September 30, 2024, presidential campaign news

- Source: CNN " data-fave-thumbnails="{"big": { "uri": "https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/videothumbnails/33503759-03792858-generated-thumbnail.jpg?c=16x9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill" }, "small": { "uri": "https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/videothumbnails/33503759-03792858-generated-thumbnail.jpg?c=16x9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill" } }" data-vr-video="false" data-show-html=" The Lead " data-byline-html="
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Updated 12:17 AM EDT, Tue October 1, 2024
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What to expect from the only VP debate between Vance, Walz
05:38 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

? Countdown to Election Day:?Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris will visit key battleground states this week as they race to make their pitch to voters with just five weeks until?Election Day.?

? Focus on Helene’s aftermath: Harris ended her West Coast campaign swing early for a briefing in Washington, DC, on Hurricane Helene’s impact, where she reiterated the Biden administration’s commitment to recovery efforts. Trump traveled to Valdosta, Georgia, where he also received a storm briefing and slammed the Biden administration’s response to the hurricane.

??Tomorrow’s VP debate:?Meanwhile, vice presidential candidates?JD Vance?and Tim Walz are preparing to face off?in their first and likely only debate. For the first time in modern campaign history, this debate?is likely to be the last marquee event before Election Day. The debate, hosted by CBS News, will air live on CNN at 9 p.m. ET, alongside special coverage.

??Election resources:?With?voting already underway in several states, visit?CNN’s voter handbook?and read up on the?2024 candidates and their key policies.

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Abortion rights take center stage in Montana US Senate debate

Tim Sheehy, left, and Sen. Jon Tester

Democratic Sen. Jon Tester of Montana, who’s locked in a competitive race to hold onto his seat, faced off against his Republican challenger Tim Sheehy for their second debate Monday. The two sparred for an hour about immigration, abortion, healthcare and housing in Montana.

One of the first issues debated between the two candidates was abortion, which is on the ballot in Montana this election. Tester said that he would like to see?Roe v. Wade?reinstated and expressed support for Montana’s Right to Abortion Initiative, which would codify the right to an abortion in the state constitution.

Sheehy said that he will respect how Montanans vote on the abortion ballot initiative, saying that “if it passes, it will be the will of the people,” but that Democrats have been pushing “extreme” abortion legislation.

“I will not apologize for wanting to protect the life of an unborn child,” the GOP candidate said, adding that he supports exceptions for cases of rape or incest and to save the life of the mother.

Tester said, “The bottom line is this, whose decision is it to be made? Is it the federal government’s decision? The state government’s decision? Tim Sheehy’s decision, Jon Tester‘s decision? No, it’s the woman’s decision. Tim Sheehy has called abortion terrible and murder. That doesn’t sound to me like he’s supporting the woman to make that decision.”

Trump says VP debate "stacked" for Vance, insults Walz

Donald Trump delivers remarks to the press in Valdosta, Georgia, on September 30.

Former President Donald Trump said that his running mate, JD Vance, will be going up against “a moron” during the vice-presidential debate Tuesday against Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Kamala Harris’ running mate.

His assessment seemed to go against his own senior campaign adviser Jason Miller, who said this morning that Walz is a “wily political veteran” who is “very good in debates.”

Trump, who has previously said he will not debate Harris again, reiterated he thinks it’s too late for another debate but claimed “I’d rather debate, I’d rather have another one.”

“The problem is we’re so far down the line, and also I had a three-on-one debate last time. So I, I debated Biden, and I must say CNN was very fair. And then I had the other debate, and ABC was totally crooked,” Trump said, again complaining about the ABC moderators, who fact-checked the former president during the debate with Harris.

Harris earlier this month accepted an invitation from CNN to again debate Trump on October 23, but the former president said at the time it is “too late” to have another presidential debate because Americans have begun casting their ballots in the 2024 election.

Trump campaign launches GoFundMe for those affected by Hurricane Helene

The Trump campaign launched a GoFundMe for those affected by Hurricane Helene after former President Donald Trump toured storm damage in Valdosta, Georgia, earlier on Monday.

The Trump campaign’s finance director, Meredith O’Rourke, is the organizer of the fundraiser, and Trump campaign officials are promoting the GoFundMe on social media.

GOP former senator says Harris-Walz ticket represents conservative values "better" than Trump

Republican former Sen. Jeff Flake said Monday he is voting for Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, because they would “better” represent conservative values than former President Donald Trump.

Flake, a longtime critic of Trump, was tapped by President Joe Biden to serve as ambassador to Turkey in 2021.

Flake endorsed Harris Sunday, and he told Collins the next day that “you need to not just lodge a?protest vote, you have to vote?for the alternative and?that’s what I’ve done.”

He added, “I’m not telling my?fellow Republicans what to do,?but that’s what I think should?be done.”

Arizona now says 218,000 voters impacted by glitch, more than double the amount originally reported

A man walks outside of a polling place in Phoenix, Arizona, during a primary election on March 19, 2024.

The Arizona secretary of state’s office on Monday announced that a proof-of-citizenship clerical error may have impacted more voters than initially reported.

The office said in a news release that about 218,000 voters were impacted, including the nearly 98,000 voters it previously said were mistakenly marked as having provided documentation proving their citizenship.

The Arizona Supreme Court ruled earlier this month that residents affected by this issue?can still vote in state and local races this year, and the secretary of state’s news release notes “all individuals included in the database error remain eligible to vote a full ballot.”

Walz says he hopes voters learn he's "just doing our best for folks" during VP debate

Tim Walz delivers remarks at an election campaign event in Superior, Wisconsin, on September 14.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz told reporters during a campaign stop in northern Michigan on Monday he hopes voters learn during tomorrow night’s vice presidential debate that he’s “just doing our best for folks.”

As Walz toured downtown Petoskey, Michigan, during a break from debate preparations, CNN asked him what he hopes voters learn about him tomorrow.

“Just doing our best for folks,” Walz said before entering a local shop.

Walz spent about an hour browsing stores in downtown Petoskey, including a bookstore and a pet shop, along with his wife, Gwen Walz, and daughter Hope.

At the bookstore, they bought several items, including a pair of records Hope picked out: “1989 (Taylor’s Version)” by Taylor Swift and “Honey Bones” by Dope Lemon. Hope showed the records to Walz, who said he was not familiar with Dope Lemon.?The Walz family also purchased some toys at the pet shop for their dog, Scout, including a stuffed narwhal.

Walz offers condolences to those affected by Hurricane Helene

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz expressed his condolences to those who have died and are suffering as a result of damage caused by Hurricane Helene, and said he’s been in touch with President Joe Biden, his running mate Vice President Kamala Harris and North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper during a local stop in Michigan on Monday.

Walz told reporters during a tour of downtown Petoskey, Michigan, that he’s proud of the government response from federal, state and local officials to the hurricane that has left at least 128 people dead across six states and millions without power.

He urged those in affected regions to take cues from state and local officials, praising the coordination among the relevant agencies to respond to the hurricane.

Tomorrow’s VP debate: Walz concluded his brief remarks by noting he was visiting the downtown area of the northern Michigan town from nearby where he’s preparing for Tuesday’s vice presidential debate. He said he’s “looking forward to tomorrow,” but keeping his thoughts with those affected by the hurricane.

Early voting efforts in North Carolina hampered by impacts of Hurricane Helene

Early voting in North Carolina is facing hurdles as the impacts of Hurricane Helene?continue to devastate communities?in the Southeast, blocking roads and disrupting services across the state.

The start of mail-in voting in the key state of North Carolina had already been?delayed by courts?that ruled ballots must be reprinted without the option of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who suspended his campaign and endorsed former President Donald Trump.

Even before the devastating hurricane, all eyes were on North Carolina as it emerged as one of the key swing states of this election, with recent polling from CNN showing Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump?virtually tied?among likely voters in the state. A?heated gubernatorial battle?between state?Attorney?General?Josh Stein and?Lt. Gov.?Mark Robinson is also taking place in Tar Heel State.

The US Postal Service issued an alert stating that operations in?certain?ZIP?codes?would be paused, which could further hamper voter efforts to cast their ballots by mail.

Absentee ballots were mailed out on September 24 to state residents who had requested them.

At an emergency board meeting on Monday, Bell said 14 of the 22 counties the board was in contact with were closed, with “several more days of closure” anticipated.

Biden says Trump is "lying" about federal response to Helene and plans to go to North Carolina on Wednesday

President Joe Biden accused former President Donald Trump of “lying” about the federal response to Hurricane Helene and said he plans to visit North Carolina later this week.

In a somewhat testy exchange with the press after he received a briefing on the Helene from officials, a reporter started to ask Biden about Trump’s baseless accusation that he and the federal government were going out of their way to avoid helping people in Republican areas.

He called the accusations “simply not true” and “irresponsible.”

Biden said he would visit North Carolina on Wednesday and hoped to visit Georgia and Florida “as soon as possible after that,” but he didn’t want to divert resources on the ground to a presidential visit.

Biden, asked if the storm was the result of climate change, emphatically said the deadly storm was caused by it. “Absolutely, positively, unequivocally, yes, yes, yes, yes,” he said.

The president was also asked about being in Delaware when the storm hit, to which he responded: “Come on, stop that game, will you?”

“I was on the phone the whole time working on that,” Biden said. “And the resources, the question is not whether we get more… the question is, how to get it in? It’s hard to get it from point A to point B. It’s hard to get it so many roads are wiped out. Communities are wiped out. There’s no ability to land, there’s no ability to get trucks through. There’s no ability to get a whole range of things through.”

“If I sound frustrated,” he added, “I am.”

Harris says Helene destruction is "heartbreaking" as she visits FEMA headquarters

Vice President Kamala Harris prepares for a briefing at FEMA headquarters on Monday, September 30.

Vice President Kamala Harris?on Monday addressed the “heartbreaking” destruction from Hurricane Helene during remarks?at the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) headquarters in Washington, DC.

Harris?ended her West Coast campaign swing?early, traveling earlier in the day from?Las Vegas to Washington, DC, to be briefed?on the storm.

Harris said that she has received regular briefings and has spoken with Georgia?Republican?Gov. Brian Kemp, North Carolina Democratic?Gov. Roy Cooper,?and local officials.

“I have shared with them that we will do everything in our power to help communities respond and recover,” she said.

Harris reiterated that she plans to visit impacted areas as soon as possible without disrupting emergency response operations.

“Over the past few days, our nation has endured some of the worst destruction and devastation that we have seen in quite some time, and we have responded with our best, with the best folks who are on the ground and here doing the kind of work that is about rising to a moment of crisis, to do everything we can to lift up folks who deserve to be seen and heard,” she continued.

Here are the official rules Vance and Walz will have to follow in the vice presidential debate

People walk past the CBS Broadcast Center the day before the television network will host the vice presidential debate on September 30, 2024 in New York City.

As vice presidential candidates Ohio Sen. JD Vance and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz are preparing to?take the debate stage on Tuesday, CBS News announced the official rules on Friday, including a 90-minute debate with no opening statements or studio audience.

The network notes it “reserves the right to mute the candidates’ microphones,” however, unlike the presidential debates, mics will otherwise be hot, according to a?release from CBS News.

Walz will appear on the right side of the screen to viewers and Vance on the left side. As the candidate of the incumbent party, Walz will be introduced to the stage first.

The candidate who is asked a question will have two minutes to answer and the other candidate will have two minutes to respond. Candidates will have one minute for additional rebuttals. An additional minute to continue a topic may be given at the moderator’s discretion.

Candidates are not permitted to interact with staff during breaks. They are provided a pen, a pad of paper and a water bottle, but no props or prewritten notes are allowed.

There will be two commercial breaks.

The debate begins at 9 p.m. ET in New York City and will be moderated by Norah O’Donnell and Margaret Brennan. CNN will air the debate live, alongside special coverage.

Man who claimed he had explosives at Michigan Trump rally is charged

Former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event in Walker, Michigan, on Friday.

The man who allegedly claimed he had C4 explosives in his car and sped through a security checkpoint at Donald Trump’s rally in Michigan?over the?weekend pleaded not guilty to charges against him on Monday.

Steven William Nauta has been charged with four state counts,?including making a false threat of terrorism and being in possession of bomb-making materials. He has pleaded not guilty to each count, according to a court official.

A bond of $1 million was set for Nauta during his arraignment Monday, according to a court official, and was placed under house arrest.

In the complaint against Nauta, prosecutors allege that he “approached a traffic point” and “held a bottle to police and stated that it was ‘C4’ explosive and that it was the ‘real deal.’”

The complaint says he sped past the traffic point,?disobeyed commands by officers to stop and, when he finally stopped after being chased by police, “removed bags of fertilizer from his vehicle and threw them on the ground to make it appear that they were explosives.”

Nauta told law enforcement, the complaint says, that “he intended to make officers, and others, believe that he had explosives.”

A federal source familiar with the incident told CNN that no explosives were found in Nauta’s vehicle. The charges against Nauta note that the fertilizer he allegedly removed from his vehicle can be used to make explosives.

Fact Check: Vance’s promise to cover people with preexisting conditions

Republican vice presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance has sought to fill in some details about the “concepts” of a health plan that former President Donald Trump mentioned in the?presidential debate in September.

In an interview on NBC’s “Meet the Press” the following week, Vance said that Trump’s plan is “actually quite straightforward.”

“You want to make sure that preexisting coverage — conditions — are covered, you want to make sure that people have access to the doctors that they need, and you also want to implement some deregulatory agenda so that people can choose a health care plan that fits them,” Vance told the show’s anchor, Kristen Welker.

“We want to make sure everybody is covered,” he continued. “But the best way to do that is to actually promote some more choice in our health care system and not have a one-size-fits-all approach that puts a lot of people into the same insurance pools, into the same risk pools, that actually makes it harder for people to make the right choices for their families.”

Facts first:?Vance’s claim that preexisting conditions would be covered if insurers didn’t have to put people into the same risk pools is misleading and needs context. A key pillar of the Affordable Care Act’s sweeping protections for people with preexisting conditions is requiring insurers to put all their individual market enrollees into the same risk pool.
That is crucial for guaranteeing that insurers don’t charge people with chronic conditions higher premiums, which could lead to many of them being unable to afford coverage.

Obamacare’s protections for those with preexisting conditions is one of its?most popular provisions?– roughly two-thirds of the public say it’s “very important” to retain the law’s mandates prohibiting insurers from charging sick people more and from denying coverage based on their medical records, according to a February?KFF poll.

But like many Republicans before him, Vance says the way to improve the nation’s health insurance system is to move away from the Affordable Care Act’s multitude of regulations and give people more choice. Similar views were voiced by congressional Republicans in their?2017 effort to repeal?the landmark law,?which failed?in part because of concerns that their replacement plans would weaken protections for those with pre-existing conditions.

Read more on this fact check.

Tim Walz is fighting nerves heading into the vice presidential debate, sources say

Tim Walz?is telling people he’s just as nervous about facing JD Vance as he was the?Sunday afternoon?in August when he warned?Kamala Harris?in his running mate interview that he was a bad debater.

Maybe more?nervous, according to multiple people who’ve spoken to him.

And the pressure is even higher, when for the first time in modern campaign history, the?vice presidential debate?Tuesday?is likely to be the last marquee event before Election Day. With many voters still saying they don’t know enough about Harris, it could be up to Walz to help convince them to trust a vice president he barely knew himself before she picked him.

Talking to the aides who have coalesced around him in Minnesota and?other supporters, Walz constantly comes back to how worried he is about letting Harris down, according to close to a dozen top campaign?staffers?and others who have been in touch with the governor and his team.?He doesn’t want?Donald Trump?to win. He doesn’t want Harris to think she made the wrong choice.

He feels genuine contempt for and confusion over what he views as?Vance’s abandonment of?their common roots, and for flipping so many of his positions to fit with Trump. The digs he takes at Vance by saying he didn’t know many Midwesterners who went to Yale are a glimpse into his anxiety that his opponent learned to be a sharp debater there, according to people who know Walz.

Keep reading here about how Walz is preparing.

Trump blames Harris and Biden for his Saturday crowd size

Former President Donald Trump once again criticized the White House after his Wisconsin rally was relocated to a smaller venue on Saturday.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump claimed that Vice President Kamala Harris and President Joe Biden are “going out of their way” to hinder his campaign efforts.

“We had one of the biggest crowds I’ve ever seen on Saturday in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, where a terrible migrant crime recently occurred. We ended up using a 750-seat theater and had to turn away more than 50,000 people,” he posted.

Trump also highlighted that the Secret Service could not provide proper protection for him during the event because they were tasked with the president of Iran, whom he alleged “is doing everything possible to kill me” at the United Nations event.

At his rally in Erie, Pennsylvania, on Sunday, Trump told his crowd that the administration “would not let us have” 50,000 attendees at a Wisconsin outdoor rally the day before.

Originally, Trump was scheduled to hold a larger outdoor rally at an airport in Wisconsin on Saturday.

“Kamala and Sleepy Joe are going out of their way to make it difficult for me to Campaign. We had one of the biggest crowds I’ve ever seen on Saturday, in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, where a terrible migrant crime was recently committed, and we ended up having to use a 750 seat theater, having to send away more than 50,000 people. They were unable to give us Secret Service protection commensurate with the crowd, because they had to protect the President of Iran, who is doing everything possible to kill me, at the United Nations event. We complained “like hell,” but there was nothing we could do …. ” Trump posted.

Trump says he spoke with Elon Musk about Starlink access for North Carolina after hurricane

Former President Donald Trump said Monday he spoke with Elon Musk?to try to get Starlink satellite service access in North Carolina as the state reels from the destruction caused by Hurricane Helene.

“They don’t have communication they don’t have anything right now. We’re trying to, I just spoke to Elon, I’m getting him, we want to get Starlink hooked up,” Trump said during a stop in Valdosta, Georgia, as he surveyed storm damage.

“Elon will always come through,” Trump added.

Trump has said Musk would have a position in his administration if Trump is reelected. He previously said Musk has agreed to lead a new government efficiency commission that Trump said he would create if he wins in November.

Earlier Monday, FEMA said in a?press release?that 40 Starlink satellite systems were already available to help in North Carolina and that an addition 140 satellites were being shipped for further assistance.

Trump says he brought truckloads of relief aid to help people of Valdosta, Georgia

Former President Donald Trump delivers remarks to the press in the aftermath of powerful storm Helene at Chez What furniture store in Valdosta, Georgia, on September 30.

Former President Donald Trump on Monday said he had brought truckloads of relief aid to Valdosta, Georgia, in the wake of Hurricane Helene’s destruction and that his team was working with an evangelical Christian humanitarian aid organization called Samaritan’s Purse to distribute the supplies.

There were several trucks parked next to where the former president spoke to reporters in Valdosta, Georgia, and Trump campaign spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said the trucks were full of supplies.

Trump said he had received a briefing on the hurricane’s impact on Valdosta earlier in the day.

“As you know, our country is in the final weeks of a hard-fought national election, but in a time like this when a crisis hits when our fellow citizens cry out in need none of that matters, we’re not talking about politics now. We have to all get together and get this solved,” Trump said.

“We’re here today to stand in complete solidarity with the people of Georgia and with all of those suffering in the terrible aftermath Hurricane Helene. Hurricane Helene turned out to be a big one,” Trump added.

Trump also thanked first responders and spoke about how the devastation from the hurricane has stretched across several states, leaving many people dead, displaced and without power. Trump held a moment of silence during his speech for those who have died.

Harris campaign eyeing Asian American voters in Georgia

Supporters react as Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign rally at the Enmarket Arena August 29 in Savannah, Georgia.

The moment Kannan Udayarajan decided to become politically active is seared into his memory.

It was four years ago when Republican Sen. David Perdue struck a mocking tone at a?Donald Trump?rally as he?repeatedly mispronounced Kamala Harris’ name. The Middle Georgia crowd laughed right along as he stretched out his words: “Ka-MAL-a or what, Kamala or Ka-MAL-a, Ka-MAL-a, -mala, -mala, I don’t know, whatever.”

That remark became a call to action for Udayarajan, 42, who now leads the Forsyth County Democratic Party and is part of the changing face of Georgia.

That mobilization is on full display here in Forsyth County, about 30 miles northeast of Atlanta, where the Asian American population has more than doubled in the past two decades, as it has in neighboring counties. Those voters are a critical piece of Harris’ game plan in?her race against Trump.

“In 2020, when Joe Biden won Georgia by 11,780 votes, Forsyth County delivered 16,000 brand new Democratic votes,” Udayarajan said. “Now, four years have passed since then, and the demographics of the county have shifted considerably.”

Those shifts could hold critical clues for the outcome of November’s election.

Read more about efforts by both campaigns to reach out to various demographic groups.

Trump says he thinks Vance will "do great" in tomorrow's debate

Former President Donald Trump on Monday said he thought his running mate Ohio Sen. JD Vance would “do great” in the vice presidential debate against Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.

“I think JD’s going to do great. He’s a very smart guy, he’s done a great job,” Trump said, adding that Walz is “not qualified.”

Trump was asked if he had offered any personal advice for Vance and said the senator didn’t need any, but that the two had been speaking about it.

“No, he doesn’t need. Well, we’ve been speaking a little bit back and forth. I think he’s in good shape,” Trump said.

Tuesday’s vice presidential debate in New York City will start at 9 p.m. ET.

What the vice presidential candidates' past debates may reveal about Tuesday’s high-stakes showdown

The only scheduled debate between the vice presidential nominees on?Tuesday night – five weeks before Election Day – may also serve as the final word for the campaigns of Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump before a large audience on national television.

It’s an unusual twist of fate for?Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz?and?Ohio Sen. JD Vance, whose selections over the summer thrust them into an intense political spotlight. A few months ago, Walz was a little-known Democratic governor and former six-term congressman who emerged as an unexpected contender as Harris’ running mate. When Trump announced Vance as his pick at the Republican National Convention in July, the first-term senator had yet to turn 40, and he has served less than two years in elected office.

A review of several past general election and primary debates for Vance and Walz yields a picture of two candidates with specific approaches to their previous performances, which could be instructive for this high-stakes moment.

The Walz-Vance matchup may be the last debate of the 2024 election, unprecedented in modern presidential campaigns, with Trump rejecting calls from Harris to agree to a second meeting, including one?proposed by CNN for October 23?in Atlanta. With an exceedingly tight race entering the closing stretch and early voting underway in a handful of states, the running mates’ showdown Tuesday in New York presents one of the last major opportunities to make the case for their respective tickets.

Keep reading here about the VP candidates’ past debate performances.

Trump criticizes Biden administration's response to Hurricane Helene during visit to Georgia

Former President Donald Trump tours downtown Valdosta, Georgia, a town that was impacted by Hurricane Helene on Monday, September 30.

Former President Donald Trump on Monday criticized the Biden administration’s response to Hurricane Helene and praised GOP Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, saying he’s been doing a “very good job.”

“The governor’s doing a very good job. He’s having a hard time getting the president on the phone, I guess they’re not being responsive. The federal government is not being responsive,” Trump said.

The White House said President Joe Biden spoke with Kemp and North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, as well as other officials across North Carolina, Tennessee, Florida and South Carolina on Sunday.

Trump said he hadn’t reached out to Biden about federal relief efforts when asked by a reporter, and he slammed his Democratic 2024 rival, Vice President Kamala Harris.

“The vice president, she’s out someplace campaigning, looking for money. So they gotta be, they have to be focused over here. It’s too big. This is a really bad one,” Trump said.

CNN reported that Harris ended her West Coast campaign swing early to attend Helene briefings in Washington, DC.

“In the meantime, we’re at Valdosta and we’re gonna go with (the) mayor and congressman and everybody else,” Trump said.

Trump landed in Valdosta, Georgia, on Monday to “receive a briefing on the devastation of Hurricane?Helene?and to facilitate the distribution of relief supplies.”

“We’ve brought a lot of supplies. We’re with Franklin Graham, who’s been always fantastic in these cases, nobody better,” Trump said.

Graham is an evangelical missionary who runs Samaritan’s Purse, an evangelical humanitarian aid organization.

Democrats sue to block new Georgia rule requiring hand-count of Election Day ballots

Democrats?sued Georgia’s State Election Board?on Monday over a new rule that requires counties?to hand-count the number of ballots cast at polling places on Election Day.

Democrats argued that it will allow “for bad-faith actors to claim that fraud has affected election results.”

The new lawsuit escalates an ongoing legal battle between?the Democratic Party?and Georgia’s GOP-controlled elections board over a series of controversial rules passed in recent weeks that critics say will bring post-election “chaos” into the state.

Backed by Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign, the?lawsuit?argues that the?hand-counting?rule conflicts with state law and that the board overstepped its authority when it approved it.?Three?Donald Trump allies on the board approved the new rule earlier this month in a?3-2 vote.

Delays caused by the hand-counting, they argued,?would?“introduce opportunities for bad-faith actors to claim that fraud has affected election results – a result that would undermine public confidence in the results and in the election of Democratic candidates specifically.”

Before the election board passed the new rules, the office of Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, a Republican,?warned the board members?that the new policies probably violated state law and would likely be blocked by a judge if anyone filed a lawsuit.

The letter from Carr’s team echoed concerns from Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, who said it was too late to change the rules for the 2024.

Read more about the lawsuit.

Vance plans to have Donald Trump Jr. and others in spin room after debate

Ohio Sen. JD Vance will have the following surrogates in the spin room after the vice presidential debate taking place on Tuesday, according to two sources familiar:

  • Senior Trump Campaign Adviser Jason Miller
  • Donald Trump Jr.
  • GOP Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton
  • GOP Alabama Sen. Katie Britt
  • House Republican Conference Chair Elise Stefanik
  • GOP Florida Rep. Byron Donalds
  • CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald Howard Lutnick

The list was first reported by NOTUS.

Vance lands in New York ahead of VP debate

Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance and his wife Usha Vance have landed in New York City ahead of tomorrow’s vice presidential debate.

On the way, the campaign plane made a stop at Washington Reagan National Airport, where Vance’s children were dropped off.

Key things to know about Walz and Vance ahead of tomorrow's high-stakes VP debate

Republican vice presidential nominee?JD Vance?and his Democratic counterpart, Tim Walz, are gearing up to participate in their first and likely?only debate tomorrow.

Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate is in his second term as Minnesota governor and chairs the Democratic Governors Association.

A onetime high school teacher and football coach who served in the Army National Guard, Walz later spent 12 years in Congress, representing a conservative-leaning rural district in Southern Minnesota.

Former President Donald Trump’s running mate was elected to the US Senate from Ohio in 2022 after receiving a boost from Trump in a contentious Republican primary.

A venture capitalist and the author of the best-selling memoir “Hillbilly Elegy,” Vance had once been a key voice in the “Never Trump” movement during the 2016 election.

Trump campaign: "We will see what happens" on potential for a second debate with Harris

Donald Trump’s campaign said that the?final debate in the 2024 cycle is likely going to be between the vice presidential candidates, but noted that “we will see what happens” with regards to another presidential debate.

Miller claimed that Harris only wants a rematch with Trump on CNN in October because she “lost terribly” in the first debate on ABC News.

Man accused in second Trump assassination attempt pleads not guilty

Martin County Sheriff’s Office released body cam video of the apprehension of Ryan Wesley Routh on Sunday on an interstate in Florida.

The man who prosecutors said stalked Donald Trump in Florida and set up what they called a “sniper’s nest” on the fence boarding the former president’s West Palm Beach golf course has pleaded not guilty to attempting to assassinate a major presidential candidate.

Ryan Wesley Routh faces five charges including the assassination attempt, gun charges and assaulting an officer. He pleaded not guilty to each charge in federal court.

Routh appeared in tan prison scrubs and wore glasses at times during the brief hearing. He told the judge he understood the charges against him.

Armed with a Soviet-designed rifle between two bags packed with bulletproof plates, prosecutors say Routh had a clear shot of the sixth-hole green when Trump was golfing that Sunday afternoon. The former president was minutes away from Routh’s line of sight, prosecutors alleged during a detention hearing last week.

Investigators have found a wealth of information allegedly on Routh and what may have been the motivation behind the alleged attempted assassination. One piece of information prosecutors have cited is a letter Routh allegedly left with a witness who came forward after Routh was arrested.

“This was an assassination attempt on Donald Trump but I failed you,” Routh allegedly wrote. “I tried my best and gave it all the gumption I could muster. It is up to you now to finish the job; and I will offer $150,000 to whomever can complete the job.” Trump “ended relations with Iran like a child and now the Middle East has unraveled,” the letter said.

Routh also wrote a self-published book in which he told Iran, “You are free to assassinate Trump as well as me for that error in judgment and the dismantling of” the Iran nuclear deal.

When arguing for his detention pending an outcome in the case, which was ultimately granted, prosecutors said Routh has been arrested over 100 times — many of which were because of traffic violations — and that his travels to Ukraine and Taiwan show that he’s able slip across borders.

Routh’s case has been randomly assigned to Judge Aileen Cannon, the federal judge who dismissed charges against Trump earlier this year after his attorneys argued that special counsel Jack Smith was unlawfully assigned to oversee the investigation and prosecution of Trump.

Trump says he was going to go to North Carolina to provide disaster relief but access is limited

Former President Donald Trump on Monday said he was going to stop in North Carolina to provide disaster relief but said “access and communication is now restricted,” and he wanted to make sure not to strain the local emergency response dealing with the devastation caused by Hurricane Helene.

Trump is making a stop in Valdosta, Georgia, on Monday to receive a disaster briefing and make remarks, and Trump said in his post on Truth Social that he was going to “pay my respects and bring lots of relief material” to the area.

Trump said, “I was also going to stop into North Carolina, which has really been hit hard. I have a lot of supplies ready for them, but access and communication is now restricted, and we want to make sure that Local Emergency Management is able to focus on helping the people most affected, and not being concerned with me.”

More on Hurricane Helene: Hundreds of roads remain closed, especially in the Carolinas, hampering the delivery of badly-needed supplies. And more than 2 million customers remain without power, according to?poweroutage.us.

Trump campaign stresses Walz is "very good in debates"

The Trump campaign is aiming to undercut the idea that Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is?fighting nerves?about facing off Ohio Sen. JD Vance at the vice presidential debate tomorrow night.

On a call with reporters, senior Trump campaign adviser Jason Miller stressed multiple times that Walz is a seasoned politician who is “very good in debates.”

While Miller said that Vance is “great” and “ready to step up and lead,” he reminded that the first-term Ohio Senator has less experience in politics than his opponent.

“JD is ready to step up and lead, but Tim Walz is a wily political veteran. He’s run countless campaigns. So really, it’s two years in official politics for JD Vance but two decades in politics for Tim Walz. So don’t let any of this ‘Tim Walz is real nervous and chewing on his fingernails about how tomorrow night is going to go,’ — he’ll have things memorized,” Walz said. “He’ll be very polished.”

Minnesota Rep. Tom Emmer also joined the call and talked about his role standing in for Walz during Vance debate preparations.

“Quite frankly, it’s tough because he is really good on the debate stage,” Emmer said. “He will stand there, and he lies with conviction, and he has these little mannerisms where it’s just hey, I’m the nice guy, but he’s not nice at all.”

Harris reiterates calls for marijuana legalization

Vice President Kamala Harris reiterated her belief that cannabis should be legalized and that people “should not be going to jail for smoking weed,” during a podcast interview released on Monday.

Speaking to former NBA players Matt Barnes and Stephen Jackson on the “All the Smoke” podcast, Harris called for cannabis legalization and decriminalization, while insisting that she has “felt for a long time” that marijuana should not be criminalized despite her history as a district attorney prosecuting cannabis-related offenses.

Harris has endorsed decriminalizing cannabis dating back to her 2019 presidential run and admitted during that campaign that she had used marijuana in college. As vice president, she has called for the Drug Enforcement Administration to reclassify marijuana into a lower drug schedule.

But as San Francisco’s district attorney, Harris oversaw thousands of marijuana convictions. And as California’s attorney general, she opposed a failed 2010 effort that would have legalized marijuana. In 2015, she called for an end to the federal government’s ban on medical cannabis, stopping short of full legalization.

Pro-Harris super PAC announces $35 million ad buy

A leading pro-Harris super PAC on Monday announced plans for a massive campaign behind a new ad slamming Donald Trump’s tax policies.

Future Forward, the top outside group backing Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign, said it would spend $35 million airing?the new ad?— more than the group has spent on any other ad so far — targeting seven key battleground states and national airwaves. Politico first reported on the new ad campaign.

The ad features a Pennsylvania voter named “Buddy” watching video of Trump at a glitzy 2023?fundraiser?at Mar-a-Lago, praising his guests’ wealth and promising tax cuts. “I know about 20 of you, and you’re rich as hell,” Trump says in the clip, as the voter shakes his head. “We are gonna give you tax cuts,” Trump continues.

The voter takes over, saying, “I’m not rich as hell. I’m the one that really needs the break, not the people that are already rich and have the money. The 1% don’t serve anybody but themselves. So for them to get a tax break, no, that’s not cool.”

He continues, “Kamala Harris is gonna make billionaires pay their fair share, and she’s gonna cut taxes for working people, like me. I’m Buddy, and I’m not rich as hell, and I’m voting for Kamala Harris.”

The ad features images of billionaire Elon Musk, and Trump greeting wealthy supporters, juxtaposed with video of Buddy pumping gas and standing in his neighborhood, aimed at portraying a contrast between the presidential candidates’ competing economic pitches.

FF PAC has spent more than any other group to support the Harris campaign — since July 22, the day after President Joe Biden withdrew from the race, and today, the super PAC has run more than $130 million worth of pro-Harris advertising; and from tomorrow through Election Day, the group is set to run nearly $200 million more worth of ads.

Democrats nearly double GOP presidential advertising in September

Democrats outspent Republicans by nearly two-to-one on advertising for the presidential race in September, seizing the edge on battleground airwaves after running about even in the previous month.

According to AdImpact data, in September, Democrats spent about $292.9 million on ads targeting the seven key swing states — Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Georgia, Arizona, North Carolina and Nevada — while Republican spent about $156.5 million. Including national advertising and spending in other states, the ratio was about the same: $361.6 million to $180.9 million.

In August, the advertising wars were much closer — during that month, Democrats spent about $209.2 million on advertising in the seven battlegrounds, while Republicans spent about $206.6 million. Including national advertising and spending in other states, Democrats had a slightly larger overall lead in August, $279.6 million to $228.1 million, but nowhere near the gap that emerged in September.

In Pennsylvania — seen as the linchpin for both sides in their path to 270 electoral voters —Democrats significantly expanded their advertising edge from August to September. In August, Democrats and Republicans ran about even on Pennsylvania airwaves, $56.8 million to $52.6 million. But in September, Democrats spent about $77.1 million advertising in Pennsylvania, while Republicans spent about $42.5 million.

Overall, including national advertising and spending in other states, the gap is larger, $696 million to $438 million —?pushing total presidential ad spending between July 22 and September 30 past $1.1 billion.

Veterans Department employees improperly accessed medical files of VP candidates, sources say

The US Department of Veterans Affairs building is seen on August 21 in Washington, DC.

Employees at the Department of Veterans Affairs improperly accessed the medical files of Sen. JD Vance and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, and an investigation is under way, sources said.

Two sources familiar with the situation confirmed that VA employees improperly accessed Vance’s medical records, and roughly two months ago, an employee in VA Inspector General Michael Missal’s office reached out to someone in the Ohio Republican’s operation to alert them of the breach, one of the sources said. A Harris campaign spokesperson said it was informed about the breach of Walz’s records.

The Washington Post,?which?first reported the incident,?said at least a dozen employees accessed the records.

Terrence Hayes, a spokesperson for the VA, confirmed?to CNN?that the department reported to law enforcement “allegations that VA personnel may have improperly accessed veteran records” but did not elaborate and referred additional questions to the Justice Department, which declined to comment.

Vance?enlisted?in the military after high school, spending four years in the Marines and serving a tour in Iraq in 2005 as a combat correspondent. Walz enlisted at 17 and served 24 years in the National Guard before retiring?in 2005 to run for Congress.

Most Americans think health care isn't getting enough attention this election, Gallup poll finds

A new Gallup poll finds that most Americans think health care isn’t getting enough attention this election cycle, and they say drug prices and mental health are among the key voting issues.

CNN Polling’s Ariel Edwards-Levy notes that voters often rate multiple different issues as being highly important to their vote, so the share of voters calling different aspects of health care their top issue are more useful in comparison to each other than as absolute percentages.

For example, about 63% of Americans said a candidate’s position on protecting Medicare and Social security is the single most important or among the most important health care-related issues in determining their vote in November, compared with 57% who said lower health care costs, 47% who cited lower drug costs and 43% who named policies related to mental health care access.

Harris will visit areas affected by Helene as soon as possible, White House official says

Vice President Kamala Harris waves while boarding Air Force Two in Los Angeles on Sunday, September 29.

Vice President Kamala Harris will visit areas affected by Hurricane Helene, a White House official said, as soon as it is possible without disrupting emergency response operations.

Harris offered her condolences Sunday to those impacted by Helene, which made landfall last week as the?strongest hurricane on record?to slam into Florida’s Big Bend region.

“I know that everyone here sends their thoughts and prayers for the folks who have been so devastated by that hurricane and the ensuing events in Florida, in Georgia, the Carolinas and other impacted states,” Harris said at a rally in Las Vegas, adding that “we will stand with these communities for as long as it takes to make sure that they are able to recover and rebuild.”

A White House official said Harris was briefed by FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell on the federal response to Helene, which tore through multiple states,?killing at least 95 people, knocking out power to millions and trapping families in floodwaters.

Harris also spoke with North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper about rescue and recovery efforts, and reached out to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, the White House official said.

House Majority Whip Emmer details how he prepared to play Walz for Vance debate prep

House Majority Whip Rep. Tom Emmer speaks during a news conference after a House Republican Caucus meeting on September 24, 2024 at the US Capitol in Washington, DC.

House Majority Whip Tom Emmer said he researched Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, who he said he has known for 20 years, to accurately play the “character” in order to help prepare Sen. JD Vance for Tuesday’s vice presidential debate.

The two men worked together in the House from 2015, when Emmer was first sworn in, to 2019, when Walz was sworn in as governor.

Emmer called Walz a “complete disaster in Minnesota” and said while the Democrat governor served in Congress “he played this character for several years of being kind of a – a folksy, [agriculture] friendly, outdoorsman.”

“He’s not well liked because once you get to know the real Tim Walz, he’s like Gavin Newsom in a flannel shirt,” Emmer said of Walz, who won his 2022 gubernatorial race in Minnesota by over 7 points.

Emmer would not get into specifics about Vance’s debate prep but said Donald Trump’s running mate will do “great,” adding that “once he understands that Tim Walz is just going to try and deflect and go into this folksy whatever, he’ll hold him accountable.”

Walz "debate camp" designed to keep Harris' running mate "true to who he is"

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz’s team has dubbed their debate prep sessions “Camp North Star,” an indication of the relaxed atmosphere in woodsy northern Michigan as the campaign is seeking to cultivate authentic aspects of Walz’s identity, a source familiar with the debate prep sessions of Kamala Harris’ running mate told CNN.

He’s gone for a hike and eaten pizza at a downtown Harbor Springs restaurant during his stay there. On Sunday, he visited a local farm, where he petted goats and rabbits, purchased some of the farms’ goods and shot pumpkins from a hydraulic squash launcher.

Televisions at the property where Walz and his staff are staying have been turned to professional and college football games this weekend, with staff showing up in gear supporting their favorite teams on Saturday and Sunday. Some staff have been tossing a football around between sessions, the source said.

But not every participant in “debate camp” arrived in casual camp gear. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, who has been portraying Ohio Sen. JD Vance in debate prep sessions, surprised staff by showing up in a red tie, mimicking the attire often worn by Vance on the campaign trail.

Trump will give remarks in Georgia today after receiving briefing on Hurricane Helene

Former President Donald Trump on Monday is expected to visit Valdosta, Georgia, where he will receive a briefing on the devastation caused by?Hurricane Helene?and “facilitate the distribution of relief supplies.”

The former president will then give remarks to the press at 2 p.m. ET, according to his campaign.

Trump on Sunday sent his condolences to those affected by?Helene, which was the strongest hurricane on record to slam into Florida’s Big Bend region.

“It’s been a rough one. That was a big, monster hurricane and … hit a lot harder than anyone even thought possible. So we want to just extend our best wishes to everybody,” Trump said at a rally in Erie, Pennsylvania.

As of Sunday afternoon, at least 90 people have died in relation to?Helene in South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, North Carolina and Virginia.

Harris cuts West Coast swing short for Hurricane Helene briefings

Vice President Harris will end her West Coast campaign swing early and travel from Las Vegas to Washington, DC on Monday morning where she will be briefed on the ongoing impacts of Hurricane Helene at the FEMA Headquarters, according to a White House Official.

During the meeting, the vice president is expected to also be briefed on the federal actions being taken to support emergency response and recovery. It comes as the Southeast is still grappling with widespread devastation after Helene made landfall last Thursday as the strongest hurricane on record to slam into Florida’s Big Bend region and tore through multiple states. At least 95 people were killed, in addition to knocking out power to millions and trapping families in floodwaters.

Harris was previously scheduled on Monday to make two campaign stops in Nevada before diverting her plans. The adjusted schedule also comes after former President Donald Trump slammed Harris for fundraising on the West Coast this weekend after Helene ripped through the Southeast region.

On Sunday, Harris was briefed by FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell?while traveling on Air Force Two from California to Nevada. She also spoke with North Carolina Gov. Cooper, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Georgia Gov Kemp and reassured them that the Biden Administration will stand with the impacted communities throughout their recovery. She intends to visit impacted communities as soon as it is possible without disrupting emergency response operations. It was not immediately planned when or where she would go.

“We stand in these communities for as long as it takes to make sure that they are able to recover and rebuild,” Harris said during a rally in Las Vegas.

“We will provide whatever help they need in the days and weeks ahead,” she later added.

Trump is expected to visit Valdosta, Georgia, on Monday where he will receive a briefing on the devastation caused by Hurricane Helene and “facilitate the distribution of relief supplies.”

Harris campaign targeting Trump-Vance on health care ahead of vice presidential debate

Kamala Harris’ campaign is needling former President Donald Trump and Ohio Sen. JD Vance over what the Republican ticket has said about their health care plans, releasing a new report Monday striking down, what the campaign describes, as the Trump-Vance proposals on the eve of the vice presidential debate.

The report— titled “Concept” on Health Care, in a swipe at Trump’s response at the presidential debate — is a 43-page analysis and collection of expert reports by the Harris campaign on Trump’s plans including proposals to cut Medicare and Medicaid, terminate the Affordable Care Act, among other measures.

A senior Harris campaign official described the report as an attempt to force Trump and Vance to address their proposals and go on the offensive on an issue top of mind for voters.

“Donald Trump and JD Vance have told us their ‘concept’ of a health care plan, and it is devastating for American families,”?said Harris campaign senior policy advisor Brian Nelson in a statement.?“They may not want Americans to see the details of their plan, but Vice President Harris and Governor Walz won’t let them get away with hiding its effects.”

Poll: Harris' lead among Latino voters smaller margin than Biden or Clinton

New polling?from NBC News, Telemundo and CNBC?finds Vice President Kamala Harris solidly ahead of former President Donald Trump among Latino registered voters, but faring less well than other recent Democratic nominees with this?growing segment of the electorate.

Overall, 54% of Latino registered voters in the poll said they supported Harris, while 40% backed Trump. The survey suggests that Harris has held on to a wide advantage among Hispanic women (leading 60% to 34% now), but is now running evenly with Trump among Hispanic men (who split evenly between Trump and Harris, 47% each).

Harris holds a wide advantage among Latino voters overall on several issues tested in the poll, including leads of 30 points or more on treating immigrants humanely and protecting immigrant rights (57% Harris to 18% Trump); handling abortion (56% Harris to 24% Trump); and addressing the concerns of the Hispanic community (53% Harris to 23% Trump), but trails Trump by narrower margins on handling the economy (45% Trump to 41% Harris); dealing with inflation and the cost of living (46% Trump to 37% Harris); and securing the border and controlling immigration (47% Trump to 34% Harris).

The survey suggests that Latino voters’ views on immigration as an issue have shifted since 2016. Back then, 69% said that immigration helps the US more than it hurts, while now, just 62% hold that view, and the share of Latino voters saying that immigration does more to hurt than help has more than doubled over that time, from 16% in 2016 to 35% now.

The new poll adds to a growing body of evidence that Democrats have lost ground among some voters of color.

Fact Check: Trump falsely describes new stats on immigrants and homicide in attack against Harris

Former President Donald Trump is wildly distorting new statistics on immigration and crime to attack Vice President Kamala Harris.

Trump falsely claimed Friday and Saturday that the statistics are specifically about criminal offenders who entered the US during the Biden-Harris administration; in reality, the figures are about offenders who entered the US over multiple decades, including during the Trump administration. And Trump falsely claimed that the statistics are specifically about people who are now living freely in the US; the figures actually?include people who are currently in jails and prisons serving criminal sentences.

“Kamala should immediately cancel her News Conference because it was just revealed that 13,000 convicted murderers entered our Country during her three and a half year period as Border Czar,” Trump wrote in?one?post on Friday, the day Harris?visited?the southern border in Arizona. Harris “allowed almost 14,000 MURDERERS to freely and openly roam our Country,” Trump wrote in another Friday?post. They “roam free to KILL AGAIN,” he?wrote, escalating his rhetoric, on Saturday.

Facts First:?Trump’s claims are false in two big ways. First, the?statistics he was referring to?are not specifically about people who entered the country during the Biden-Harris administration. Rather, those statistics are about noncitizens who entered the country under any?administration, including Trump’s; were convicted of a crime at some point, usually in the US after their arrival; and are now living in the US while being listed on Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s “non-detained docket” — where some have been listed for years, including while Trump was president, because their country of citizenship won’t let the US deport them back there. Second, that ICE “non-detained” list includes people who are still serving jail and prison sentences for their crimes; they are on the list because they are not being held in immigration detention in particular.

Read more?here.