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2024 Elections Latest: Donald Trump and Kamala Harris enter the final stretch of the 2024 campaign

2024 Elections Latest: Donald Trump and Kamala Harris enter the final stretch of the 2024 campaign

That evening, McCamish hosted thousands of accredited media outlets, as well as a floor of “virtual room” where surrogates come to insist that their candidate won. The whirlwind proved unrivaled that evening, but after Biden’s whispering, a chaotic performance underscored the 81-year-old president’s age and ultimately led to his death. falling out races.

Trump’s top advisers were on the McCamish floor that evening, crowing about what happened on the debate stage and anticipating a brawl with Biden, but Democrats instead chose to nominate the vice president Harris.

Trump spoke about his experiences with faith and fatherhood at the National Faith Advisory Council summit. Trump recounted his upbringing in New York, saying he sometimes enjoyed religious ceremonies but generally avoided the issue of his own faith.

Trump praised conservative Christians as a key part of his administration and said the revamped faith office would have a direct connection to the Oval Office. He also promised to repeal the Johnson Amendment, which prohibits 501(c)(3) nonprofits from supporting or opposing political candidates.

“I shouldn’t chastise anyone, but Christians are not known for being very solid voters,” Trump told the crowd.

“We have to save religion in this country. No, honestly, religion is under threat,” he warned.

Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia congresswoman and Trump loyalist, used quite the exaggeration to brag about Trump at a Georgia Tech rally.

After returning from a Trump rally in New York, she described Trump as “the man who built this city.”

Trump’s first development projects, carried out jointly with his father’s company, took place in the 1970s. He opened Trump Tower in 1983. Many of New York’s iconic skyscrapers predate this era, including the Woolworth Building (1913), the Empire State Building (1931), and the World Trade Center (dedicated in 1973).

Conspiracy theorist and US MP Marjorie Taylor Greene reacts sharply to Donald Trump’s harshest critics.

“We are tired of being called Nazis and fascists,” Greene, R-Ga., said during a Trump rally on the Georgia Tech campus in Atlanta. “These are absolute lies and we won’t put up with it anymore.” Greene suggested that Trump supporters filed a class-action lawsuit against media outlets and others who spread these labels about the former president and his supporters during the 2024 election.

She failed to mention that Trump had repeatedly called Harris a “communist” and a “fascist.”

She criticized Harris and all Democrats as incompetent, arguing that their policies do not work “like their stupid vaccine” in the fight against Covid-19. Greene is one of the most vocal supporters of the anti-vaccine conspiracy theory.

Democrats are sharing and condemning a racist comment made by a comedian during a Trump rally in New York. They hope to dissuade Puerto Ricans across the country from voting for the former president, but the influence could be especially strong in Pennsylvania.

The Census Bureau does found Puerto Ricans are the largest specific group of Latinos in the commonwealth. AND test according to the University of California, Los Angeles, the number exceeded 470,000 in 2018.

Harris’ campaign will begin new ad condemning the racist joke calling Puerto Rico a “floating island of garbage” made by a comedian at a Trump rally yesterday.

Harris’ ad opens with the sound of a joke, then Harris says, “I will never forget what Donald Trump did. He left the island and offered nothing but paper towels and insults,” he said, referring to the then-president’s response to Hurricane Maria in 2017. When Trump visited the island after the deadly hurricane, he threw rolls of paper towels into the crowd.

“Puerto Ricans deserve better,” Harris says on camera. “As president, I will always fight for you and your families, and together we can forge a new path forward,” he adds.

Harris’ campaign says the ad will run on digital platforms in all battleground states, but will specifically target ZIP codes with high concentrations of Latino voters.

“There’s a lot of religion there. That’s nice. That’s pretty good. We like it,” the former president said after applause. The National Faith Advisory Council summit is held in Powder Springs, Georgia.

Republicans on Monday asked the U.S. Supreme Court to issue an emergency order in Pennsylvania that could result in thousands of votes not being counted in this year’s election in the battleground state.

Just over a week before the election, the court was asked to weigh in on a dispute over provisional ballots cast by Pennsylvania voters whose absentee ballots were rejected for failing to follow technical procedures set out in state law.