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Harris and Trump’s final campaign sprint as early voting begins in North Carolina

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On the campaign trail: Vice President Kamala Harris bashed Donald Trump’s recent comments on the January 6 attack and reproductive rights at stops in Wisconsin Thursday, saying the “American people are exhausted” with his “gaslighting.” The former president spoke tonight at a charity dinner in New York City.

Race close in 2 key states: With just 19 days to go until Election Day, a new CNN Poll of Polls averages find a close race for the presidency in the key states of Arizona and Pennsylvania.

Early voting kicks off in North Carolina: The North Carolina State Board of Elections said there were more than 200,000 early voting ballots as of Thursday afternoon, which suggests the state is on track to come close to — or potentially exceed — the 2020 early vote numbers. The pivotal swing state of Georgia began early in-person voting earlier this week and saw record numbers.

What to know before you cast your vote: 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.

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Trump bashes Harris for not attending Al Smith charity dinner

Former President Donald Trump repeatedly bashed Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday for turning down an invitation to attend the Al Smith charity dinner in New York, calling her absence “disrespectful.”

“It’s been a long tradition for both Democrat and Republican candidates for president of the United States to attend this dinner. Always, it’s a rule. You gotta go to the dinner. You gotta do it. Otherwise, bad things are gonna happen to you from up there,” Trump said at the Catholic charity dinner.

Trump, who spoke after a video message from Harris played at the dinner, said: “You can’t do what I just saw on that screen. But my opponent feels like she does not have to be here, which is deeply disrespectful to the event and in particular to our great Catholic community. Very disrespectful.”

Throughout his speech at the dinner, Trump told several jokes and took swipes at prominent Democrats, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, who was seated next to the podium.

“Tradition holds that I’m supposed to tell a few self-deprecating jokes this evening. So here it goes. Nope, I’ve got nothing. I’ve got nothing. There’s nothing to say,” the former president said.

Trump said, “It’s a true pleasure to be with you this evening. Amazing pleasure, and these days it’s really a pleasure, anywhere in New York, without a subpoena for my appearance.”

Trump wishes NYC Mayor Adams “good luck” after indictment and says “I think you’re going to win” 

Former President Donald Trump walks under a US flag as he holds a campaign rally in Wilmington, North Carolina, on September 21.

Former President Donald Trump wished New York City Mayor Eric Adams “good luck” and said he thought Adams was “going to win” after the Democrat was indicted on five federal charges related to bribery, wire fraud, conspiracy and soliciting campaign contributions from foreign nationals.

Trump made the comments at the Al Smith charity dinner in New York, which Adams was also attending.

“Mayor Adams, good luck with everything, they went after you. They went after you mayor, oh boy I knew that. Nine-and-a-half months ago I said, ‘He just said something bad about the administration, he’s going to be indicted any moment.’ And guess what happened?” Trump said at the dinner.

The former president continued, “But you’re going to win, I think you’re going to win, I know you’re going to win, so good luck. Good luck. I don’t like what they do.”

Trump added: “They’ve gone after me, Mr. Mayor, and you’re peanuts compared to what they’ve done to me, and you’re going to be OK.”

Adams, who is up for reelection next year, pleaded not guilty to the charges in September.

Trump has repeatedly accused the Biden administration without evidence of orchestrating the several indictments against him. Trump was convicted earlier this year in New York of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records.

Harris leans into comedy in video message at New York dinner

Vice President Kamala Harris leaned into comedy in a video message she taped for the Al Smith charity dinner that featured Mary Katherine Gallagher, the recurring character on Saturday Night Live played by actress and comedian Molly Shannon.

Harris taped the video in lieu of attending the dinner, which was attended by former President Donald Trump and former first lady Melania Trump.

At one point during the skit, Harris asks Gallagher if she had any thoughts about what Harris should and shouldn’t say in her message for the Catholic charity dinner.

“Well, don’t lie. Thou shalt not bear false witness to thy neighbor,” Gallagher said.

“Indeed, especially thy neighbor’s election results,” Harris said, referencing Trump’s lies about the 2020 election results.

“Just so you know, there will be a fact checker there tonight,” Gallagher said.

“Oh, that’s great. Who?” Harris responded.

“Jesus. And maybe don’t say anything negative about Catholics,” said Gallagher.

“I would never do that, no matter where I was. That would be like criticizing Detroit in Detroit,” Harris said, referencing Trump criticizing Detroit while he was giving a speech in Detroit.

Harris ended the video with a more sincere message about how the “dinner provides a rare opportunity to set aside partisanship and come together to do some good by supporting the tremendous charitable work of the Catholic Church.”

“The Gospel of Luke tells us that faith has the power to shine a light on those living in darkness, and to guide our feet in the path of peace. In the spirit of tonight’s dinner, let us recommit to reaching across divides, to seek understanding and common ground, and in honor of the great Al Smith, let us fight to build a better future with faith in God, our country and in each other,” Harris said.

Walz seeks to tie Trump to Mark Robinson in first visit to North Carolina since CNN reporting

Tim Walz speaks during a vice presidential debate with JD Vance, in New York, on October 1.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz criticized North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson during his first trip to the Tar Heel state since CNN reported Robinson made homophobic, racist and antisemitic comments on a pornographic website, and sought to tie Trump and Robinson together while attacking Republicans for advocating for abortion restrictions.

Walz falsely said Trump “brags about” wanting to give states the right to monitor pregnant women while labeling Republican-backed abortion restrictions as “extreme abortion bans.” Walz then made a tongue-in-cheek jab at Robinson as he criticized Robinson’s past comments on abortion.

Walz praised Harris’ testy sit-down interview with Fox News, joking after her appearance and his multiple appearances on “Fox News Sunday” this month that they’re becoming regulars on the network.

Melania Trump accompanies Donald Trump to New York dinner and seated near Chuck Schumer and Letitia James

Donald Trump and Melania Trump attend the 79th annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner, in New York, on October 17.

Former President Donald Trump is accompanied tonight at the Al Smith charity dinner in New York by former first lady Melania Trump, who rarely makes public appearances with her husband.

The Trumps are seated near Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and are also in the same vicinity as New York Attorney General Letitia James, who successfully brought a civil fraud case against Trump that led to a judge ordering the former president to pay $454 million. Trump is appealing the judgement.

Trump has repeatedly attacked James and Schumer. He has baselessly accused Schumer of being a “proud member of Hamas,” after Schumer sharply criticized Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu amid the Israel-Hamas war.

Harris says Trump "has no idea what he's talking about" on women's health care

Kamala Harris speaks during a campaign event in Green Bay, Wisconsin, on October 17.

Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday said Donald Trump “has no idea what he’s talking about” when it comes to women’s health care issues, pointing to the former president’s past remarks on abortion and mocking his “father of IVF” comments.

“See for yourself. Let’s roll a clip,” said Harris, before a video was played of Trump’s comments vowing to protect women and touting his role in overturning of Roe v. Wade.

Harris pushed back on Trump’s remarks that “everyone” — including Republicans and Democrats — wanted Roe v Wade to be overturned.

“No, Donald, everybody did not want Roe v. Wade to be overturned. Women are dying of sepsis because they cannot get the healthcare they need, they did not want this. Couples just trying to grow their family are being cut off in the middle of IVF treatments. They did not want this,” she said.

Harris also ridiculed Trump’s declaration that he is the “father of IVF,” comments the former president made during a Fox News town hall in Georgia focused on women’s issues. “And now, I mean, it just gets more unbelievable sometimes. And now the man calls himself the father of IVF. I mean, what does that even mean?” Harris said before laughing.

“And all of that, well, he is the one who, by the way, is responsible for it being at risk in the first place,” she argued.

She continued, “What is sadly interesting, I think, is that when you listen to Donald Trump talk, it becomes increasingly clear, I think, he has no idea what he’s talking about when it comes to the healthcare of women in America.”

Blue Wall governors — along with Massachusetts and Maryland — emphasize stakes of election in Michigan

Chair of the Democratic National Committee Jaime Harrison, left, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers and Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro talk to volunteers during a campaign event in Flint, Michigan, on October 17.

Govs. Gretchen Whitmer, Tony Evers and Josh Shapiro continued their tour across the “Blue Wall” midwestern states that Democrats see as key to holding onto the White House, stressing the stakes of the election to voters in Michigan on Thursday.

“Don’t write anyone off. Wear them down if you have to. Right? Let’s get it done so that on November 6, we can celebrate that Michigan showed up, that Michigan showed the world we care,” Whitmer said at an event on Michigan State University’s campus, where students and residents of East Lansing filled less than half a room at the student union center on an evening around the middle of the school’s first semester.

Highlighting the outsized influence of Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania’s election results, Evers said “there is no question … what the results will be in the state of New York. There’s no questions about what the outcome will be in Illinois or California. That means that 322 million people are counting, you, me, Josh, all across that’s what the expectation is. It’s going to be who wins these three states.”

They were joined by Maryland Gov. Wes Moore and Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey, who lead states that typically vote Democratic.

Healey told the crowd “it’s not about the ads on TV” and “it’s not even about who’s spending the most money or raising the most money.”

“It’s about the work that people all are doing and are going to do over the next 18 days. It’s about the hearts you touch. It’s about the reminder that you give to everybody about what’s at stake for them, for them, and it’s why we’re going to win this election,” she said.

Moore recalled how college students helped boost him to win his gubernatorial primary in Maryland “because they were using their voice.”

“It was college students in Maryland, too, that made sure we won that race. It will be college students who will make sure that Kamala Harris becomes the next president of the United States,” he said.

Top pro-Harris super PAC reports $71.6M on new ad buys, unloading war chest, FEC filing says

The top outside group supporting Kamala Harris disclosed a staggering $71.6 million in new ad buys on Thursday, according to a new filing with the Federal Election Commission, unloading its war chest as the presidential race enters its final sprint.

FF PAC, which has taken on the lead role among Harris’ outside support, reported a total of $71.6 million worth of independent expenditures in a single filing, all going to media buys that were made on October 15.

Independent expenditure reports with the FEC don’t include details on state targeting, but data from the ad tracking firm AdImpact shows how the leading super PAC is budgeting its resources down the home stretch of the race.

FF PAC has a total of $140.5 million in ad reservations remaining, from tomorrow through Election Day, according to the latest AdImpact data.

Here’s a break down of what the group is spending in swing states:

  • $30.3 million targeting Pennsylvania
  • $20.9 million targeting Michigan
  • $19.7 million targeting Georgia
  • $14.8 million targeting Arizona
  • $14.4 million targeting Wisconsin
  • $13.7 million targeting North Carolina
  • $1.3 million targeting Nevada

FF PAC also has about $24.8 million in national ad reservations remaining.

According to its FEC filing, FF PAC has now spent a total of about $315 million on independent expenditures targeting the presidential race this year. And the group is set for a decisive role in the closing weeks of the race, as its $140.5 million in remaining ad bookings dwarfs the advertisers on the GOP side. According to AdImpact data, the three largest pro-Trump outside groups have a total of $85 million in remaining ad bookings combined.

FF PAC is set to file a monthly report with the FEC on Sunday, detailing its fundraising and spending activities in September; according to the most recent data available, the group had about $84 million in cash on hand at the end of August.

The group has received a significant portion of its funding, about $56 million, from a liberal dark money group, Future Forward USA Action, which faces few donor disclosure requirements. FF PAC has also reported receiving $19 million from the billionaire former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, $10 million from LinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman, and $9.1 million from the billionaire financier James Simons.

Jimmy Carter was excited to vote in presidential election, grandson says

In this November 2023 photo, former President Jimmy Carter departs after the funeral service for former first lady Rosalynn Carter at Maranatha Baptist Church on November 29, 2023, in Plains, Georgia.

Former President Jimmy Carter on Wednesday became the oldest living president to vote in a presidential election.

Carter, who is in hospice care, needed assistance and had a family member cast his ballot on his behalf for Vice President Kamala Harris, according to his grandson, Jason Carter.

“He sat down and told everybody what he wanted to do and was excited about it,” Jason Carter told CNN. “My aunt dropped his ballot in the ballot box for an absentee drop box, just like thousands and thousands of other Georgians.”

He went on to say that it is “crucially important” to his 100-year-old grandfather to be able to vote.

Walz attacks Trump for refusing to back off false claims about migrants during rally featuring Bill Clinton

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz speaks at a campaign rally in Durham, North Carolina, on Thursday.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz attacked former President Donald Trump for his recent remarks on immigration, telling supporters at a rally in Durham, North Carolina, on Thursday that Trump and his running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, are putting immigrants “at risk” by spreading “disgusting, untrue” conspiracy theories about immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, and Aurora, Colorado.

Walz referenced Trump’s refusal to back off the false conspiracy theory that Haitian migrants are eating pets in Springfield during a Wednesday night Univision town hall. Walz also attacked Trump for spreading conspiracy theories about immigrants and portrayed Trump and Vance as “outsiders” along the same lines Republicans have characterized the impact immigrants have on the country.

Walz attacked Vance for saying at a Pennsylvania rally on Wednesday that Trump did not lose the 2020 presidential election “not by the words I would use.” Walz said in that remark, Vance showed his “fealty” is to Trump, rather than the Constitution.

Walz introduced former President Bill Clinton at the rally, where he praised the 42nd president as “the comeback kid,” admired Clinton’s grasp of the political moment and thanked him for joining the campaign.

Former President Bill Clinton speaks at a campaign rally in Durham, North Carolina, on Thursday.

During his remarks, Clinton invoked Trump’s repeated criticism of his wife, former Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, for using a private email during her time as Secretary of State as he attacked Trump for promoting “conspiracy theories.”

Throughout his remarks, Clinton sought to draw the contrast between Harris and Trump, arguing Harris would be a more stable leader and offer more to middle-class families.

Harris to highlight the risk of a 2nd Trump presidency to women during Green Bay remarks

Vice President Kamala Harris is expected to highlight the risk of a second Donald Trump presidency to women voters during her remarks scheduled to occur shortly in Green Bay, Wisconsin, according to a senior Harris official.

Harris in her remarks will warn of the damage that former President Donald Trump caused during his first term as president when he appointed Supreme Court justices who struck down Roe v. Wade, the senior official said.

The senior official said Harris will continue to use her rallies to highlight Trump’s remarks in contrast to her plan if elected.

There's no clear leader for presidency in Arizona or Pennsylvania, new CNN Poll of Polls finds

A new CNN Poll of Polls averages find a close race for the presidency between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump in the key states of Arizona and Pennsylvania.

In Arizona, Trump holds an average of 50% support to Harris’ 47% among likely voters. In Pennsylvania, Harris takes an average 48% among likely voters to Trump’s 46%.

The new Arizona average includes a CBS News/YouGov poll released Thursday, which finds Trump taking 51% to Harris’ 48% among likely voters in the state, with a 3.3 percentage point margin of sampling error. CBS finds the Democrats performing better downballot, with Democrat Rep. Ruben Gallego leading Republican Kari Lake, 54% to 45%, among likely voters in the Arizona Senate race.

The latest Pennsylvania average includes a UMass Lowell/YouGov poll released Thursday and conducted earlier this month that shows a deadlocked race, with Harris at 46% and Trump at 45% among likely voters.

North Carolina reports strong early voting with more than 209,000 ballots cast so far

Voters mark their ballots on the first day of early in-person voting in Marion, North Carolina, on Thursday.

The North Carolina State Board of Elections says they are at 209,644 early voting ballots as of Thursday afternoon.

This isn’t a complete total — voting is ongoing and not all counties are reflected in this tally — so there isn’t an exact apples-to-apples comparison for previous years. But the numbers, as of late afternoon, suggest the state is on track to come close to (or potentially exceed) the 2020 early vote numbers.

The state election board is expected to report a more complete tally of today’s early vote numbers Friday morning.

Below are the numbers for the first full day of early voting, by year, for the past several federal elections, according to the state election board:

  • October 18, 2012: 166,617
  • October 23, 2014: 121,209
  • October 20, 2016: 165,947
  • October 17, 2018: 136,454
  • October 15, 2020: 348,599
  • October 20, 2022: 137,387

Harris blasts Trump for referring to January 6 as a “day of love”

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a campaign rally at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse in La Crosse, Wisconsin, on Thursday.

Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday blasted former President Donald Trump for referring to January 6 as a “day of love.”

During a town hall hosted by Univision on Wednesday, Trump tried to downplay the severity of the January 6 insurrection at the US Capitol, claiming it was a “day of love” and that there was “nothing done wrong at all” on his part.

Harris continued to rail against Trump’s rhetoric and again called him “increasingly unstable and unhinged,” adding he “will stop at nothing to claim unchecked power for himself.”

In a pitch to Wisconsin voters, Harris hit Trump on a number of policy issues, including healthcare, his economic agenda and abortion rights. And she warned of the stakes of a second Trump term.

The vice president reminded voters that early voting begins in Wisconsin next Tuesday as she urged them to vote.

Obama posts video in support of Harris campaign as part of latest 2024 push

Former President Barack Obama posted a video to X Thursday touting his support for Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign.

In the video clip, which is billed as part of a “conversation with Eva Longoria,” the former president says, “Kamala combines passion — she cares deeply about people, she cares deeply about the issues — with a real sense of connecting.”

The video comes as CNN’s Isaac Dovere reports Obama has turned his full attention to the 2024 race, recording 21 videos for the Harris campaign last Wednesday alone, with more ads for Democratic Senate candidates already in the can.

US "can’t afford" to extend Trump-era tax cuts without raising revenue, treasury secretary says

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen speaks at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York on Thursday.

In a question-and-answer session following remarks Thursday, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen defended the Biden administration’s decision not to repeal Trump-era tariffs on China, telling the moderator: “I think the main reason for that is that we look to China to address the practices that were emphasized in the [Section] 301 action, which went to issues of unfair competition, and China really did not address any of those issues.”

Trump implemented sweeping tariffs on about $300 billion of Chinese-made products when he was in office. President Joe Biden has kept those tariffs in place and, after the US Trade Representative’s Office finished a multiyear review earlier this year, decided to increase some of the rates on about $15 billion of Chinese imports.

Yellen also offered a more direct swipe at some of the policies Trump has proposed on the campaign trail during Thursday’s event, including a pledge from Republicans to extend Trump-era tax cuts.

“I believe it’s important for our nation to have a responsible fiscal policy and to be on a sustainable fiscal path, and some of the proposals that have been put forward on the Republican side — and I should say I’m covered by the Hatch Act and want to be careful not to comment on electoral politics,” she said. “But, for example, the CBO has said that [extending tax cuts] would result in $5 trillion of additional deficits over the next 10 years, and I believe, unless that’s paid for in some way, that’s something that we just can’t afford.”

Acting Secret Service Director is "deeply concerned" about morale after Trump assassination attempt report

Following a damning report on the Secret Service from an independent panel established by the Department of Homeland Security, Acting Director Ronald Rowe told staff he had concerns about some of the recommendations from the panel.

The panel recommended that leadership at the agency be replaced with outside hires who could change the culture. The panel also suggested cutting certain investigative functions that they concluded don’t directly help the primary goal of protection in the agency.

“I am deeply concerned about the unintended impact on agency morale,” Rowe said, “especially as so many of you are working extremely long hours, spending weeks away from your families, and giving so much to this agency and its mission. Regardless of what you may read or hear, please know this — you are worthy of trust and confidence.”

Vance says he might not prefer mail-in voting, but Republicans have to deal with "reality"

Sen. JD Vance speaks at a campaign event at The Pennsylvanian in Pittsburgh on Thursday, October 17.

When asked to reconcile how the Trump campaign previously cast doubt on mail-in voting — but has since been pushing the method for voters in 2024 — Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance said that while he might not prefer this type of voting, Republicans have to deal with “reality.”

As CNN previously reported, Pennsylvania overhauled its election law in 2019, which included allowing for earlier mail-in voting and lowering the barriers to vote by mail.

Without citing evidence, Vance claimed a “number of international organizations” have talked about “the fact that mail-in voting can sometimes introduce problems.”

“You’ve got to make sure that mail-in votes are properly — have a proper signature matching. You got to make sure the mail-in votes are properly tracked to a real registered voter. There are all these things that we can do, and the Republican Party is fighting every single day, not just for our own voters, but for everybody,” he said. Vance claimed Republicans “only want the legal ballots to count, not the illegal ballots.”

On the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania’s website, it states, “Voting by mail is safe and secure, and no evidence exists of widespread mail voting fraud in Pennsylvania.”

It also explicitly notes, “Pennsylvanians won’t always know the final results of all races on election night, and any changes in results that occur after election night are not evidence that an election is rigged.’”

Vance claims Trump wouldn’t use military force to target opponents after his "enemy from within" comments

Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance speaks at a campaign event at The Pennsylvanian in Pittsburgh on October 17.

Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance said Donald Trump would not use the military to target people who oppose him in a potential second administration, after the former president recently suggested that he would use the military to handle the “enemy from within” on Election Day.

Trump on Fox News earlier this week described “the enemy within” as being worse than immigrants whom the former president has repeatedly attacked with dehumanizing rhetoric.

“I think the bigger problem are the people from within. We have some very bad people. We have some sick people. Radical left lunatics,” he said, adding “I think it should be very easily handled by, if necessary, by National Guard, or if really necessary, by the military, because they can’t let that happen.”

Vance also said “everybody believes” those who committed acts of violence on January 6, 2021 “should be prosecuted,” but suggested that the media tends to forget about the riots and looting in the summer prior, referring to the unrest surrounding police brutality protests following the death of George Floyd.

On Wednesday, Trump continued to downplay the severity of the Jan. 6 attack on the US Capitol, claiming it was a “day of love” and that there was “nothing done wrong at all” on his part.

Despite storm damage, North Carolina early voting opens with "terrific turnout," top election official says

The executive director of North Carolina’s election board said early voting began in Thursday with “terrific turnout statewide,” and possibly the highest turnout for an opening day of early voting, though that won’t be confirmed until the end of the day.

Executive Director Karen Brinson Bell became teary-eyed and overcome with emotion as she discussed the start of early voting at a news conference in western North Carolina, where some have feared turnout could drop this election due to damage from Hurricane Helene.

Bell said early voting is now underway in all 100 of North Carolina’s counties, which includes 76 early voting sites – down from 80 that were originally planned – in the 25 counties in a designated disaster area. She said the voting sites are not temporary structures but rather brick-and-motor buildings with power, though not necessarily running water.

She said the Postal Service has reduced the number of undeliverable addresses “considerably,” though acknowledged that some people in affected communities may still have to walk to get their ballots or travel to their polling places.

She commended workers who have helped restore power, cell service and infrastructure in time for early voting.

“This is an incredible accomplishment,” Bell said.

Corinne Duncan, director of elections in Buncombe County, home to Asheville, which sustained heavy damage, said her county is caught up on absentee-ballot processing and has a “strong” plan for early voting. She said about two-thirds of poll workers who had been trained before the storm to serve during early voting are still able to work.

Harris slated to center on her economic vision during stops in Wisconsin and Michigan

Vice President Kamala Harris’ “blue wall” swing in Wisconsin and Michigan will focus on her plans for entrepreneurship, manufacturing, and protecting workers, according to a campaign adviser.

With Harris gaining some ground in public polling on handling economic issues, her campaign believes it has an opening to further argue a Harris administration would be stronger than former President Donald Trump on the key issue.

Harris and billionaire surrogate Mark Cuban will visit a business class at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s entrepreneurship center to speak to a group of young leaders. The center hosts a “Shark Tank”-style competition for college students to secure funding for business ideas. During the stop, she’ll push her plan to expand the small business tax deduction from $5,000 to $50,000.

At an evening rally in Green Bay, Wisconsin, Harris is expected to underscore her support for unions with an introduction from Jim Ridderbush, the vice president of the United Food & Commercial Workers Local 1473.

And in Michigan on Friday, the vice president will continue to message on the economy and manufacturing, specifically in Lansing.

In podcast interview, Trump says Zelensky should "never have let that war start"

Former President Trump and Ukrainian President Zelensky sit down for a meeting on September 27 in New York City.

Former President Donald Trump in a podcast aired Thursday tried to blame Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky for Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and said he thought Zelensky “should never have let that war start.”

“I think Zelensky is one of the greatest salesmen I’ve ever seen. Every time he comes in, we give him $100 billion,” Trump said on the PBD Podcast. “Who else got that kind of money in history? There’s never been. And that doesn’t mean I don’t want to help him because I feel very badly for those people. But he should never have let that war start. That war is a loser.” 10:26:37

More on Trump’s relationship with Putin and Zelenksy: Trump said earlier this week he wouldn’t comment on reporting by journalist Bob Woodward that he has spoken to Putin multiple times since leaving office but added, “If I did, it’s a smart thing.”

Trump has a long history of praising the Russian leader and when he was president, Trump went as far as to side with Putin over the US intelligence community over Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

Trump met with Zelensky at Trump Tower in New York last month when the Ukrainian president was in the US for the United Nations General Assembly. The meeting came days after Trump criticized Zelensky’s handling of the war and claimed he “refuses to make a deal” amid Russia’s war in Ukraine. As he stood next to Zelensky, Trump said, “We have a very good relationship, and I also have a very good relationship, as you know, with President Putin.”

Trump will hold a town hall in Pennsylvania Sunday and a rally in North Carolina Monday

Former President Donald Trump will hold a town hall in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on Sunday and a rally in Greenville, North Carolina, on Monday.

The former president and Vice President Kamala Harris have been criss-crossing key battleground states as Election Day quickly approaches

“Kamala Harris has abandoned North Carolina families, leaving them to struggle under the crushing weight of inflation and skyrocketing costs. President Trump will put an end to this madness when he returns to the White House, ” the Trump campaign said in a statement announcing the North Carolina rally.

This post has been updated with more reporting on Trump’s upcoming campaign events.

Walz grilled on internet trends and being a "girl dad" in TikTok video

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz was grilled on the latest online trends in a TikTok interview released on Thursday with Betches, a digital media company that caters to young women, as part of the campaign’s effort to engage young female voters ahead of November’s election.

The Democratic vice presidential candidate described what he has learned by being a “girl dad” to his daughter Hope, and he also stressed the need to protect access to reproductive health care and advocate for wage equality.

Walz was then asked if he was familiar with a few viral trends, starting with a uniquely large baby penguin at the Melbourne Aquarium named Pesto, whom he correctly identified. He was then asked to identify Moo Deng, the famous baby hippopotamus living in Thailand.

“It’s the baby hippo. What is the baby hippo’s name?,” he said, before being told the hippo’s name. “Moo Deng! That’s right.”

He was then asked if he knew what the slang term “rizzler” means.

“Kind of. I am not one. Do I have the context right?” he asked, while laughing. “Yeah I think I know what it is. Casanova-type thing or whatever.”

At the end of the video, Walz said his favorite viral moment of the year was him meeting with schoolchildren after signing into law a program that would provide free breakfast and lunch to public school students.

“We did the Meals for Kids, and a bunch of elementary kids kind of swarming me. We didn’t plan on that happening, but it kind of warms my heart still,” he said.

Ad roundup: Both sides flood battleground airwaves with new content in final campaign sprint

The Kamala Harris and Donald Trump campaigns are up with several new ads this week as the presidential race enters its final sprint.

Here’s a recap of the new spots hitting the airwaves, and some data on how the overall tone of each side’s messaging compares:

Positive versus negative messaging

Ads from the campaigns and their allies cover a wide range of competing issues, and they also reflect divergent strategies when it comes to their overall tone.

The ad tracking firm AdImpact categorizes the tone of campaign ads airing on broadcast TV as either “positive,” “negative,” or “contrast.” Comparing the share of both side’s spending going to ads of each tone illustrates how advertisers are splitting their messaging budget.

And the data shows that the Trump campaign and its allies are waging an overwhelmingly negative advertising effort. By comparison, data for the Harris campaign and its allies reflects a more balanced approach.

New Trump campaign ads

Trump’s presidential campaign has launched five new TV ads so far this week, leveling a wide range of critiques against Harris.

Nearly all of the ads reference immigration and border security, slamming Harris’ record and seeking to link illegal immigration to other issues, including crime, entitlements, and transgender health care policies – a major point of emphasis in GOP campaign ads so far in October.

One of the notable new spots seizes on comments from Harris on ‘The View’ last week, when she was asked how should would govern differently from President Joe Biden, and answered that “not a thing comes to mind.”

New Harris campaign ads

On the other side, the Harris campaign produced a huge wave of 13 unique new TV ads so far this week, putting its prohibitive financial advantage to work in the race’s closing sprint.

The ads reflect a varied approach, mixing spots that promote Harris’ policies and draw contrasts with Trump’s in addition to a steady diet of sharp-edged attacks – and they also display a highly customized strategy, with several spots targeting key swing states, featuring local voters and issues.

Analysis: These are some key quotes from Harris' interview with Fox News

Vice President Kamala Harris has not submitted to many interviews with journalists during her short presidential campaign, and certainly none with conservative media.

When she sat down with Fox News’ Bret Baier for nearly a half-hour on Wednesday, it was her first interview with the network.

Here are some key lines from the interview:

Immigration: It got off to a hot start with a lengthy exchange on immigration, a top issue for many voters, particularly Republican and Republican-leaning ones.

At one point, Baier asked when Harris, who at the outset of President Joe Biden’s administration would say the US southern border was secure, began to realize there was a problem.

Gender: From immigration, Baier pivoted to the wedge topic of gender. He noted that Trump’s supporters have invested heavily in commercials that show Harris, during that 2019 Democratic primary and in comments unearthed by CNN’s KFile, expressing a willingness to enable prisoners who need gender-reassignment surgery to obtain it.

Baier asked if she was still in favor of it, and Harris responded by pointing at federal law in place during the Trump administration:

Comparison with Biden: Baier played clips of Harris saying she would not change anything in Biden’s presidency and asked how hers would be different.

Read more notable lines from the interview.

Michigan judge seems skeptical of GOP push to reject some overseas ballots

A Michigan judge pushed back Thursday against the efforts by the Republican National Committee to throw out some overseas ballots cast in the critical battleground state.

At a hearing in Detroit, Court of Claims Judge Sima Patel appeared skeptical toward the GOP argument that the state constitution bars spouses and children of overseas voters from voting in Michigan if they never resided in the state themselves.

Remember: This is one of a several GOP lawsuits – in swing states that could decide the 2024 election – that hopes to throw out some ballots cast by overseas and military voters. They are a tiny slice of the overall electorate, but former President Donald Trump and his allies have recently ramped up false claims that overseas voting is rife with fraud.

“If you have not, and have never been, a resident of Michigan, you may not vote here,” Michigan GOP lawyer Brandon Debus said during the hearing.

“Isn’t that contrary to what the statute actually says?” Patel asked.

The judge later asked an RNC lawyer, “Doesn’t your interpretation penalize the children of overseas servicepeople?” She also suggested the case could “disenfranchise” voters.

Lawyers for Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat, have previously called the case “frivolous” and urged the judge on Thursday to dismiss the lawsuit.

“Such an extraordinary claim should be accompanied by extraordinary legal support, but in this case, there is none,” said Erik Grill, a lawyer from the Michigan attorney general’s office, who is representing Benson. “This election is underway… it is simply too late.”

“Ultimately what this leaves us with is chaos, confusion, disruption – and none of this would be necessary if these claims had been raised earlier in the year,” Grill added.

The hearing ended without a ruling from the judge.

Common to campaign with Walz in North Carolina

Award-winning rapper and actor Common will campaign alongside Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Walz in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, on Thursday, a campaign official told CNN.

Common will campaign on behalf of Vice President Kamala Harris with the Minnesota governor, where the two will urge North Carolinians to get to the polls ahead of the November 5 election, the official said.

Walz will also be joined by former President Bill Clinton at a rally in Durham, North Carolina, on Thursday.

Trump campaign launches ad seizing on Harris’ comments on what she would have done differently than Biden

The Trump campaign launched a new TV ad this week seizing on Vice President Kamala Harris’ comment on ‘The View’ last week, when she said that “not a thing comes to mind” about something she would have done differently than President Biden over the last four years.

The new ad opens with a focus on illegal immigration, containing stark images of crowds near a border wall. “A flood of illegals, skyrocketing prices, global chaos – and Kamala wouldn’t change a thing,” the ad’s narrator opens.

The ad then replays the clip from ‘The View,’ with host Sunny Hostin asking Harris, “Would you have done something differently than President Biden during the past four years?” Harris responds, “There is not a thing that comes to mind.”

The ad’s narrator resumes, “Nothing will change with Kamala, more weakness, more war, more welfare for illegals and even more taxes. Only President Trump cut middle class taxes and only President Trump will do it again.”

Harris’ answer on “The View” was immediately seized on by GOP critics, eager to cement the link between the vice president to the outgoing incumbent, with President Biden’s approval rating stuck underwater.

The ad that began airing Wednesday is the first from the Trump campaign on TV looking to exploit the moment – and in just a day and a half since its first airing, the campaign has already put more than $4 million behind it, according to AdImpact data, with runs in key swing states between $500,000 and $1 million (highest in Georgia, more than $900,000 so far).

With 19 days until election, latest CNN average of national polling still finds no clear leader in presidential race

An updated CNN Poll of Polls average of national polling, released Wednesday evening, continues to find no clear leader in the presidential race, with an average of 50% of likely voters supporting Vice President Kamala Harris and 49% backing former President Donald Trump.

Of the five surveys included in the average, two give Harris a slight edge over Trump, while three find an effectively deadlocked race.

The latest average includes a poll released Wednesday evening by Fox News which finds no clear leader in the presidential race nationally, with 50% of likely voters supporting Trump in a head-to-head matchup between the candidates, and 48% supporting Harris.

In the Fox poll, 8 in 10 registered voters backing Trump say their support is mostly for him, rather than against Harris, while a smaller 66% majority of registered voters backing Harris say they’re mostly voting for her rather than against Trump.

When voters were asked to describe in their own words the top issue or factor motivating their vote, the most common reasons among Harris supporters were dislike of the other candidate, protecting democracy and abortion; among Trump supporters, it was the economy, immigration, and the candidates’ characteristics.

Analysis: Harris clashes with Fox as she tries to peel away some GOP voters

Kamala Harris didn’t get her second debate with Donald Trump — so she went on Fox News instead.

The vice president clashed heatedly with the pro-Trump network’s top anchor Bret Baier on Wednesday night in the kind of adversarial, unscripted scrum that Republicans have long accused her of avoiding.

Harris and Baier squabbled and interrupted one another, as he exposed her policy flip flops and reversals and she rammed home her talking points. The contentious clash, conducted in swing state Pennsylvania, had more in common with the vice president’s sole debate showdown with the former president than forensic, formal interviews where she’s often stumbled.

“May I please finish, you have to let me finish,” Harris said early in the interview, using a technique she has employed against male rivals in congressional hearings and debates in the past.

The vice president’s trip to Fox News showed how she’s trying to conjure new turning points in a contest with no clear leader and with most swing states regarded as toss-ups. Trump’s decision to decline a second debate with his rival has meant that the final weeks of the campaign lack big scheduled moments that could change the race.

In the end, on Wednesday, both Harris and Fox News probably got what they wanted.

Read the full analysis.

What the presidential candidates are up to today

Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are continuing their push to reach voters with less than three weeks to go until Election Day.

Here’s what’s on their schedules today:

Donald Trump: On Thursday, Trump will attend and deliver remarks at the 79th Annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner in New York City.

Kamala Harris: Harris will campaign across the battleground state of Wisconsin on Thursday. She will first campaign in Milwaukee before traveling to La Crosse and Green Bay to speak at rallies. The vice president will then travel to Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Tim Walz: Gov. Walz will continue his political swing. Former President Bill Clinton is expected to join the Democratic vice presidential candidate at an event in Durham, North Carolina, today, according to the campaign.

Next week, former President Barack Obama will appear with Walz in Madison, Wisconsin, on Tuesday, the Harris campaign previously said.

JD Vance: The Republican vice presidential candidate will deliver remarks in Pittsburgh on Thursday, according to the campaign website. Other Trump allies will also be on the road for events in Waynesburg, Pennsylvania, and Raleigh, North Carolina, the website said.

Polls open today for early voting in North Carolina. Here are key things to know

Poll workers set up ballot-marking machines at an early in-person voting site at Asheville-Buncombe Technical Community College on October 16, 2024.

Early voting is underway on Thursday in pivotal swing state of North Carolina. Here’s what to know if you plan to go to the polls before Election Day:

Impact of Hurricane Helene damage: The North Carolina State Board of Elections website has updates about relocated polling places, how constituents can vote if they lost their identification in the storm and how displaced voters can request new absentee ballots.

No more grace period for mail ballots: Voters considering casting a ballot by mail should note that their ballots need to be received by 7:30 p.m. ET on Election Day.

New voter ID rules: Residents of the Tar Heel State will be required to present identification when they show up to vote.

Read the full story and visit CNN’s voter handbook to see how to vote in your area.

Vance says Harris "dipped and dodged questions" in Fox News interview

Sen. JD Vance speaks at a campaign rally at Wilmington International Airport in North Carolina on October 16.

Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance said Vice President Kamala Harris “couldn’t answer a direct question” and failed to acknowledge or explain her role in contributing to what he sees as failures of the Biden-Harris administration, including on the border, in her interview with Fox News Wednesday night.

Vance said Harris is trying to do a “bait and switch” by blaming former President Donald Trump for tanking a bipartisan border deal, which the Ohio senator claimed “wouldn’t have secured the border.”

“They came in saying they were going to undo Donald Trump’s border policy. They did that. The predictable consequences ensued. Admit that. Admit it. Admit that you guys screwed up and change course. Don’t blame it on Congress because you guys refused to do your job,” Vance said.

Vance also criticized Harris for pivoting to Trump when answering what she is “turning the page” from in her own campaign.

“She pretends that Donald Trump bears the responsibility for problems that happened while she was the sitting vice president,” Vance said.

Nikki Haley records robocall for Trump in closing weeks of campaign

Nikki Haley walks on stage at her caucus night event on January 15, 2024 in West Des Moines, Iowa.

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley is lending her voice to support Donald Trump in the closing weeks of the campaign in a robocall that acknowledges her past disagreements with the former president but emphasizes the stakes of the upcoming election.

Haley, who was a GOP primary rival of Trump, goes on to praise the former president’s record on the economy, immigration, and foreign policy, drawing a stark contrast between his administration and that of Vice President Kamala Harris.

She accuses the Biden-Harris administration of presiding over “record inflation,” an “open border,” and weakening America’s global standing.

“I’m voting for Trump, for my family and for yours,” Haley urges, asking voters to support Trump on November 5.

The robocall was confirmed to CNN by Betsy Ankney, Haley’s former campaign manager, and two Trump campaign advisers. The Trump campaign declined to provide further details on the call.

The call comes after the former US ambassador to the United Nations endorsed Trump at the Republican National Convention after clashing with him during the primary campaign in which she sought to present herself as a more moderate alternative within the GOP.

CNN’s Alayna Treene contributed reporting to this post.

Overseas voters targeted by GOP lawsuits in battleground states

An overseas ballot process that has long been seen as sacrosanct by both parties, due to its connection to US military members serving in foreign countries, is the target of multiple GOP-backed lawsuits filed in recent days.

The new legal assault comes as ballots cast by Americans abroad have become very favorable for Democrats and could be crucial in getting Vice President Kamala Harris over the finish line.

In addition to the new lawsuits filed by Republicans in Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Michigan, former President Donald Trump has suggested without evidence that the overseas vote is a source of fraud, even as he has made entreaties to Americans abroad with a campaign promise of lowering their taxes.

Why this matters: There are about 6.5 million eligible American voters living, serving and studying overseas, with about 1.6 million of them in battleground states, and more in tight House districts. Those votes could be decisive: The 2020 election was decided by 44,000 votes over four states.

More than 1.2 million ballots were sent abroad in 2020 and nearly 890,000 were eventually counted, according to a report by the US Election Assistance Commission.

Read the full story.

Harris will campaign across Wisconsin today. Here's what is on her agenda in the key battleground state

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign event at Washington Crossing Historic Park with supportive Republicans in Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania, on October 16.

Vice President Kamala Harris will make campaign stops in Milwaukee, La Crosse and Green Bay, Wisconsin on Thursday as she continues to campaign across Blue Wall states, according to a campaign official.

Harris will first stop by the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where she will drop by a business class while on campus and outline her economic agenda as she meets with students.

The vice president will then travel to La Crosse where she will hold a rally at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse in an effort to engage young voters. Harris will wrap up her day with a rally in Green Bay, alongside Wisconsin leaders.

Harris’ team is touting their ground game in the Badger State, with over 250 coordinated staffers and more than 50 offices across the state, according to the campaign.

Why this state is key: Wisconsin, Michigan, and above all Pennsylvania have been a top priority for both Harris and former President Donald Trump – just as they have in seemingly every recent presidential election.

Trump won the presidency in 2016 by stunning Democrat Hillary Clinton to win all three states by a combined margin of about 80,000 votes. President Joe Biden won back the White House in 2020 by recapturing all three states by a combined margin of around 260,000 votes.

Read more about the importance of these three states in presidential elections.

CNN’s Ronald Brownstein contributed reporting to this post.

Harris campaign launches second TV ad featuring Hadley Duvall, reproductive rights advocate and rape survivor

Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign launched a new ad Thursday featuring Hadley Duvall, a reproductive rights advocate and rape survivor who has appeared in several high-profile campaign ads.

In the new ad, Duvall shares her story and criticizes abortion restrictions, blaming former President Donald Trump directly, and saying, “Trump did this.”

“When I was five, I began getting sexually abused by my stepfather, and he got me pregnant when I was 12. 64,000 pregnancies from rape have occurred in states with total abortion bans, and Trump did this,” Duvall says in the new spot. “Women and girls need to have choices. With Kamala Harris, we do.”

Some background: Duvall rose to prominence during the 2023 Kentucky gubernatorial race, appearing in a striking ad for Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear’s reelection campaign that went viral, and she has since become an influential voice as Democrats have centered abortion rights in their campaigns.

In September, Harris’ campaign launched its first ad featuring Duvall, which it’s since spent more than $660,000 airing across all the key swing states. The new ad first began airing this morning in Wisconsin, and already has about $30,000 behind it, but additional targeting details are not yet available.

At least 30 election deniers and 2020 fake electors serving as Trump electors this year

More than a dozen Republicans who were “fake electors” in 2020, including several facing criminal charges, are serving as former President Donald Trump’s official electors in battleground states this year, according to a CNN survey.

Another 16 GOP electors from these states are election deniers who say President Joe Biden’s victory in 2020 was fraudulent. Combined, these election deniers and 2020 fake electors represent more than a third of the 82 electors picked this year to support Trump in the seven states where he attempted to overturn the results in 2020.

The involvement of these Republican activists in the Electoral College process this year, especially in critical battlegrounds like Pennsylvania and Michigan, could lead to post-election chaos if Trump is defeated and they try again to subvert the will of the voters.

Their participation also highlights how a huge part of the Republican Party continues to fully embrace Trump’s election denialism

“Those who participate in election fraud should be held accountable, not given another bite at the apple,” said Lindsey Miller, research director at Informing Democracy, a nonprofit that works to safeguard the vote-counting and election certification process.

Read more about the return of fake electors ahead of Election Day.

Popular dating apps have new features to show off political views

Recognizing that daters are increasingly prioritizing politics in their search for “the one,” many dating apps have introduced features that make it easier for users to match with potential partners based on their politics in the run-up to the election.

Tinder last month launched its “Take Action Center,” which introduced profile stickers that allow users to share whether they will be voting and the issues important to them. The most popular stickers among the new ones rolled out are “Hot people vote (I’m voting)” and “Voting for reproductive rights.”

Abortion rights are on the ballot in 10 states next month as the issue continues to be a major political flashpoint.

“We are really committed to protecting reproductive freedom because we believe this really impacts dating and relationships,” said Stephanie Danzi, senior vice president of global marketing for Tinder.

The “Take Action Center” also features a partnership with Vote.org, a nonpartisan voter registration organization, to provide users with election-related information such as polling locations and voter registration deadlines.

OkCupid has added a dozen new matching questions that focus on voter behavior and help show users more compatible profiles. The questions, added in January, include “Are you voting in the 2024 presidential election?”; “What’s the most important issue to you in the 2024 presidential election?” and “Is it a deal breaker if your date is voting for a different candidate than you in the 2024 presidential election?”

Read the full story.

Catch up on the headlines you might have missed

Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump took opportunities to try to reach voters through interviews and town halls this week.

It comes with less than three weeks to go until Election Day and there is still no clear leader in the presidential race, according to a new CNN Poll of Polls average of national polling.

Here’s a recap of what happened on the campaign trail on Wednesday:

  • At a Univision town hall in Florida with Latino voters, Trump repeated his false claim that Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, are eating their neighbors’ pets.
  • Trump also didn’t directly answer questions about his plan for “mass deportation” of undocumented immigrants and why he opposed a bipartisan border bill. He instead talked about his administration’s immigration policy and the economic difficulties facing farmers.
  • Trump declared himself the “father of IVF” during a Fox News town hall in front of a female audience. He also falsely claimed that “everybody” wanted Roe v. Wade to be overturned.
  • Harris sat down with Fox News anchor Bret Baier on Wednesday where she pivoted to the bipartisan border security bill blocked by the GOP when pressed on the Biden administration’s handling of the US-Mexico border.
  • The vice president also tried to differentiate herself from Biden and continued to attack Trump, saying anyone who wants to be President of the United States should be able to take criticism without saying they would “lock people up.”
  • Earlier Wednesday at a rally in Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania, with more than 100 Republican supporters, Harris said that Trump is “increasingly unstable and unhinged.”