October 14, 2024, presidential campaign news | CNN Politics

October 14, 2024, presidential campaign news

RENO, NEVADA - OCTOBER 11: Republican presidential nominee, former U.S. President Donald Trump, greets supporters during a campaign rally at the Grand Sierra Resort on October 11, 2024 in Reno, Nevada. With 25 days to go until election day, former President Donald Trump is campaigning in Nevada and Colorado. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Why former defense secretary fears Trump would try to utilize military against US citizens
03:28 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

• On the campaign trail: Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump held dueling events in the pivotal battleground state of Pennsylvania today as they make their final pitches to voters with just weeks until Election Day.

• VP candidates also hit the trail: Meanwhile, the vice presidential nominees were criss-crossing another round of states. Gov. Tim Walz campaigned in Wisconsin while Sen. JD Vance was traveling to Minnesota, Illinois and Iowa.

• A very close race: The latest CNN Poll of Polls average of national polling finds no clear leader in the presidential race, with an average of 50% of likely voters supporting Harris and 47% backing Trump.

• What to know to cast your vote: With early voting and by mail underway in much of the country, 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.

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Michigan Senate candidates spar over abortion, EVs and guns in second debate

Democratic Rep. Elissa Slotkin and Republican former Rep. Mike Rogers faced off in a second debate on Monday as they compete for retiring Sen. Debbie Stabenow’s seat in Michigan.

During the debate, the candidates addressed abortion, transgender athletes playing on women’s and girls’ sports teams, electric vehicles, border security, gun regulations and former President Donald Trump.

Rogers, who was endorsed by Trump earlier this year and often appears at campaign events with the former president, did not bring up the GOP nominee on Monday night, just as he did not in last week’s debate.

However, Slotkin linked Rogers with Trump in an effort to portray the former congressman as corrupted by the former president and his rhetoric.

She also brought up earlier in the debate that Betsy DeVos, who served in Trump’s administration, is a donor to her opponent, and implied that Rogers’s education policy is shaped by the former education secretary.

Trump stays on stage and sways to music long after wrapping town hall in Pennsylvania

Former President Donald Trump stayed on stage, swaying to the music and looking out at the crowd for several songs after finishing a town hall Monday night in Oaks, Pennsylvania.

It was unclear why Trump stayed on stage for so long and there was confusion about what was happening when he was up there.

Music played for more than 30 minutes as Trump stood on stage and occasionally made brief remarks in between songs.

As the music played, Trump occasionally exchanged words with South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, who moderated the town hall, and people near him in the crowd, but Trump mostly just looked out into the audience and nodded his head as the music blasted throughout the venue. The event was held indoors at the Greater Philadelphia Center & Fairgrounds.

Asked why Trump was still on stage, Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung told CNN, “He’s here for the people. Not like loser Kamala Harris.”

Trump kicked off the unusual moment by saying, “Let me hear that music, please. Nice and loud.”

The first song was “Time To Say Goodbye (Con Te Partirò)” by Andrea Bocelli and Sarah Brightman. Then “It’s a Man’s World” by James Brown and Luciano Pavarotti.

After the songs played, Trump said he would take a question from the crowd. But then he said, “How about this, we’ll play YMCA, and we’ll go home.”

“YMCA” by Village People played, and then “Hallelujah” by Rufus Wainwright, “Nothing Compares 2 U” by Sinead O’Connor, “An American Trilogy” by Elvis Presley, “Rich Men North of Richmond” by Oliver Anthony and “November Rain” by Guns N’ Roses.

This unusual moment came after Trump asked his team to play “Ave Maria” earlier during the town hall when someone was receiving medical attention. Two people needed medical attention during his town hall. About 30 minutes into his town hall, Trump paused the event and asked for a doctor to attend to someone in the crowd. After a few minutes, the crowd started singing “God Bless America.”

"You heard his words." Harris uses Trump’s "enemy from within" comment to portray GOP rival as dangerous

Vice President Kamala Harris attends a campaign rally in Erie, Pennsylvania, on Monday

Vice President Kamala Harris slammed Republican rival Donald Trump in Pennsylvania on Monday night over the former president’s comment that the US military should handle “the enemy from within” on Election Day.

It was the latest example of Harris’ campaign drawing sharper distinctions with Trump in the presidential race’s closing weeks, using the former president’s own words and those of his former aides to cast him as dangerous and unstable.

Speaking in Erie, Harris took a rare step of rolling clips of Trump’s extreme rhetoric as she highlighted his comments Sunday on Fox News, when he said he isn’t worried about his supporters’ actions on Election Day. “I think the bigger problem is the enemy from within,” he said.

“Please roll the clip,” Harris said as the monitors of the Erie Insurance Arena played some of Trump’s recent comments.

Read more on Harris’ comments here.

CNN’s Ebony Davis contributed reporting from Erie, Pennsylvania.

Walz labels Trump a "fascist" after former president suggests using the military against "the enemy from within"

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz speaks at a rally in Green Bay, Wisconsin, on Monday.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz on Monday labeled Donald Trump a “fascist” after the former president suggested using the military to respond to “the enemy from within” in reference to what he described as “radical left lunatics.”

Walz told hundreds of supporters at a convention center in Green Bay that Trump’s suggestion of using the National Guard or the US military to respond to political opposition “makes me sick to my stomach.”

Some context: Trump suggested using the military to handle what he called “the enemy from within” on Election Day during an interview on Fox News, saying that he isn’t worried about chaos from his supporters or foreign actors, but instead from “radical left lunatics.”

Walz helps launch Hunters and Anglers for Harris-Walz coalition

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said Vice President Kamala Harris is committed to protecting public lands and believes in the Second Amendment. Harris’ running mate made the remarks during the launch of the Hunters and Anglers for Harris-Walz coalition.

Pointing out that Harris was the tie-breaking vote on the Inflation Reduction Act, which had “expand voluntary conservation easements on native grasslands and other critical wildlife habitat,” Walz said, “As our next president, she’s committed to protecting our public lands and natural resources.”

The Democratic vice-presidential nominee said that he and Harris are gun owners and “believe in the Second Amendment, but we also believe that our first responsibility is to keep our kids safe.”

Trump and Vance to appear at NYC fundraiser on the same day as rally at Madison Square Garden

Former President Donald Trump and Ohio Senator JD Vance are seen in New York City on September 11.

Former President Donald Trump and his running mate, JD Vance, will appear at a fundraiser in New York City on October 27, according to a source familiar with the event, hosted by the Trump 47 committee.

This comes as the Harris campaign announced it raised $1 billion since she launched her candidacy. As CNN reported, Trump’s campaign announced about $430 million jointly with the Republican Party in the three months between the start of July and end of September.

Trump has a campaign rally at Madison Square Garden on the same day. The fundraiser was first reported by The New York Times.

Vance says military force justifiable if rioting and looting happen after the 2024 election

Vance speaks in front of the Minneapolis police department's 3rd precinct on October 14.

Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance backed up former President Donald Trump for suggesting he would use the National Guard or military to fight the “enemy from within,” if riots break out in the aftermath of the 2024 election.

Vance claimed there were “a core group of far-left activists” who were willing to harass and commit violence against fellow Americans in 2016 and after the death of George Floyd in 2020.

Earlier, Vance also said Trump was saying “something nice and polite” when praising Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz in 2020 for his handling of the riots in Minneapolis following Floyd’s death, but it doesn’t mean Walz “can run away from the fact that he let his own city burn to the ground.”

Vance also defends other Trump comments: At a news conference in Minneapolis, Vance said Trump “was just talking honestly” about how “Detroit has been left behind,” when asked by CNN about the former president’s criticism of the city last week.

On Thursday, Trump warned at the Detroit Economic Club that the whole country would end up “like Detroit” if Vice President Kamala Harris wins in 2024.

Walz visits stadium of NFL’s Green Bay Packers

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz visited Lambeau Field on Monday, home of the NFL’s Green Bay Packers, the latest effort by the Harris campaign to lean into the Democratic vice-presidential candidate’s background as a former football coach.

Walz took a tour of the team’s stadium, spending several minutes on the field.

Inside the visitors’ locker room, Walz asked about how football teams would organize themselves in the room and reflected briefly on Hall of Fame former Green Bay Packers quarterback Brett Favre returning to the stadium when he played for the Minnesota Vikings. He then spoke fondly of the history of the stadium and thanked team staff for showing him the stadium.

Walz has visited football stadiums three times in the past three weeks. He attended the University of Michigan-University of Minnesota football game in Ann Arbor, Michigan, at the end of September. On Friday, he attended the rivalry game between his former school Mankato West High School and Mankato East High School.

2 prominent Arab American groups in Michigan will not endorse a presidential candidate

Two prominent Arab American groups based in the Detroit metro area — Arab American PAC and Arab American News — will not to endorse a candidate for president, the longtime publisher of Arab American News said.

Osama Siblani told CNN that the decision was made late Sunday night after two days of intense joint meetings on the topic. It comes less than a month before the presidential election in a battleground state where Arab American voters are an important voting bloc.

The groups will send a letter explaining their decision to about 75,000 homes in southeast Michigan later this week, he said.

The Arab American community was energized about the possibility of Vice President Kamala Harris in the beginning of her campaign over the summer, but Siblani said they now feel she is no different than President Joe Biden or former President Donald Trump.

“Harris took off very well at the beginning, she was flying high, but now she is declining,” he said. “We do not see progress it is just talk.”

Earlier this month, Harris met with Arab American advocates in Michigan in an effort to boost her support within the community.

But Siblani said that the community wants a candidate who commits to peace and justice and no longer sending US weaponry to Israel and they have not heard any commitments from Harris.

Harris expected to seize on Trump's "enemy from within" comments during event in Pennsylvania

Attendees await the start of a campaign rally for Vice President Kamala Harris at Erie Insurance Arena on October 14 in Pennsylvania.

Vice President Kamala Harris is expected to slam former President Donald Trump over his suggestion that he’d use the military to handle what he called “the enemy from within” on Election Day, according to a senior campaign official.

It marks the latest effort by the vice president to paint her Republican rival as dangerous, particularly in the critical battleground state of Pennsylvania where Trump is also campaigning Monday.

Harris plans to seize on those remarks during a rally in Erie, Pennsylvania, and warn that Trump’s action could people’s freedom at risk. The campaign will also release a new ad, dubbed “Enemy Within,” featuring former Trump aides, including Olivia Troye and Kevin Carroll.

“The second term would be worse,” Carroll says in the ad. “There will be no one to stop his worst instincts. Unchecked power. No guardrails.”

Trump campaign releases another TV ad hammering Harris on transgender health care policy

The Trump campaign on Monday released another TV ad hammering Vice President Kamala Harris over previous comments she’s made about transgender health care policy.

The ad opens with Charlamagne tha God, a radio host who has said he is going to vote for Harris this election, criticizing the vice president, saying, “Kamala supports taxpayer-funded sex changes for prisoners.”

The comments reference CNN reporting on a 2019 questionnaire that Harris filled out in the course of her unsuccessful 2020 presidential bid, in which she said she would support taxpayer-funded surgeries for detained immigrants and federal prisoners.

The ad includes a clip of Harris at a town hall event during the 2020 campaign hosted by the Transgender Equality Action Fund, in which Harris discusses her support.

“Surgery for prisoners — every transgender inmate in the prison system would have access,” Harris says in the clip. The ad then plays a clip of Charlamagne tha God saying, “Hell no, I don’t want my taxpayer dollars going to that.”

Charlamagne tha God has publicly praised Harris and her policies and Harris is set to participate in a town hall in Detroit this week hosted by his radio show, “The Breakfast Club.”

The Trump campaign has run similar ads highlighting these comments by Harris.

Analysis: Education has become the biggest predictor of how someone will vote

American voters are divided in many ways – by gender, by race, by region – and any of these can be used to explain the current state of politics.

But, the “biggest single, best predictor of how someone’s going to vote in American politics now is education level,” according to the longtime Democratic strategist Doug Sosnik, who was former President Bill Clinton’s political director and is known for incisive deep-dive memos.

Trump’s rise over the past three election cycles “accelerated and completed this political realignment based on education that had been forming since the early ’70s, at the beginning of the decline in the middle class,” Sosnik told David Chalian on the “CNN Political Briefing” podcast.

As the US transitions to a 21st-century economy, there’s a rift between the people who attain education — “that’s become the basic Democratic Party,” he said, comparing them with people who feel left behind, “that group of voters is now the modern Republican Party base.”

College graduates hold about three-quarters of the wealth in the US but account for only about 40% of the population.

Sosnik went a step further, arguing that the seven or so battleground states that could be won by either Trump or Harris also tend to be right in the middle on education levels, “not skewing too much college-educated voters and not too much non-college. That’s the only reason they’re different than the rest of the country,” he said.

Dive deeper into the full analysis about education and voting.

Trump’s social media stock is making an epic comeback as election nears

Former President Donald Trump’s social media company is on fire on Wall Street. It’s all about Trump’s perceived chances of retaking the White House.

Up until very recently, Trump Media & Technology Group had been in meltdown mode. Its share price dropped to a record low of $12.15 on September 23, marking a stunning 82% crash from its high.

But the owner of Truth Social is enjoying a massive rebound of nearly 150% in the three weeks since, more than doubling its share price. It spiked nearly 50% last week alone and surged another 18% Monday.

It’s a remarkable turnaround, even for a notoriously volatile stock that has been described as a meme stock on steroids.

Trump Media did not announce a sudden revenue stream or a flashy new product that could explain the move. It didn’t land an endorsement from Wall Street analysts or a major shareholder.

Instead, the turnaround has been fueled by the perceived odds of Trump winning in November. Trump Media has long served as a way for traders to bet on the election.

Trump campaign highlights comments from Bill Clinton as criticism of Harris' handling of immigration

Former President Donald Trump’s campaign is highlighting former President Bill Clinton’s comment Sunday that Georgia nursing student Laken Riley’s death “probably wouldn’t have happened” if migrants, including her alleged killer, had “all been properly vetted.”

Clinton’s remark came as he lambasted Trump for scuttling a bipartisan border security bill earlier this year. The bill sputtered in January when Trump’s opposition to it led Republican support to erode. Vice President Kamala Harris, who is looking to blunt Trump’s attacks on immigration, has vowed to revive that bill and sign it into law if she wins the White House.

Clinton said the bill would have led to “total vetting before people got in” at the US-Mexico border. “Now, Trump killed the bill,” he added.

He then pointed to Riley, a 22-year-old Augusta University nursing student who was killed while jogging in February. The suspect, Jose Antonio Ibarra, an undocumented immigrant from Venezuela, was arrested in 2022 after entering the United States illegally, according to a statement from Immigration and Customs Enforcement, but was released for further processing.

But Trump’s campaign cast Clinton’s comments as an indictment of President Joe Biden and Harris’ handling of border security, noting that Riley’s alleged killer had entered the United States in 2022, long before that bill had been drafted.

The back-and-forth demonstrated how Democrats have tried to address what polls have shown is among Trump’s most potent issues — and how the former president has pushed back, accusing Biden and Harris of taking action far too late and only as the presidential election loomed.

Pennsylvania accounts for more than 20% of all ad spending by both candidates since Biden dropped out

Both presidential candidates are holding campaign events in Pennsylvania tonight, once again training the spotlight on the premier battleground state this election.

Democrats have outspent Republicans overall in Pennsylvania since Vice President Kamala Harris became her party’s nominee, but Republicans are poised to seize a narrow advertising edge over the final stretch of the race. The parties are also placing different bets on the top media markets for the closing sprint with Democrats putting more money into Philadelphia and Republicans putting more into Pittsburgh.

Democrats have outspent Republicans overall during that stretch by about $174.3 million to $136.9 million. But during the first two weeks of October, Republicans have seized a narrow edge, outspending Democrats by about $31.2 million to $30.3 million.

And going forward, Republicans also have slightly more ad time remaining. According to AdImpact data, Republican presidential advertisers have a total of about $52.1 million in remaining Pennsylvania ad bookings, while Democrats have about $49.7 million.

Walz tells Wisconsin students that Trump's comment about the "enemy from within" is about them

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz attacked Donald Trump after the former president suggested using the military on what he called “the enemy within” while describing the need to control “radical left lunatics.”

Walz was speaking to a few dozen students gathered at a coffee shop at University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire’s campus on Monday, telling them he didn’t want to “make you fearful” but to create a sense of urgency to defeat Trump in November.

Walz’s comment followed on Trump saying in a Fox News interview released Sunday that the National Guard or the military may be necessary to control “the enemy from within” on Election Day and said he’s more concerned with “radical left lunatics” than chaos from his supporters or interference from foreign actors.

Vance lands in Minneapolis for fundraiser minutes after Walz plane departs

Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance has landed in Minneapolis, Minnesota, stepping off the plan Monday afternoon with his wife Usha Vance.

Minutes before Vance landed, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz’s campaign plane took off from the same airport heading for Eau Claire, Wisconsin.

Vance has a closed fundraiser and roundtable in Minneapolis and later travels to Chicago for another fundraiser, according to a source familiar.

Vance’s plane was parked just feet from where the Walz plane was previously parked.

Gwen Walz warns Trump will sign "nationwide abortion ban" in essay detailing infertility struggles

Minnesota first lady Gwen Walz shared details of her and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz’s fertility journey and their decision to talk about struggles with infertility publicly in an essay for Women’s Health Magazine published on Monday.

In the essay, she asked voters to support Vice President Kamala Harris to protect reproductive health care access and said she believes former President Donald Trump will sign a “nationwide abortion ban” if he’s reelected, a proposal he has repeatedly opposed.

Gwen Walz wrote about her experience conceiving using intrauterine insemination treatments after years of struggling with infertility. She recalled memories of going to procedures at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota and asking her neighbor to help her take shots before finally conceiving shortly before Easter in 2000. She wrote she hoped sharing her story “will empower people to take their own power and change the way forward.”

Gwen Walz also discussed the decision she and her husband made to discuss their infertility struggles publicly after learning last year the news that the Alabama Supreme Court gave legal protections of personhood to embryos, potentially jeopardizing the administering of some infertility treatments, a ruling she said “brought us to our knees.”

“We both needed a second,” she wrote of learning of the decision. “Tim asked me, ‘Do you feel like we can talk about this publicly?’ And I said, ‘We absolutely do not have a choice.’ At the time, we had not talked about it, even with people who knew us well. But this news brought us to our knees.”

Gwen Walz made a direct case against Trump and on behalf of Harris around the issue of reproductive health care, saying she doesn’t “trust him” on the issue and expressed concern that her daughter Hope is “going to have fewer rights” than she does, and that Trump will support a “nationwide abortion ban.”

Kamala Harris will sit for first-ever interview on Fox News on Wednesday

Vice President Kamala Harris will sit down with Fox News anchor Bret Baier on Wednesday for her first ever interview on the right-wing cable network.

The interview with the Democratic presidential nominee will take place in Pennsylvania and air during the “Special Report with Bret Baier” at 6 p.m. ET, the network said Monday.

The interview is set to air hours after Fox televises a town hall with Donald Trump in front of an all-female audience Wednesday in Georgia.

Harris recently sat for an interview with “60 Minutes.” CBS said Trump had agreed to the traditional interview but later backed out.