November 1, 2024, presidential campaign news | CNN Politics

November 1, 2024, presidential campaign news

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Nancy Pelosi reacts to Trump calling her part of the ‘enemy within’
09:25 - Source: CNN

Key things to know

Focus on Badger State: Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump ended a busy day of campaigning with rallies within a few miles of each other in Milwaukee as they raced to deliver their contrasting closing pitches to voters in battleground states.

• Key ruling by top court: The Supreme Court on Friday left in place a Pennsylvania court ruling that is expected to expand backup options for voters whose ballots are rejected for technical reasons, in a defeat for Republicans in a critical battleground state.

Voter resources: See CNN’s voter handbook for how to vote in your area, and read up on the 2024 candidates and their proposals on key issues. Have questions about the election? Submit them here.

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What Trump and Harris said today on the campaign trail

Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris held dualing in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on November 1, 2024.

In a final push to Election Day, Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump campaigned in two key battleground states on Friday.

Trump held events in Michigan and Wisconsin while Harris focused exclusively on the Badger State. Their final rallies took place within a few miles of each other in the Milwaukee area.

The two states are crucial for the candidates. The latest CNN polling shows that Harris holds a lead over Trump by 48% to 43% among likely voters in Michigan and leads the former president, 51%-45% in Wisconsin. The states broke in Trump’s favor in 2016, but President Joe Biden won them in 2020.

Here’s what to know:

Harris:

  • In a pitch to union workers in Wisconsin, Harris promised to invest in industries like steel and iron, but also new manufacturing opportunities to build things like solar panels. She also said she would upgrade existing factories and “work with unions to create good paying jobs.”
  • Harris’ campaign is microtargeting voters in Pennsylvania and Michigan by amplifying different parts of her message on Israel and Gaza in new ads.
  • Harris’ final rally Friday in Milwaukee featured a slew of celebrities and performances from rappers Flo Milli and Glorilla. At the rally, Grammy Award winning rapper Cardi B said she didn’t plan on voting in the presidential election until Harris joined the race. She also went on describe Trump as “a hustler” and criticizing his comments on women.

Trump:

  • At a rally in Michigan, Trump urged voters to cast their ballot, warning “it’s now or never.” Describing the race as “the most important election you’ve ever thought about voting in,” Trump urged attendees to not “take any chances.” He also reminisced on his nine years of campaigning in the final days of his third presidential race.
  • Trump didn’t directly answer questions from reporters on whether he would appoint Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as the Health and Human Services secretary, instead saying that the former independent presidential candidate will “have a big role in health care.”
  • In Milwaukee, Trump railed against the Green New Deal and pushed false claims about climate change, as he has done before. He also experienced mic difficulties, which he complained loudly about several times. And he insulted his opponent, at one point saying Harris hates Americans.

Outcry over comments about Liz Cheney:

This headline and post were updated with the latest details from the campaigns.

In closing pitch, Harris highlights Trump's plans for retribution

Democratic presidential candidate Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a rally in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on November 1, 2024.

Vice President Kamala Harris told supporters tonight in Milwaukee that, if elected, she would be focused on carrying out her campaign promises while her opponent would focus on retribution.

Former President Donald Trump has promised to use the Department of Justice to attack critics and former allies. In several videos and speeches, the former president also laid out plans to gut the current justice system by firing “radical Marxist prosecutors that are destroying America.”

Harris’ remarks come a day after Trump made violent comments about former Rep. Liz Cheney, a former Republican member of Congress and outspoken critic who has endorsed Harris and campaigned alongside her. Trump said the former Wyoming congresswoman is a “radical war hawk” and suggested she deserves to be fired upon. Earlier Friday, Harris told reporters the former president’s violent rhetoric “must be disqualifying.”

The Milwaukee event, which featured a slew of celebrity guests such as rappers Glorilla, Flo Milli, and Carbi B, was just one of Harris’ stops in the critical Badger State on Friday.

In four of the last six presidential elections, Wisconsin has been decided by less than a percentage point on the presidential level. In 2016, Trump won Wisconsin by 0.7 percentage points. In 2020, Joe Biden flipped the state, winning by 0.6 percentage points.

The headline and post were updated with some of Harris’ remarks from Milwaulkee.

Trump says he thinks Harris "hates" Americans as he attempts to contrast his closing message

Former President Donald Trump sought to draw a contrast between his opponent Vice President Kamala Harris’ and his closing arguments during a rally in Milwaukee on Friday night, as his third presidential campaign reaches its final days.

“She’s not a good person,” Trump said referring to Harris. “Kamala’s closing message to Americans is that — I believe, she hates you.”

He continued: “My closing message is that I love America. And I’m inviting you to join us in building an extraordinary future for our nation.”

Trump becomes visibly frustrated with the microphone at his rally

Republican presidential candidate, former President Donald Trump gestures as he speaks at a campaign rally at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on November 1, 2024.

Former President Donald Trump became visibly frustrated with his microphone during a rally tonight in Milwaukee, where he is looking to earn support in the key battleground state of Wisconsin.

After a few supporters in the back of the arena chanted “Fix the mic!” Trump yanked it out of its stand.

Trump held his microphone in his hand for almost an hour. After about 10 minutes of holding it, he said, “You know, I’ve never held a microphone up so long in my damn life. It’s like I’m weightlifting. This sucker’s heavy.”

Trump went off on a rant about the technical difficulty.

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‘I’m seething!’: Trump rants about technical difficulties with mic at rally
03:50 - Source: CNN

Later in his remarks, while railing against the Green New Deal — which he described as a “scam” — Trump pushed false claims about climate change.

“If it’s cold, that’s good. If it’s hot as hell, that’s good. It used to be global warming, that wasn’t working because we’re actually cooling,” Trump said. He later added: “So they talk all the time about the ocean will rise in 500 years, one-eighth of an inch. Who the hell cares?”

The planet is not cooling down as Trump suggested, but rather becoming hotter. The world breached a critical climate threshold in February, getting more than 1.5 degrees Celsius hotter over a 12-month period for the first time on record. CNN has reported that 2023 was the hottest year on record.

This post and headline were updated with more of Trump remarks about the mic issues.

Vance hits all 7 battlegrounds and Pennsylvania twice in lead up to Election Day

Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance speaks at a campaign rally in Portage, Michigan, on November 1, 2024.

Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance is hitting all seven battleground states in the three days before November 5 – campaigning across Nevada, Arizona, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan and Georgia.

On both Sunday and Monday, Vance will have an event in a collar county of Philadelphia: Delaware County (Delco) on Sunday and his final event before Election Day in Bucks County on Monday, according to press advisories released by the Trump-Vance campaign.

On Saturday, Vance rallies in the Sun Belt battlegrounds with events in Las Vegas and Phoenix.

Vance begins Sunday in Raleigh, North Carolina, before heading to Aston, Pennsylvania. On Monday, Vance is set to rally in La Crosse, Wisconsin, Flint, Michigan and Atlanta, Georgia before Newtown, Pennsylvania.

Vance told supporters at his rally in Michigan Friday that he would be casting his ballot on Tuesday in Ohio.

Trump and Harris are right now speaking within a few miles of each other in the Milwaukee area

Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are currently speaking at the same time at nearby rallies in Milwaukee area.

Harris’ event is being held at the Wisconsin State Fair Park, six miles from Trump’s event taking place at the Fiserv Forum which was the site of the Republican National Convention.

Wisconsin is a battleground state. The latest CNN polling conduct conducted by SSRS show the vice president holding a narrow lead over Trump in the Badger State.

NOW: Trump is speaking in Milwaukee

Supporters cheer as former President Donald Trump arrives at the podium to speak during a campaign rally at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, November 1, 2024.

Former President Donald Trump is speaking in Milwaukee as the campaign looks to focus on battleground states with four days until Election Day.

Trump’s visit comes as he and Vice President Kamala Harris are in a tight race in Wisconsin. The former president won the state in 2016 by 0.7 percentage point and President Joe Biden flipped the state in 2020 with an even thinner margin.

Earlier Friday, Trump was in Michigan, making stops in Dearborn and Warren.

Rapper Cardi B says she wasn't going to vote this year until Harris joined the race

Cardi B attends a campaign rally for Vice President Kamala Harris in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on November 1, 2024.

Grammy Award winning rapper Cardi B said she didn’t plan on voting in the presidential election until Vice President Kamala Harris joined the race.

She went on to call former President Donald Trump “a hustler” who hustles “women out of their rights to their bodies” and “Americans out of their hard-earned money,” referencing Trump’s businesses where he leverages his candidacy for personal profit with items on sale like a Trump-themed Bible and golden sneakers.

“Today he’s hustling you with the ‘oh buy my sneakers,’ tomorrow it’s going to be your health care rights,” the rapper warned. “He’s going to take it away from you. He’s going to snatch it.”

Cardi B also responded to Trump’s comments on protecting women, saying that “if his definition of protection is not the freedom of choice, if his definition of protection is making sure our daughters have fewer rights than our mothers, then I don’t want it.”

Keegan Michael Key rallies supporters ahead of Harris rally in Milwaukee

Actor and comedian Keegan Michael Key rallied supporters for Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign Friday, whipping a crowd in Milwaukee into a frenzy at a star-studded campaign stop that also featured performances from MC Lyte, Glorilla and Flo Milli.

The “Wonka” star acknowledged the choice voters face in Tuesday’s faceoff between Harris and former President Donald Trump, but joked: “That’s like saying there’s a choice on how to travel from Canada to the United States.”

“You can either, you know, drive a car, take the train to get over the border, or you can take a barrel over Niagara Falls,” he said. “And in this election, the choice is even clearer — it’s even clearer than that.”

Harris’ campaign, Key said, is “fighting for a new way forward, that strengthens our democracy, protects reproductive future, ensures that every person has the opportunity to not just get by, but to get ahead.”

In contrast, he warned, Trump “has made a career out of turning people against each other, and he says — and this one really gets me — he says that it’s OK to pass the blame and the buck on to others.”

“This election is clearly the most important one we’ve ever had — ever — and that’s why I’m here today, it’s why I’m here today,” the actor said, pledging that “over the next four days, I’m going to continue to roll up my sleeves and do everything I can” to elect Harris.

Walz calls Trump's comments on Cheney "sickening but not surprising"

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz condemned former President Donald Trump’s violent comments about former Rep. Liz Cheney as “sickening but not surprising,” and said the remark offers another example of why he believes voters should elect Vice President Kamala Harris and keep Trump “nowhere near the Oval Office.”

Walz said in a SiriusXM radio interview that aired Friday that Trump suggesting Cheney is a “war hawk” who should face gunfire is “unacceptable behavior,” and linked the comments to a remark made by a Trump rally speaker at his New York City rally on Sunday referring to Puerto Rico as an “island of garbage.”

“When I hear it, yeah, it’s sickening, it’s un-American. But it also just inspires me and I hope it does a whole bunch for your listeners. This is why they need to go vote. This is why we need to put an end to this. This is why we need to get that new way forward that the vice president keeps talking about that is truly American,” he continued. “So it just inspires me to go work more. But it is unacceptable behavior and that’s why Donald Trump needs to get nowhere near the Oval Office.”

During a campaign event in Arizona on Thursday, Trump said that Cheney, a former Republican member of Congress who has endorsed Harris and campaigned alongside her on multiple occasions, is a “radical war hawk” and suggested she deserves to be fired upon.

“She’s a radical war hawk. Let’s put her with a rifle standing there with nine barrels shooting at her, OK?” the former president said at a campaign event in Glendale, Arizona, with former Fox News host Tucker Carlson. “Let’s see how she feels about it, you know, when the guns are trained on her face.”

October ad themes: Democrats emphasize taxes while Republicans focus on immigration

Democrats emphasized taxes and Republicans emphasized immigration in broadcast TV advertising for the presidential race during October, according to a CNN analysis of data from the ad tracking firm AdImpact, reflecting the closing messages from both sides in the election’s final stretch.

Democratic presidential advertisers spent about $288 million on broadcast TV in October and nearly 60% of it went to ads mentioning taxes, as Vice President Kamala Harris and her allies touted her proposals to cut taxes for working families while criticizing former President Donald Trump’s calls for additional tax cuts for corporations and top earners. Other economic messaging and criticism of Trump’s character were also featured heavily in pro-Harris ads.

GOP presidential advertisers spent about $239 million on broadcast TV in October, and roughly 56% of it went to ads that referenced immigration, as the former president and his supporters hammered the Biden-Harris administration record on border security. In addition, nearly 40% of GOP broadcast TV ad spending in October went to spots referencing crime, often linked to immigration in Republican ads.

Meanwhile, Republicans also ramped up ads attacking Harris over transgender polices in October, spending more than $50 million on spots criticizing Harris for voicing support for taxpayer-funded gender transition surgeries for detained immigrants and federal prisoners.

AdImpact, the ad tracking firm, catalogs the issues that are referenced in broadcast TV campaign ads and tracks the amount of money behind those spots. Comparing changes month-to-month illustrates how each campaign is tailoring its message, and it shows the share of campaign resources spent highlighting various issues.

"We're fully prepared": Georgia secretary of state says he expects more interference from foreign actors

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger participates in an election forum in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on September 19.

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said he expects “further interference and disinformation” in the wake of a viral video of alleged voter fraud that U.S. intelligence officials have confirmed was manufactured by “Russian influence actors.”

Raffensperger’s office last month fended off a cyberattack believed to have come from a foreign country against the website voters use to request absentee ballots. There was no disruption to voters’ ability to request ballots.

Vance claims he and Trump have “never once” attacked Harris’ supporters

Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance speaks at a campaign rally in Selma, North Carolina, on Friday.

Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance claimed that he and his running mate have “never once” criticized Vice President Kamala Harris’ voters — while at the same time insinuating Harris is “trash” that needs to be taken out and arguing Donald Trump will be “the president for all of us.”

Throughout his campaign, Trump has said that certain groups of voters, including Jewish Americans, Catholics, African Americans and Hispanic Americans should have their heads examined if they vote for Democrats. Trump has also referred to certain top Democratic leaders as the “enemy from within,” as well as “radical left lunatics” who may riot if he wins the 2024 election.

Vance falsely stated that Harris called Trump supporters “garbage,” when it was President Biden who made the comment earlier this week, quickly setting off backlash from Republicans. Biden said that he was speaking only of “hateful rhetoric about Puerto Rico spewed by Trump’s supporter at his Madison Square Garden rally.”

CNN’s Brittany Hall contributed reporting to this post.

A Michigan city clerk is asking for equipment to speed up counting after declining to process ballots early

The clerk for Michigan’s third largest city is attempting to secure another ballot tabulator, after deciding not to take advantage of a new state law that allows for pre-processing of absentee ballots before Election Day.

Warren City Clerk Sonja Buffa asked late last week for funds to buy another high-speed scanner and tabulator for the city, as the top election official for Macomb County warned that the city’s election results might be available later than other jurisdictions in the key battleground state.

Michigan enacted several new voting measures in 2022 in an effort to make early voting easier and to speed up the processing of ballots, including a measure allowing cities or townships with a population of at least 5,000 to process and tabulate absentee ballots eight days before Election Day.

Buffa, who has been administering elections in Warren for 24 years, explained earlier this month that her decision not to pre-process absentee ballots sent by mail was driven by a desire to make accuracy a “number one priority,” over speed.

“It actually would take more time to pre-process absentee votes for eight days given the extra people needed, the time it takes, the storage necessitated, and the compiling afterwards, than one full day of counting,” she said in a statement, adding that the eight-day pre-processing period “opens the door for results to get leaked or compromised.”

Buffa’s comments have led to frustrations within the county, including from Alysa Diebolt, the Macomb County Democratic Committee Chair, who says the clerk should be able to both efficiently and accurately process the ballots.

The city mayor’s office sent a request on behalf of Buffa last Friday to the Warren City Council to approve $140,000 for Buffa to purchase a new tabulator, to add to the city’s four existing machines.

On Monday, just before a special city council meeting about the proposal, Buffa decided that she intended to rent a scanner and tabulator instead, so she could “evaluate its performance before considering a full purchase.”

CNN was unable to reach Buffa for comment Friday, but she told CNN last week that she expected to have the “majority” of her data loaded into her election report management software, which generates a file that she can email to the county clerk’s office, by around midnight on election night.

Court extends on-demand early voting in Pennsylvania bellwether county after ballot delivery issues

A court in Erie County, Pennsylvania, ordered election officials to take additional steps to address a mail ballot delivery issue, including providing an extension of so-called “on demand” mail voting for those affected by the delivery disruptions.

The order was issued in a case brought by Pennsylvania Democrats after, due to a vendor mess-up, thousands of voters did not receive their mail ballots in time for them to be delivered back to election officials by Pennsylvania’s Election Day deadline.

Additionally, at least 365 voters received duplicate ballots containing a bar code assigned to another voter, according to the court’s order Friday.

In addition to offering the on-demand mail voting service through the weekend, election officials have also been ordered to ensure there are enough provisional voting materials at in-person voting sites on Tuesday, in anticipation of a surge of provisional voting by the mail voters caught up in the delivery issue. The order also laid out a process for dealing with the duplicate ballots.

With just over 182,000 registered voters in Erie County, up to 9% may have been impacted by the delivery failures.

Sam Talarico, chair of the Erie County Democratic Committee, told CNN he is very happy with the judge’s order, and said volunteers are working to reach affected voters.

CNN reached out to Erie County’s Board of Elections for comment.

These battleground state voters say they may not vote for Harris until she promises action for Gaza

Palestinians walk through a devastated neighborhood in Gaza City on October 24.

Some voters from key battleground states like North Carolina, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania say they want to see a public commitment from Vice President Kamala Harris on taking action on Israel’s war in Gaza before they decide to vote for her.

Halah Ahmad: “Nothing feels good about this election,” the Palestinian-American from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, told CNN, describing the regular feeling of “shock and horror” she feels as she sees footage of people killed and places destroyed in Gaza.

Ahmad said she can’t guarantee her vote and support to leaders until she is guaranteed an arms embargo or an end to hostilities in Gaza. “I feel most accountable to life — that most basic sanctity of life — in this election,” she said. “The only way to operate is to operate from the place of ‘doing what I can’ and if there’s some hope, I have to act on that,” she added.

She said she takes “the risk” of a possible Trump presidency “very seriously,” but argued that there is “no viable alternative to genocide on the Democratic ticket” either.

Ahmad remains undecided on whether to vote at all, “or I may vote third party, or maybe Harris will do what’s right.” If Harris loses the election, she said she would hold the vice president and the Democratic Party responsible for her loss.

Reem Abuelhaj: The Philadelphia resident said she plans to go to the polls and vote down ballot, but “will not vote for Vice President Harris unless, at any point between now and November 5, she publicly commits to impose an arms embargo on Israel or permanent ceasefire achieved in Gaza.”

“I’m a voter of conscience, and a candidate who is staunchly promoting a policy of unconditionally arming and funding Israel to carry on its genocide in Gaza and escalation in the West Bank and the war in Lebanon is a red line for me,” she said.

She told CNN the issue is “deeply personal” to her. The Palestinian-American says she knows people who have lost family members in Gaza over the last year and can’t vote for someone who is part of an administration she sees as responsible.

At a CNN town hall, Harris said she believed that people who care about Gaza also care about reproductive freedom and grocery prices among other things, and may want to vote for her based on those issues.

Meghan Watts: A resident of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, said that to have those issues “weaponized” against her “speaks to how disconnected she feels from what people are really concerned about.”

“It shouldn’t be a choice where we have to either accept genocide in exchange for lower groceries or in exchange for rent to be lowered,” the PhD student said. “It’s an egregious choice to be forced on us.”

She said she won’t vote on the presidency even though she fears a second Trump term would embolden his “fascist/neo-Nazi” supporters “to enact violence against marginalized communities.”

The candidates’ stances: Harris gave a forceful and notable speech about the situation in Gaza in July and echoed President Joe Biden’s repeated comments about the “ironclad support” and “unwavering commitment” to Israel, as well as the need to get the Israeli hostages back from Hamas captivity. The country has a right to defend itself, she said, while noting, “how it does so, matters.” She called out the plight of the people in Gaza, as well as the need to free the Israeli hostages and secure a ceasefire deal, in her acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention in August. Read more about Harris’ stance on the war here.

In the immediate aftermath of Hamas’ attack on Israel, Trump criticized Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for his handling of the war, claiming to Fox News at the time the prime minister and the country overall were “unprepared.” Many Israelis presume that Trump would give Netanyahu a longer leash to use greater force in Gaza. Trump has said that Israel must “finish what they started,” “get it over with fast,” and that the US must “let Israel finish the job.” Read about Trump’s stances on foreign policy here.

The post was updated with more comments from the interviewees and reporting on the candidates’ stances.

Correction: This post has been updated to reflect how Reem Abuelhaj described her thoughts on Harris’ support of funding Israel.

Harris, making her closing pitch, tells Wisconsin voters they can make the difference in the election

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign rally in Little Chute, Wisconsin, on Friday.

Vice President Kamala Harris pressed on with her closing arguments on Friday in Little Chute, Wisconsin, a crucial “blue wall” battleground state.

“You, Wisconsin, are going to make the difference in this election,” she said.

Harris maintains a narrow advantage in Wisconsin over former President Donald Trump, according to recent CNN polls conducted by SSRS, CNN reported Wednesday.

In her remarks, Harris touted her various plans to bring down the cost of living in the US, vowing to give a “middle-class tax cut to over 100 million Americans,” enact the first ever federal ban on corporate price gouging on groceries, and expand Medicare benefits to cover home health care for the first time.

Read more about the promises Harris has made so far in her campaign here.

The headline and post were updated with some of Harris’ remarks from Little Chute.

Supreme Court rules Pennsylvania may count backup votes when mail ballots are rejected

The Supreme Court on Friday left in place a Pennsylvania court ruling that is expected to expand options for voters whose mail ballots are rejected for technical reasons to have their votes counted — a defeat for Republicans in a critical battleground state.

There were no noted dissents.

For Pennsylvania voters who made a mistake in how they prepared their mail-in ballots, it could ensure they have a backup option to have a provisional ballot counted.

Conservative Justice Samuel Alito wrote a brief statement – which was joined by Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch – essentially arguing that the court couldn’t give the Republicans who brought the appeal what they wanted even if it wanted to.

The case, Alito wrote, “is a matter of considerable importance.” But, he wrote, “even if we agreed with the applicants’ federal constitutional argument (a question on which I express no view at this time), we could not prevent the consequences they fear.”

Wisconsin governor condemns Trump’s comments on Cheney ahead of his visit to the state

Wisconsin Democratic Gov. Tony Evers condemned Donald Trump’s recent violent comments against former Rep. Liz Cheney, warning of the impact of such rhetoric on kids ahead of the former president’s visit to the state later today.

Evers’s comments come after Trump said during a campaign even Thursday night that Cheney is a “war hawk” who should be fired upon. Trump is set to visit Wisconsin Friday night for a campaign event in Milwaukee as both campaigns look to build their support in the critical swing state.