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Both Trump and Harris campaigned in Wisconsin on Wednesday evening with the Republican holding an impromptu press conference from a garbage truck
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With less than a week to go in the US presidential election race, Kamala Harris and Donald Trump are making their final pitches to voters.
The Democratic presidential nominee was forced to respond to Joe Biden inadvertently whipping up a conservative media storm by seemingly calling Trump’s supporters “garbage” in response to comedian Tony Hinchcliffe’s already-notorious Madison Square Garden joke about Puerto Rico. The White House and president maintain he did not.
Harris told reporters on Wednesday that she “strongly” disagrees with any criticism of the public based on their voting intentions.
Trump also addressed the president’s comments: “He called them garbage and they mean it.”
In a bizarre moment, the former president appeared in a garbage truck, dressed as a sanitation worker, before a rally in Green Bay and answered questions about the original slur on Puerto Rico, seemingly reviving the initial scandal to ridicule from the Harris campaign.
Trump also told the crowd in Wisconsin he would protect women “whether the women like it or not”.
On Tuesday, Harris delivered her “closing argument” in Washington DC, speaking on the very same spot from which Trump told his supporters to “fight like hell” on January 6, 2021.
Vice President Kamala Harris is charging towards election day in full turnout mode, delivering her “closing argument” in a massive rally on the Ellipse while making last-ditch appeals in key battleground states.
As she heads to Reno, Nevada on Thursday for what is likely to be her last visit to the state as a candidate, the vice president’s campaign is leaning hard on support from organized labor in the Rust Belt to shore up her strength there.
John Bowden reports.
Union canvassing efforts reach millions of voters as Trump’s populist veneer fades
Reggaeton star Nicky Jam has rescinded his support for Donald Trump following the racist remarks made about Puerto Rico at the former president’s recent New York City rally.
The “Hasta el Amanecer” singer, 43, who in September campaigned alongside Trump at his Nevada rally, took to Instagram to retract his endorsement.
Inga Parkel has the story.
The ‘Hasta el Amanecer’ singer explained that he had originally supported Trump because he ‘believed it was what’s best for the economy’
Former President Trump has floated some high profile names that could join his administration, like anti-vaxxer Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and billionaire Tesla and X (formerly Twitter) CEO Elon Musk. “Focus on health”, Trump said during an interview with Joe Rogan, while referring to Robert F. Kennedy Jr, alluding to the potential appointment. While Vice President Kamala Harris hasn’t named specific individuals, she is promising to appoint a Republican to her cabinet. Here’s who is speculated to join either candidate’s future administration.
Josseli Barnica was suffering from a deadly infection from a miscarriage while at the hospital in Houston — but doctors had to wait to treat her due to the state’s abortion ban that limited how much care they could provide her as her baby maintained a heartbeat.
“They had to wait until there was no heartbeat,” her husband told ProPublica in Spanish. “It would be a crime to give her an abortion.”
Kelly Rissman has the story.
She isn’t the only woman to have died due to confusing laws surrounding reproductive care
Donald Trump claimed he will bring back the “American Dream” – and end inflation and immigration in just six days. The former US President said he was “thrilled” to be back in North Carolina on Wednesday (30 October), but told supporters he had “one question” to ask. “Are you better off now than four years ago?”, Trump asked. “We are down to six days. In six days I will end inflation and stop the mass invasion of criminals. “I will bring back the American Dream, we’ve not had that in a long time.”
Eric Garcia writes:
With less than a week to go, campaigns have inundated any state or district with a competitive election with television ads to make their closing argument. This can be especially aggravating, especially after a long day of work where the average voter might just want to watch some mindless reality television or some football.
But in truth, campaigns needs to run ads there to meet voters where they are. This might be why we are seeing more ostentatious ads this election cycle than ever before.
While in her speeches, Vice President Kamala Harris has focused on the danger of Donald Trump’s rhetoric — even going so far as to call him a “petty tyrant” — most of her ads have gone all-in on the economy.
Meanwhile, Republicans, led by Trump, have done a slew of anti-transgender ads, focusing largely on the issue of transgender women in men’s sports.
Continue reading…
From ‘little silver spoon boy Donald Trump’ to ‘Kamala is for they/them’, Eric Garcia breaks down the most ostentatious ads from the final weeks of the US election
In the latest CNN polls of several battleground states, Kamala Harris leads Donald Trump in Michigan and Wisconsin – but the two are tied in Pennsylvania.
The so-called blue wall states are Harris’s most viable, but not only, path to an Electoral College victory after Tuesday’s election.
Gustaf Kilander looks at the numbers.
Trump won all three in 2016, but President Joe Biden managed to win them all back four years later
Rudy Giuliani’s sexual assault case hearing spiraled into chaos for two hours that ended with the former New York City mayor being muted by the judge.
The first oral arguments in the civil suit, brought by accuser Noelle Dunphy, unfolded on Wednesday after a series of delays in the case that was first filed in early 2023. Dunphy, who claims to be his former employee, is accusing Giuliani of wide-ranging misconduct, including sexual harassment, assault, battery and a hostile work environment. The hearing was streamed online and journalists were allowed to watch.
Kelly Rissman reports.
The hearing was chaos-filled, including technical troubles, ‘inappropriate’ personal attacks from Giuliani against Dunphy, and Lev Parnas’ attempt to enter into the virtual call
Dressed in a bright orange safety vest to troll Democrats in the war of words over comments in which Puerto Rico was called a “floating island of garbage” at another MAGA rally, Donald Trump told a crowd in Green Bay, Wisconsin, on Wednesday that he wants to protect the women of America – whether they like it or not.
He even admitted that his campaign had told him not to say that, saying that they called it inappropriate. Online, people called it “threatening.”
Read on…
While there were cheers at Trump’s rally, reaction online was less enthusiastic
Ian Sams of the Harris campaign notes that Trump’s comments about protecting women whether they like it or not capped off quite a Wednesday for the former president’s campaign.
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