in plenty of places.”

Trump meanders on several topics while discussing Elon Musk at North Carolina rally

Former President Donald Trump on Monday told several meandering stories while discussing Elon Musk’s support for his candidacy.

“I love Elon, by the way,” Trump said in Greenville, North Carolina. Trump said Musk “makes a great car” but recognizes Teslas aren’t perfect for everyone.

“Some want gasoline-propelled,” Trump said. “And we have a lot of gasoline right under there. And some want other things. They want to have a hybrid.”

Trump then said he did not like hydrogen-fueled vehicles and graphically described what happens when something goes wrong with them.

“You know the story with hydrogen – it’s great until it blows up, in which case you’re not recognized.”

Trump pointed to a man in the crowd. “So even guys, strong guys like this, they call your mom or your wife – is that a mom, or whoa? Look at that. Oh, I know them. Very wealthy parents. I know them. No, your kids wouldn’t be recognizable. That’s not a good thought. How’s my son doing? Well, he tried the new hydrogen car. It didn’t work out too well.”

Next, Trump recalled watching TV as one of Musk’s rockets landed.

“I was on the phone talking to a very important guy, actually, and I have the television muted, it’s dead muted, and I see this ball of fire come, like a 20 story building. It’s coming down. I say, ‘Would you do me a favor? Hold.’ and I’ve never –?what the hell is happening? I thought maybe it switched over to a movie or something, and I put the phone down. Very important guy, you know what? I never picked it up. The guy was holding for like, 45 minutes. I forgot he was on the phone because - “

Trump then pointed toward the media section: “And now there are these idiots back there will say he’s cognitively impaired.”

Trump slams Jimmy Carter’s presidency while criticizing Biden administration

Former president Jimmy Carter before a game between the Atlanta Falcons and the Cincinnati Bengals in Atlanta, Georgia, on September 30, 2018.

Former President Donald Trump on Monday slammed the record of Jimmy Carter’s administration while criticizing President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris during a rally in North Carolina.

Carter, who turned 100 on October 1, has been in hospice care since February 2023.

Carter last week fulfilled his wish of voting for Harris. He remains deeply beloved in his home state of Georgia, which is a critical battleground state in this election.

Trump argues Harris campaigning with Liz Cheney hurts her with Arab Americans

Former President Donald Trump on Monday argued Vice President Kamala Harris campaigning with Republican Liz Cheney would hurt her with Arab American voters.

Cheney’s opposition to Trump and his efforts to overturn the 2020 election – including her vote to impeach him – led the House GOP to oust her as conference chair and replace her with a top Trump ally, New York Rep. Elise Stefanik. Cheney went on to serve as vice chair of the House select committee that investigated the January 6, 2021, insurrection at the US Capitol and later crossed the aisle to endorse Harris.

Cheney was campaigning Monday with Harris in three Great Lakes swing states.

Asked about North Carolina man's arrest for allegedly threatening FEMA, Trump says "you have to be able to speak"

Former President Donald Trump said “you have to be able to speak,” when asked about a North Carolina man’s arrest earlier this month for allegedly threatening harm against Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) employees and whether Trump’s claims about the agency were helping the recovery effort.

“Well, I think you have to let people know how they’re doing. If they were doing a great job, I think we should say that too because I think they should be rewarded, but if they’re not doing, does that mean that, if they’re doing a poor job we’re supposed to not say it,” Trump said.

Trump said, “You have to be able to speak. Does that mean let’s not talk about it? Because by doing that, they’ll do a better job the next time.”

William Jacob Parsons, 44, was arrested the weekend of October 12 in Rutherford County and charged with Going Armed to the Terror of the Public, a misdemeanor

More on Trump’s claims: Trump has made several false claims about the federal response to Hurricane Helene, including one he repeated on Monday about how money that was appropriated for disaster response was used on undocumented immigrants. Trump also falsely claimed that the Biden administration’s response to the hurricane has been roundly criticized despite the response receiving bipartisan praise, including from Republican governors.

Rutherford County is southeast of the hard-hit Asheville area.

Former Georgia GOP lieutenant governor encourages Republicans to vote for Harris in sprint to election

Former Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan speaks on stage during the third day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on August 21 in Chicago.

Geoff Duncan, a Republican and former Georgia lieutenant governor, is making a final push to convince swing state voters in his party to vote for Kamala Harris.

He said Republicans who are unhappy with Donald Trump should vote for Harris “not?because they are Democrats,?not because they plan to be a?Democrat, but because they want?to be a patriot.”

Duncan, who has endorsed Harris, said the former president is a “boat anchor around Republicans neck” and that Trump does not represent what Republicans stand for.

He said he and other Republican officials who are backing Harris are “truly,?genuinely embarrassed every?time (Trump) sees a microphone or a?camera, every time he walks and?talks to the military, every?time he speaks about faith,?every time he talks about?fiscal conservatism — he’s a?fraud.”

Some background: Duncan?delivered a speech on the third night of the?Democratic National Convention?in Chicago in August at which he said that after Trump conspired to overturn the 2020 election, he realized the former president was a “direct threat to democracy.”

Before Harris became the Democratic nominee, Duncan said that he was going to vote for President Joe Biden.

Trump says he's not concerned about voting in North Carolina after Hurricane Helene

Poll workers help voters inside an early voting site on October 17 in Hendersonville, North Carolina.

Former President Donald Trump on Monday expressed confidence in North Carolina’s voting system as the state grapples with the aftermath of Hurricane Helene.

Trump, who spoke to reporters in an area of Asheville, that had significant storm damage, was asked: “Is there any concern or specific reasoning that you have to believe at this point in time … that the results of the election in North Carolina will not be credible or legitimate because of the storm’s aftermath?”

The former president also praised Michael Whatley, who serves as the chair of the Republican National Committee and previously served as the chair of the North Carolina Republican Party. Trump said Whatley, who attended his remarks Monday, called him to tell him that “they’re setting records in North Carolina voting.”

“It’s just that they’re great people. I mean, they lost their house and they’re standing outside voting,” Trump said adding, “Voting is the least of it right now. They gotta vote, they want to vote because it’s very important but they have to survive. That’s why I can’t believe the early voting, the early voting is records.”

Trump’s remarks come after the Trump campaign asked North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, who is a Democrat, and the state legislature to expand voter access for those affected by the devastation of Hurricane Helene.

The North Carolina State Board of Elections reported a strong turnout last week, saying more than?200,000 early voting ballots?were cast as of Thursday afternoon, the day early in-person voting began in the state.

Liz Cheney says women can't get the care they need in post-Roe America and "it has to change"

Former GOP Rep. Liz Cheney on Monday appeared to take issue with the?Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision?ending the constitutional right to an abortion, saying that women can’t get the care they need. Cheney initially supported the decision when it was handed down in 2022.

The event with Cheney and Harris was the first of several as the vice president’s?campaign courts?Republicans and independents in key swing states.

“I think this is not an issue that we’re seeing break down across party lines, but I think we’re seeing people come together to say what has happened to women, when women are facing situations where they can’t get the care they need,” Cheney said. “That’s not sustainable for us as a country, and it has to change.”

In 2022, the former Wyoming congresswoman?approved?of the Supreme Court’s decision to end Roe v Wade, saying she has “always been strongly pro-life” and that the ruling “returns power to the states and the people of the states to address the issue of abortion under state law.”

Analysis: Why candidates are focusing on motivating voters to get to the polls

Both Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump’s campaigns are putting money and time into trying to motivate voters to turn out to the polls, the director of the center for politics at University of Virginia said.

With just 15 days to go until Election Day, Larry Sabato told CNN that even the smallest fractions of a percentage could make a difference. The presidential race?remains tight nationwide?and?a new poll shows voters are closely split?between the candidates in seven swing states.

He said when he looks at undecided voters, he sees that they are conflicted and “a lot of them will decide not to vote because they are conflicted.” Sabato said for this reason, undecided voters won’t make much of a difference — underscoring why it is so critical for the candidates to motivate others to get to the polls.

Sabato said the Harris campaign and Democrats have a “superb get out the vote effort,” while the Trump campaign has been delegating those efforts to other organizations.

Harris “has a?big edge in money and a lot of?that is going to be invested, or already has been invested, in?voter contact and get out the?vote,” Sabato said.