The vice president has over a 50 percent chance of winning Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Nevada, according to Silver.
U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris leads Republican rival Donald Trump by 5 percentage points in an NBC News poll released on Sunday that found that respondents have come to see her more favorably since she emerged as the Democratic candidate for president.
A double-digit increase in popularity, rising Democratic enthusiasm and an early edge for representing “change” have vaulted Vice President Kamala Harris forward and reshuffled the 2024 presidential contest,
Vice President Kamala Harris will skip this year’s Al Smith charity dinner in New York. Harris is breaking with tradition so she can campaign instead in a battleground state less than three weeks before Election Day.
Harris has a four-point edge over Trump, 52%-48%, in the latest CBS News/YouGov poll of likely voters taken Sept. 18-20—but her lead shrinks to just 51%-49% in the seven states that are likely to decide the electoral college winner (Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and North Carolina).
On CNN’s State of the Union, CNN Political Commentator Kate Bedingfield, CNN Political Commentator Jamal Simmons, and Republican strategists Erin Perrine and Brad Todd discuss new national polling showing Harris leading Trump and the controversy engulfing the North Carolina gubernatorial race.
Get the latest news from the 2024 campaign trail in the contest between Vice President Harris and former president Donald Trump.
The former president is taking an increasingly visible role on the campaign trail for his longtime friend: “I’m pushing, and I hope you are, too,” he tells donors.
The first presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump dominated Americans’ political attention in the week that followed. It also served to elevate a set of false social media claims about migrants to sudden national prevalence.
A senior Harris campaign aid told Politico during a recent interview that voters shouldn't "read too much into" Kamala Harris' lack of interviews.
Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) exclusively joins Meet the Press to react to a new NBC News national poll and discuss Kamala Harris’ campaign.