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Three days before the election, Trump and Harris are frantically zigzagging around swing states.

Presidential Candidate 2024

Trump and Harris

Trump and Harris are spending the day in North Carolina after attending a number of rallies on Saturday.

On Friday, the two rallied in Wisconsin, a crucial battleground state.

Over 66 million people have already cast ballots, surpassing the 2020 early voter turnout record.

Trump and Harris

The states that Trump and Harris must win in order to reach 270

The majority of the 50 states in the US cast ballots for the same party in each election, whether it be Republican or Democratic.

Only a few states remain where any candidate may prevail. There are seven at this election.

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On Tuesday, October 22, 2024, a person passes the voter services van in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, which is part of Montgomery County. (Photo by Matt Rourke/AP)

Known as the swing states, they are separated into two groups: the Rust Belt (Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania) and the Sun Belt (Nevada, Arizona, North Carolina, Georgia).

The winner will be the candidate who receives 270 or more of the 538 electoral college votes that are up for grabs throughout the United States.

The presidential candidate who receives the most individual votes from the state’s citizens wins all of the electoral college votes in all but two states.

To cross the finish line, both candidates must win at least three swing states.

In the surveys, who is in the lead?

Since entering the race at the end of July, Harris has maintained a slight lead over Trump in national polling averages, which currently stand at 48% to 47%, according to 538/ABC News, external.

Trump or Harris

National polls are not the most accurate approach to forecast the outcome of an election, but they are a good indicator of a candidate’s level of support nationwide.

 

Even though the majority of US states usually always vote for the same party, there are very few when both candidates have a chance of winning.

Saturday’s campaign trail

Trump

Before traveling to a campaign event in Salem, Virginia, in the late afternoon (20:00 GMT), Donald Trump will make his first appearance at a rally in Gastonia, North Carolina, where he will speak at noon (16:00 GMT).

Donald Trump stole secret documents. © Pixabay
Donald Trump stole secret documents. © Pixabay

Then, in the evening (23:30 GMT), Trump will travel to Greensboro, North Carolina, for his last event.

In the meantime, Lara Trump, Trump’s daughter-in-law, is scheduled to appear at a Team Trump Women’s Tour event in Atlanta, Georgia, this evening at 22:00 GMT.

Harris

Additionally, Kamala Harris is scheduled to attend a protest in Atlanta, Georgia, in the afternoon (19:00 GMT).

Kamala Harris Challenges Donald Trump to Second Debate

In the evening (23:00 GMT), she travels to Charlotte, North Carolina, for a campaign rally and a concert.

In the meantime, supporters of Harris will head to Washington, DC, for the Women’s March event titled “We Won’t Go Back” in the afternoon (19:00 GMT).

In Wisconsin, what did Trump say?

The Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, where Donald Trump held his event, is also where he received the Republican Party nomination during the summer.

The Republican presidential candidate said the following:

“Are you better off now than you were four years ago?” he asked voters at the outset, promising to “bring back the American dream” and stop inflation.

He had problems with his microphone at one point. He said, “This mic stinks,” and when people yelled, they were unable to hear him.

Declaring it to be “the most beautiful word in the whole dictionary,” he reiterated his intention to impose tariffs.

“We’re suffering from climate change!” declared the former US president, who also pledged to terminate the Green New Deal.

– despite being a collection of non-binding recommendations meant to address climate change

He asserted that the American family has lost thousands of dollars as a result of Kamala Harris’ “inflation nightmare”.

“Can you imagine if Kamala won?” Trump continued. You would have a downturn similar to that of 1929.

In Wisconsin, what did Harris say?

Both Donald Trump and Kamala Harris staged rallies in Wisconsin, a crucial swing state, on Friday, as we have been reporting.

Harris was in a suburb, while Trump was in the heart of Milwaukee.

Less than a point, or less than 23,000 votes, has determined the outcome of four of Wisconsin’s previous six presidential elections.

The Democratic presidential candidate said the following:

Harris, who appeared with union workers, called Donald Trump a “threat” to the labor movement and described his record as a “disaster for working people.”

She promised to improve current factories and make investments in manufacturing towns.

Rapper Cardi B joined Harris in denouncing Trump’s abortion rights policy, declaring, “I’m not taking any chances with my future.”

Harris stated that “bringing down the cost of living” was a top objective for the economy.

Harris said she will combat pedophiles, criminals, and drug traffickers, recalling her background as a prosecutor and former California attorney general.

She stated young people were “determined to live free from gun violence” and “take on the climate crisis” in an attempt to address Gen Z voters.

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