Frantic campaigning by Trump amid Iowa poll shock
Good morning and welcome to our coverage of the 2024 US presidential election as we move into the final hours before polls open on Tuesday.
Itâs set to be a busy day for Donald Trump with appearances in three swing states and it comes amid a surprise setback in Iowa with a poll showing him trailing Kamala Harris in what was previously expected to be a safe state for the Republicans.
The Republican nominee will kick off this morning with a rally in Lititz, Pennsylvania, followed by an afternoon event in Kinston, North Carolina, and rounding the day off in Macon, Georgia.
Harris, meanwhile, will head to Michigan later today where the Democratic hopeful is due to speak at a campaign rally at Michigan State University in East Lansing.
Last night, she broke from the campaign trail to embrace her reputation as a âjoyful warriorâ with a surprise appearance on Saturday Night Live. Harris portrayed herself, appearing in a mirror opposite the actor Maya Rudolph, who first played her on the show in 2019 and has reprised the role this season.
If you missed it, you can read David Smithâs fun report here:
In other developments:
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A Georgia judge rejected a Republican lawsuit trying to block counties from opening election offices on Saturday and Sunday to let voters hand in their mail ballots in person. The lawsuit only targeted Fulton county, a Democratic stronghold. Trump falsely blamed Fulton county workers for his loss of the 2020 election in Georgia.
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Americans took to the streets in cities across the country for a day of womenâs marches. Marches were planned in all 50 states for the eighth annual gathering, which began the day after Trump was inaugurated in 2017.
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Vaccine skeptic Robert F Kennedy Jr could assume some control over US health and food safety in a second Trump administration, according to reports on Saturday. Kennedy said in a social media post that he would remove fluoride from all public water.
Key events
Kamala Harris is scheduled to deliver remarks in about half an hour in East Lansing, Michigan, taking the stage at Michigan State University.
Harris landed at Detroit Metro airport at 1am this morning, and stopped in several locations in Detroit before heading to the Jenison Field House arena for her speech at 6pm ET.
This morning, Harris delivered remarks at a Sunday church service in Detroit and later visited Kuzzoâs Chicken & Waffles, joined by Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer and Detroit mayor Mike Duggan.
Edward Helmore
Donald Trump disputed an Iowa poll showing Kamala Harris ahead in red state.
The former president has passionately disputed a shock Iowa poll that found the vice-president leading Trump in the typically red state 47% to 44%.
âNo President has done more for FARMERS, and the Great State of Iowa, than Donald J. Trump,â Trump said in a post on his Truth Social network on Sunday morning. âIn fact, itâs not even close! All polls, except for one heavily skewed toward the Democrats by a Trump hater who called it totally wrong the last time, have me up, BY A LOT.â
Trump continued, in all caps: âI love the farmers, and they love me. And they trust me.â More than 85% of Iowaâs land is used for farming and it produces more corn, pigs, eggs, ethanol and biodiesel than any other state.
On Saturday, the Selzer poll carried out for the Des Moines Register newspaper showed Harris ahead of her Republican rival by three points. Selzer is a widely respected polling organisation with a good record in Iowa; she shot to polling fame in 2008 when she predicted that a virtually unknown senator, Barack Obama, would beat frontrunner Hillary Clinton in the Iowa caucuses.
If Harris were even competitive in Iowa â which Trump won in both 2016 and 2020 â it could radically reshape the race.
The pollster told MSNBC on Sunday that Harris was leading in early voting in Iowa âbecause of her strength with women generally, even stronger with women aged 65 and older. Her margin is more than 2-to-1 â and this is an age group that shows up to vote or votes early in disproportionately large numbers.â
Earlier on Sunday, Trumpâs campaign released a memo from its chief pollster and its chief data consultant calling the Des Moines Register poll âa clear outlierâ and saying that an Emerson College poll â also released Saturday â more closely reflected the state of the Iowa electorate.
The Emerson poll found 53% of likely voters support Trump and 43% support Harris, with 3% undecided and 1% planning to vote for a third-party candidate.
The Trump campaign, which many Democrats believe is setting the stage for a series of legal challenges to poll results, also said in an email that the Des Moines Register poll and a subsequent New York Times swing state poll that found Harris ahead in four of the seven states, is âbeing used to drive a voter suppression narrative against President Trumpâs supportersâ.
Hereâs more context on the Selzer poll:
Donald Trump kept his speech short in Kinston, North Carolina, sticking to most of the talking points he uses during his rallies.
He accused Kamala Harris of ruining the economy, delivered anti-immigrant remarks, promising to impose harsher measures on the southern border, and encouraged members of the crowd to âfight, fight fightâ.
FCC regulator claims Harris appearance on SNL violates âequal timeâ rule
Edward Helmore
A US government communications regulator has claimed that Vice-President Kamala Harrisâs surprise appearance on Saturday Night Live violates âequal timeâ rules that govern political programming.
Brendan Carr, a commissioner with the federal communications commission (FCC), claimed on the social platform X that Harrisâs appearance on the show âis a clear and blatant effort to evade the FCCâs Equal Time ruleâ.
Carr made the claim in response to an Associated Press alert to Harris being on the show that night.
âThe purpose of the rule is to avoid exactly this type of biased and partisan conduct â a licensed broadcaster using the public airwaves to exert its influence for one candidate on the eve of an election. Unless the broadcaster offered Equal Time to other qualifying campaigns,â said Carr, who was nominated by both Trump and Biden and confirmed unanimously by the Senate three times.
FCC guidelines state: âEqual opportunities generally means providing comparable time and placement to opposing candidates; it does not require a station to provide opposing candidates with programs identical to the initiating candidate.â
A spokesperson for the FCC issued a statement: âThe FCC has not made any determination regarding political programming rules, nor have we received a complaint from any interested parties.â
Harris joined comedian Maya Rudolph at the start of the show in a sketch that skewered Donald Trump for his recent rally speeches, including wearing an orange and yellow safety jacket, a riff on the ongoing garbage controversy, and pretending to fellate a broken microphone.
Harris began her âmirror imageâ sketch opposite Rudolph, the SNL cast member selected to impersonate her, on the other side of a mirror.
âIâm just here to remind you, you got this, because you can do something your opponent canât do â you can open doors,â Harris told Rudolph, seemingly referring to a video from earlier in the week in which Trump had struggled to reach the handle of a garbage truck he briefly rode in to a Wisconsin rally.
Hereâs more on the claim by the FCC regulator:
Senator Raphael Warnock condemned Donald Trump after saying that, whether women like it or not, he will âprotect womenâ.
Warnock told NBC News that the comment âsounds rather ominous coming from the mouth of a convicted sexual predator. We donât need a predator, we need a president in the Oval Office, and that person is clearly Kamala Harris.â
Donald Trump holds rally in Kinston, North Carolina
Donald Trump started delivering his remarks in Kinston, North Carolina, about two hours behind schedule.
So far, heâs accused his opponent Kamala Harris of doing âthe worst job ever on hurricane salvage and removalâ and attacked Senate GOP minority leader Mitch McConnell.
âHopefully we get rid of Mitch McConnell pretty soon,â Trump said. âCan you believe he endorsed me? Boy, that mustâve been a painful day in his life.â
Donald Trump, the Republican presidential candidate, said he expects the winner of the presidential election to be declared on election day.
In an interview with ABC News, the former president was asked whether he thought there was any way he could lose.
âYeah, I guess, you know,â Trump said. âI guess you could lose, can lose. I mean, that happens, right? But I think I have a pretty substantial lead ⦠Bad things could happen. You know, things happen, but itâs going to be interesting.â
He also told the outletâs chief Washington correspondent, Jonathan Karl, that he has âa substantial leadâ in the presidential race.
Kamala Harris dodged a question on whether she voted for Californiaâs Proposition 36, which would make it easier for prosecutors to send repeat shoplifters and drug users to jail or prison, after submitting her ballot.
âI am not gonna talk about the vote on that because, honestly, itâs the Sunday before the election and I donât intend to create an endorsement one way or the other,â Harris told reporters.
The measure would roll back provisions of Proposition 47, which downgraded low-level thefts and drug possession to misdemeanors.
Trump says âI shouldnât have leftâ White House, despite losing 2020 election
Hugo Lowell
Donald Trump told supporters that he should have stayed in the White House, despite his losing the 2020 election, while at Lititz in the battleground state of Pennsylvania on Saturday.
The former presidentâs remarks were made during one of his final rallies of the campaign, where he also denounced public polls putting him behind his rival Kamala Harris and joked that reporters could take a bullet for him.
The comments were off script â an acknowledgment of how he has become increasingly uninhibited as the fatigue of doing multiple rallies a day has inexorably taken its toll.
Trump stayed on message for some of his remarks, saying illegal immigration was down and the economy was up when he was president. His team has noted with satisfaction for weeks that they remain the top two issues for undecided voters across the battleground states.
But Trump could not resist reverting to his most problematic impulses of describing Democrats as âdemonicâ and then lamenting about the 2020 election, an issue that polls poorly and his team had thought they had convinced him to let it go.
âWe had the safest border in the history of our country the day that I left,â Trump said. âI shouldnât have left, I mean honestly, we did so well, we had such a great â â and then abruptly cut himself off.
The remark reflected what Trump told aides and allies in the aftermath of his 2020 election defeat, a loss he has never conceded, and how he sat in at least one meeting at the end of his first term where he mused about refusing to leave the White House, a person familiar with the matter said.
Once Trump started on the 2020 election, he could not stop. He revived debunked conspiracy theories from 2020 and suggested anew that voting machines would be hacked, and efforts to extend polling hours in Pennsylvania â what his own team has pushed for â amounted to fraud.
Trump also spent time at the rally lashing out at a series of recent polls, notably a Des Moines Register poll in Iowa that put him four points behind Harris in the state of Iowa. Harris is universally not expected to win Iowa, but it could be indicative of her momentum in the final days.
Hereâs more context on the rally:
The Harris campaign condemned former president Donald Trumpâs comments at a rally in Pennsylvania earlier today, where he accused Democrats of stealing the elections from President Joe Biden and expressed it âshould be illegalâ to release polls that are bad for him.
âTrump is spending the closing days of his campaign angry and unhinged, lying about the election being stolen because heâs worried he will lose,â said Ammar Moussa, a spokesperson for the Harris-Walz campaign.
âThe American people deserve a leader who tells the truth and will walk into the Oval Office focused on them â thatâs Vice President Harris,â she added.