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US presidential election, live: Harris holds historic rally and gives Trump a nickname

Kamala Harris' speech Tuesday night was an opportunity for the Democrat to mark a break with his Republican competitor, calling him a “budding dictator” one week before the election.

The essential

  • The US presidential election will be held on November 5, 2024, but Americans have already started voting since the end of September with early voting gradually opening in the different states.
  • Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Kamala Harris are the main candidates for the US presidential election. They are neck and neck in the national and state polls. In the seven swing states that will swing the election one way or the other, the gap is also very tight, with the advantage shifting back and forth from Trump to Harris.
  • On Tuesday night, Kamala Harris delivered a unifying speech from the Ellipse near the White House, where Donald Trump had addressed the crowd before storming the Capitol on January 6, 2021. “This is a choice between a country founded on the freedom of every American and a country governed by chaos and division,” she said as she took the stage.
  • This “final indictment” from the Democratic candidate, as she liked to point out in recent days, did not spare her Republican competitor. Between purchasing power and immigration, the vice president also brought the subject of abortion back to the table: “The government should not tell women what to do with their bodies,” she said, referring to Donald Trump's relatively vague position on abortions in the country.
  • A total of 75,000 people came to listen to Kamala Harris' speech in Washington. In opposition to the divisions desired by the former president, Kamala Harris hammered home a message based on the future: “We have to stop pointing fingers at each other and start standing together. It's time to turn the page on drama, conflict and confusion,” she said. The Democratic candidate also wanted to mark a real break with Donald Trump, going so far as to calling the Republican a “dictator in the making”, a nickname that the Republican is unlikely to like.
  • Follow the latest news on the US presidential election campaign in our live feed.

Live

15:23 – “Malicious narcissist”, “contemptuous”.. A Puerto Rican newspaper castigates Trump

Puerto Rican newspaper El Nuevo Dáa has endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris, following outrage over a comedian's offensive comments at former President Donald Trump's rally in New York on Sunday against Puerto Rico. “Trump has for years maintained a discourse of contempt and misinformation against the island that reveals an obsession and contempt for a people who do not have the power of the vote to defend themselves, since the three million American citizens who live in Puerto Rico cannot vote in the presidential elections. However, the remaining five million living in the United States, which he also calls trash, can vote,” says editor-in-chief María Luisa Ferráé Rangel in an outraged editorial.

“Trump suffers from psychopathic elements that he highlights by lying repeatedly. He has no moral compass and believes that the rules do not apply to him. These are typical traits of people who are described as malignant narcissists. Trump is one of the worst,” the article also reads. Trump's team has since tried to distance itself from the controversial comedian. Trump and Harris are now battling for the Puerto Rican vote, particularly in Pennsylvania, where about 500,000 Puerto Ricans live. A key electorate in the race for the White House.

14:36 ​​- Agenda for this Wednesday: Harris in Wisconsin, Trump in North Carolina

Election Day is less than a week away, and candidates are making their final campaign trips. As a reminder, the election date is set for Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024. This Wednesday, Vice President Kamala Harris is hosting a get-out-the-vote rally at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, according to a campaign spokesperson. Performers Gracie Abrams, Mumford & Sons, Remi Wolf, and The National’s Matt Berninger and Aaron Dessner will perform at the event. The Democrat will also campaign at events in Raleigh, North Carolina and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania in the coming days.

Former President Donald Trump is scheduled to speak at a rally in Rocky Mount, North Carolina. He is also scheduled to speak at a campaign rally in Green Bay, Wisconsin. In other words, this Wednesday, both candidates The White House are therefore present in swing states, territories where the polls are extremely tight.

12:54 – Trump judges Harris' speech as "terrible" and "full of lies"

On his social network Truth, Donald Trump reacted to the rally of his competitor Kamala Harris, which was held Tuesday evening at the Ellipse. “Kamala's speech was terrible, full of lies and nothing new. Where are the jobs ? There are none!”, he said. Kamala Harris notably compared her political plans to those of Trump, presenting herself as the opposite of her competitor. Namely, a president who would expand health care to home, which would support women's reproductive rights and which would favor compromise, unlike the Republican.

“Our democracy doesn't require us to agree on everything. That's not the American way,” Harris said Tuesday. “We love a good debate. And just because someone disagrees with us doesn't make them the 'enemy within,'” she said at the historic rally. The fight is on less than a week before the election, on November 5th.

11:48 – Impossible to give the result of the election on the evening of the election ? A State poses a problem

The results of the American presidential election may not be known on election night, November 5. Indeed, we may have to wait a little while to find out whether Donald Trump or Kamala Harris will be designated the new president of the United States. At issue ? Maricopa County in Arizona. Located in one of the 7 Swing states, these pivotal states of the election that change political color from one election to the next. the other, it is defined as the “swing county par excellence” by the Associated Press.

In this county, the counting could actually take longer than elsewhere. With 4.5 million residents, Maricopa is more populous than nearly 50 percent of the states in the country. In addition, 60 percent of Arizona voters reside there. Add to that a voting process slowed by the territory's election laws and a result that promises to be wildly erroneous. in that county, and you have a dreaded situation that could leave America in doubt for days. As a reminder, in previous elections, it has sometimes been necessary to wait more than a week after the election date to get local results in Maricopa County. In 2024, the count could take up to 13 days according to election officials. 

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10:55 – Harris' victory hinges on women's vote in “Swing states” ?

As both presidential candidates work to woo voters ahead of Election Day on Nov. 5, one major factor could come into play, said Ron Brownstein, a leading political analyst for CNN: gender. “Women make up the majority of voters in every swing state, and they do nationwide. “Women's participation rates are higher than those of men, and the gap is particularly wide among young women and young men,” he told CNN.

This is why “if Harris wants to win this race, it will be… with the support of women in swing states, in the inner suburbs of big cities that traditionally lean Republican,” he says. While many women therefore favor the Republican party on the security and economic side, the issue of abortion rights could tip the scales in favor of Democrat this time.

09:52 – “We have the power to turn the page” Harris assures

“Turn the page” was the main message delivered by Kamala Harris during her historic rally on Tuesday, October 29 at the Ellipse. While the Democrat is neck and neck with her competitor Donald Trump in the polls, she delivered a speech advocating the collective interest and in favor of the freedoms of each American, particularly concerning women and the right to “Those who came before us did not fight, sacrifice and give their lives only to see us give up our fundamental freedoms. On November 5, we each have the power to turn the page,” said the vice-president.

08:58 – A historic meeting and a successful tour de force for Harris

Kamala Harris made a big impact with her rally in Washington on Tuesday evening, delivering her final plea to “write the next chapter” of the United States in front of a huge crowd. Indeed, 75,000 people were present at the National Hall according to her campaign management, where Donald Trump had harangued her supporters before the storming of the Capitol on January 6, 2021.

Overheated supporters of all ages had come to fill the aisles, American flags in hand, with the hope of seeing Kamala Harris become the first female president of the United States and of seeing the Democratic coat of arms fly above the White House once again. A tour de force and a gamble that also seems to be a week before the election to try to swing in her favor, an election that could be played out at a few thousand votes in some states.

08:34 – Abortion, Kamala Harris' hobby horse

Revoked by the Supreme Court, the right to abortion at the federal level will be reestablished by Kamala Harris in the event of accession to the White House, as she hammered home yesterday at Washington, marking a major difference with her Republican rival: “The government should not tell women what to do with their bodies,” she said during her “closing statement.”

08:22 – “I want to lower taxes for the middle class,” Harris assures

“He wants to cut taxes for billionaires, I want to cut taxes for working people, for the middle class,” Kamala Harris said Tuesday evening from Washington, positioning herself as the candidate of the people and the middle class, rather left aside by her opponent according to her words. “I know that the majority of us have more in common than what separates us,” she adds, striving to highlight the strong bond that unites Americans before the long-awaited election. She says she wants to work “every day” to “reach consensus and compromise to move things forward (…) If you give me the chance to fight on your behalf, nothing in the world will stop me,” she continues.

08:10 – “I will be the president of all Americans”, a speech of national unity

“Donald Trump has spent a decade dividing the American people and convincing us to fear each other. That is who he is, but, America, I am here tonight to tell you that is not who we are. That is not who we are,” Kamala Harris said at her Ellipse rally, in a largely unifying speech in which she praised the collective. The United States is “a country of immigrants.” and I promise to “listen to those who didn't vote for her,” she said. “Republicans, Democrats, independents,” it doesn't matter, the vice president recognizes that she is “not perfect,” and intends to “invite to her table” Americans who don't think like her. “I will be a president for all Americans,” she says.

08:02 – Harris attacks and calls Trump a “dictator in the making”

During her Ellipse rally on Tuesday, October 29, Vice President Kamala Harris did not hesitate to hit hard against her competitor Donald Trump, calling the former president of the United States a “budding dictator” in an attempt to both demonize her competitor and discredit him: “We are not the vehicle that allows budding dictators to carry out their plans.” (…) We are a nation big enough to hold all our dreams, strong enough to overcome our fractures, bold enough to imagine a future full of promise (…) Let us fight for this beautiful country we love. And in seven days, we will have the power. Each of you has the power to turn the page and begin to "write the next chapter," she said from the podium, ending her remarks on a note of hope, the common thread of her speech during the rally.

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What you need to know

The American presidential election will take place on November 5, 2024 and is mainly between Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Kamala Harris, despite the presence of a few other minor candidates in the race for the White House. The election promises to be particularly tight this year according to the various national polls or those conducted in each state. In the United States, it is the results of the state-by-state ballot that are decisive for the outcome of the election.

Each of the 50 states in the country represents a certain number of electors, the more populated the state, the greater the number of electors. It is ultimately these electors who vote for the future president of the United States. But the electors are not distributed to the Republican and Democratic camps proportionally to the results of the election, they all go to one and the same party: the one that obtained the highest score. To hope to win the presidential election, candidates must therefore win the ballot in as many states as possible to obtain the most electors possible. It is necessary to win 270 electors to be assured of victory.

The outcome of the election is already known in most American states that have very strong electoral habits: the territories on the east and west coasts are usually very progressive like California or New York and vote for the Democratic camp, those in the Midwest are rather conservative and mainly support the Republican party. But there are a handful of states, called swing states, which from one election to the next can swing from one camp to another. These are the states that decide the outcome of the election: Arizona, North Carolina, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

Teilor Stone

By Teilor Stone

Teilor Stone has been a reporter on the news desk since 2013. Before that she wrote about young adolescence and family dynamics for Styles and was the legal affairs correspondent for the Metro desk. Before joining Thesaxon , Teilor Stone worked as a staff writer at the Village Voice and a freelancer for Newsday, The Wall Street Journal, GQ and Mirabella. To get in touch, contact me through my teilor@nizhtimes.com 1-800-268-7116