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Election 2024: Harris goes on high-profile media blitz; Trump postpones town hall with RFK Jr.

Kamala Harris joined "The View" and "The Howard Stern Show" before appearing on "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert."
A split side by side image of Vice President Kamala Harris and Donald Trump.
Vice President Kamala Harris; former President Donald Trump.Getty Images file

Coverage on this live blog has ended. For the latest news, click here.

What to know about the campaigns today

  • Vice President Kamala Harris is joining several popular shows in New York, appearing on "The View," "The Howard Stern Show" and "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" as her campaign launches a media blitz in the final weeks before Election Day.
  • Her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, made a late-night appearance yesterday on "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" He spoke this evening at a campaign rally in Reno, Nevada, after campaign events in Sacramento, California, and Seattle.
  • Donald Trump was expected to join a virtual town hall focused on health care with former independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and former Democratic Rep. Tulsi Gabbard. The event was postponed because of Hurricane Milton.
  • The GOP vice presidential nominee, Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, defended Trump after journalist Bob Woodward reported in a new book that Trump has had several conversations with Russian President Vladimir Putin since he left office.

Democrats’ attacks on GOP candidate’s Colombian family and heritage draw charges of racism in Ohio Senate race

Reporting from Cleveland

Some Democrats working to re-elect Sen. Sherrod Brown in Ohio this fall are trying to raise fears about his opponent’s Colombian family and heritage, drawing charges of racism from Republicans.

Bernie Moreno, a businessman who immigrated to the U.S. as a child, came here to “take advantage of America’s wealth and greatness,” Peg Watkins, the Democratic Party chair in Delaware County, a key area of the state that encompasses the affluent suburbs of Columbus, asserted at an event last week while warming up the crowd for Brown.

“So we are doing everything we can to stop him from invading our Senate,” Watkins added.

Read the full story here.

Attempted border crossings dropped to the lowest level of the Biden presidency in September

The Border Patrol made under 54,000 apprehensions of immigrants attempting to cross into the U.S. illegally in September, according to preliminary data obtained by NBC News, the lowest monthly total of illegal border crossings attempts since Biden took office.

The figure, which has not been officially released by Customs and Border Protection, is also the lowest total since August 2020, during the Trump administration, and it is in line with the September totals under Trump in 2018, 2019 and 2020. In September 2018, 50,568 migrants tried to cross the southern border between legal ports of entry. A year later, 52,546 immigrants tried to cross, and in September 2020, the number was 54,771.

This September’s preliminary total of under 54,000 attempted illegal crossings also includes an unspecified number of apprehensions at the northern U.S. border. Northern crossings have long been a tiny fraction of southern border crossings, though they have risen in 2024.

Read the full story here.

Walz accuses airlines of price gouging in Florida as Milton nears landfall

At a campaign rally in Nevada tonight, Walz accused airlines of price gouging by raising ticket prices for Floridians seeking to escape Hurricane Milton.

"Airlines' charging people exorbitant amounts to fly out of Florida to get out of the hurricane — that's price gouging," Walz said.

Walz said he was glad to see Biden make a statement at a hurricane briefing earlier today, when he called on airlines not to engage in price gouging.

Aurora mayor cites Trump in statement calling concerns about Venezuelan gang activity 'grossly exaggerated'

The Republican mayor of Aurora, Colorado, called concerns about Venezuelan gang activity in the city "grossly exaggerated," citing Trump in a statement released today ahead of his visit Friday.

“Former President Trump’s visit to Aurora is an opportunity to show him and the nation that Aurora is a considerably safe city — not a city overrun by Venezuelan gangs," Mayor Mike Coffman said.

Trump often talks about Aurora at his rallies, claiming gang activity in the city is rampant.

Coffman, who said Trump's depictions of migrants in the city were "not accurate," reiterated his invitation to show him the community and meet with the police chief for a briefing.

"The reality is that the concerns about Venezuelan gang activity have been grossly exaggerated," Coffman said. "The incidents were limited to several apartment complexes in this city of more than 400,000 residents."

Trump describes cities with migrants as being 'infected' by violence

While discussing the Venezuelan migrant community in Aurora, Colorado, in a radio interview today, Trump suggested that the city has been "infected" by violence.

"Cities that haven't been infected, and I use that word very openly, that haven't been infected by this violence yet, they’re petrified because it's coming to them also," he said on "The John Kobylt Show."

It not the first time Trump has used the term to describe migrants. During remarks on Sept. 26 in New York City, Trump said, "They're infecting our country. They're destroying our country."

On an episode of "The Hugh Hewitt Show" that aired yesterday, Trump suggested that migrants have “bad genes.” In 2023, during a campaign rally in New Hampshire, Trump said immigrants are “poisoning the blood of our country."

Ohio Democrats say they're learning more about Vance now that he's a VP nominee

Armand Manoukian

Reporting from Canton, Ohio

Democratic voters who are already showing up to cast ballots in Canton, Ohio, said Vance’s emergence as Trump’s vice presidential nominee has taught them more about his backgrounds and beliefs — even though Vance won Stark County by 15.6 percentage points in Ohio’s 2022 Senate election.

Chris Kienzle, 69, of Minerva, said Vance had “been in the background” of politics before Trump added him to the ticket.

“The very fact that he became the running mate for Trump makes me leery of him,” Kienzle said. “I don’t trust him at all, especially with women’s issues.”

Peter Boyd, 52, who lives in Massillon, said he learned of Vance’s connections with Peter Thiel and the Heritage Foundation only after he was named Trump’s running mate, even though Thiel and Vance’s relationship dates to 2011.

“He kind of came out of nowhere,” Boyd said. “And so I watched ‘Hillbilly Elegy’ and stuff like that, just kind of wanting to know more about him. I’ve learned who backs him, like Peter Thiel.”

Mike Rogers and Elissa Slotkin tangle over national security and tout bipartisan credentials in Michigan Senate debate

Reporting from Grand Rapids, Michigan

Democratic Rep. Elissa Slotkin and GOP former Rep. Mike Rogers clashed repeatedly here tonight over who would best represent their purple state in the first debate of their hotly contested Senate race.

The tone during the hourlong debate, hosted by NBC affiliate WOOD, was mostly civil. But there were several hostile moments, with both candidates accusing the other of lying about and misrepresenting their records.

Rogers, noting Slotkin’s background as a CIA analyst, said he was “not even sure she could pass the polygraph test [for] the CIA anymore.”

Read the full story here.

Trump announces Latter-day Saints coalition in push for battleground voters

Trump today announced a “Latter-Day Saints for Trump” coalition less than a month before Election Day as the campaign looks to shore up support among a key voting bloc in which defections could be particularly damaging in key western battlegrounds.

Among the leaders of the coalition are four prominent Utah Republicans: Sen. Mike Lee, Rep. Celeste Maloy, Rep. Burgess Owens and state Attorney General Sean Reyes.

Lee said Trump ensured that “Latter-day Saints and people of all faiths can worship freely and live according to our beliefs. His dedication to life and protecting the unborn has fortified our families’ foundations, and his leadership is exactly what America needs to preserve the God-given rights that make us strong and free.”

Read the full story here.

Jovial scene at Ohio voting center on first day of early in-person voting

Reporting from Cleveland, Ohio

At the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections office, poll workers cheered each time it was announced that there was a first-time voter in the crowd, including a man who jogged back into the building just to get an “I Voted” sticker.

"Everyone's in a good mood," Adrian Slovenec, 24, an engineer, said after having waited 20 minutes to vote. "You'd think like waiting in line people would be kind of grumpy, and you know, it's like a chore, but they make it pretty fun."

At one point, those in line made way for a 101-year-old woman to cast her ballot.

Across the street from the Board of Elections, a DJ was blasting Motown classics in anticipation that Rep. Shontel Brown, D-Ohio, would give remarks.

Amid the joyful scene, voters signaled that they came to the polls for meaningful change. Scotty Ogletree, 26, said he hopes his vote for Harris will ensure that Trump doesn't return to the Oval Office.

Arthur Lavin, 69, called it the most important election "since the 1860s."

"Democracy is actually under assault," he said.

Walz bashes Electoral College at campaign reception

Reporting from Fair Oaks, California

At a fundraiser at the home of California Gov. Gavin Newsom today, Walz criticized the Electoral College in favor of a popular vote for picking the president.

“I think all of us know the Electoral College needs to go,” Walz said. “We need national popular vote.”

“But that’s not the world we live in,” he added.

Democratic presidential candidates won the popular vote but lost the Electoral College in 2000 and 2016.

Vance reveals his favorite song — via an orange

Reporting from aboard JD Vance's campaign plane

Members of the media traveling with Vance aboard his campaign plane engaged in a quirky tradition of posing a question by way of an orange.

Reporters wrote a question in black marker on an orange and rolled it to the front of the cabin, where Vance and his staff sit. The question: What’s your favorite song?

Less than five minutes later, after the successful roll up the aisle of the 737, the citrus was returned with an answer: Led Zeppelin’s "Ten Years Gone."

Vance makes a point of taking questions from the media at his campaign stops, but this midflight answer is most likely the first time he has delivered an answer by fruit.

Americans for Prosperity super PAC launches battleground Senate ad blitz

Americans for Prosperity Action, a super PAC affiliated with the Koch network of political advocacy groups, is launching a series of ads backing Republicans across multiple Senate battleground races, spending $8.75 million on a campaign focused largely on issues like the economy, inflation and immigration.

With mail ballots already being mailed out in dozens of states, AFP Action is spending $1.5 million to boost GOP former Rep. Mike Rogers in Michigan, $1.25 million on behalf of Tim Sheehy in Montana and $2 million each for Bernie Moreno in Ohio, Dave McCormick in Pennsylvania and Eric Hovde in Wisconsin.

“The next 28 days are going to be 100% committed to talking to as many people as we can via the doors and the phones to convince them that our candidates are the right choice,” AFP Action senior adviser Tim Golding said.

Read the full story here.

Harris reveals she's a fan of Formula 1 and Lewis Hamilton

Harris revealed today that she’s a Formula 1 fan.

“We love it. Our whole family does,” she told Howard Stern in an interview.

Her favorite driver? “Lewis Hamilton, of course,” Harris said, referring to the seven-time world champion, who is exiting the Mercedes team to join Ferrari next year in one of the biggest shakeups in the sport’s history.

“I don’t even know who that is,” Stern replied.

“He’s leaving Mercedes,” Harris said. “You don’t know. You don’t watch Formula 1. ... Once you start, I think you should see it. You might get hooked. ... It’s good stuff.”

F1 has crossed paths with Washington, as the Justice Department is investigating whether it is violating antitrust law by denying the American team Andretti Global a place on the grid, an allegation that F1’s U.S.-based owner denies.

Harris criticizes Trump for spreading disinformation about hurricane relief

Tara Prindiville

Tara Prindiville and Raquel Coronell Uribe

Harris also criticized Trump for spreading disinformation about hurricane relief available to victims of Hurricane Helene, which created the highest death toll since Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

“It’s crude,” Harris said. “Have you no empathy, man, you know, for the suffering of other people? Have you no sense of purpose if you purport to be a leader?”

Harris told residents of North Carolina and Georgia that they are entitled to help.

“There’s a lot of misinformation, and I beseech you, I beg you, to please pay attention to it, because there are a whole lot of folks who are there to give you help and aid,” she said.

Harris blasts Trump over ties to Putin in Colbert interview

Tara Prindiville

Tara Prindiville and Raquel Coronell Uribe

Harris taped an interview with "Late Show" host Stephen Colbert today, blasting Trump over new reports in Bob Woodward’s book that he secretly sent Covid test kits to Putin during the height of the pandemic.

“We would watch the number every day being reported of people who were dying, people who were in hospitals without their family, where the only touch that they had was of a nurse that they had met because the family could not get there, and this man is giving Covid test kits to Vladimir Putin. Think about what this means,” Harris said. “On top of him sending love letters to Kim Jong Un. No, think about it. He thinks Vladimir Putin is his friend. What about the American people? They should be your first friend.”

Harris said that “strongmen” play Trump by appealing to his ego and that it's important for the next president to "stand strong and defend the principles that we hold dear."

Walz slams Trump for reportedly sending Covid tests to Putin during the pandemic

Reporting from Fair Oaks, California

Walz bashed Trump today over reports he sent Covid tests to Russian President Vladimir Putin during the height of the coronavirus pandemic.

Speaking at a campaign reception at the home of California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Walz said: “This latest revelation, I think as a governor, boils my blood. Donald Trump threw us into hunger games, pitting one against the other, and governors tried to partner together to try and save our people, whether it was testing or vaccines or whatever else it would be. Now we find out Donald Trump is giving Vladimir Putin things that we couldn’t even get for our own people. That’s real, that stuff is out there.”

Journalist Bob Woodward's new book describes Trump secretly sending coronavirus tests to Putin while he was in office.

Trump continues attacks on Harris' intelligence: 'Very low IQ'

Trump continued to mock Harris' intelligence in an interview today with conservative commentator Ben Shapiro, saying "she sounds like a child."

"She sounds like a person with a very low IQ,” Trump said, referring to Harris' recent interview with CBS News' "60 Minutes."

"This is not a president. She’s answering questions in the most basic way," said Trump, who declined to sit for an interview with the program.

Trump has been ramping up his personal insults against Harris, a former senator and attorney general of California, including telling conservative host Hugh Hewitt in an interview that aired yesterday that "she’s a dumber person" than Biden.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump pointed to Harris' appearance on ABC's "The View" earlier in the day and said she is "being exposed as a 'dummy' every time she does a show."

He similarly insulted the show's co-hosts, calling them "the dumb women on the show."

In response to a request for comment, Harris' campaign said she addressed Trump's insults in an interview with podcaster Alex Cooper that aired Sunday.

“I think it’s really important not to let other people define you. And usually those people who will attempt to do it don’t know you,” Harris said in the interview.

Afghan national living in the U.S. charged with plotting an Election Day terrorist attack

An Afghan national living in Oklahoma was charged this week with conspiring to carry out a terrorist attack on Election Day on behalf of the Islamic State terrorist group, according to court documents unsealed today.

Nasir Ahmad Tawhedi, 27, was arrested yesterday in connection with conspiracy and attempting to provide material support to ISIS and getting firearms and ammunition to execute a violent attack in the U.S. on behalf of the terrorist group. Tawhedi made his initial appearance today in the federal courthouse in Oklahoma City before U.S. Magistrate Judge Suzanne Mitchell.

According to court documents, Tawhedi indicated in seized communications that he planned his attack for Election Day, Nov. 5. Authorities said that in an interview after his arrest, he confirmed that the attack was intended to target large gatherings and that he was expected to die a martyr along with a juvenile co-conspirator, described as an Afghan citizen with legal permanent resident status.

Read the full story here.

Trump targets football fans, and criticizes Harris, with anti-trans ads during games

If you've watched a football game this fall, college or NFL, you've most likely seen a version of a Trump ad attacking Harris for her past support for taxpayer-funded gender-affirming treatments.

That's because the ads — which end with the same punchy tag line: “Kamala is for they/them; President Trump is for you" — are two of the ads the campaign is running most frequently during college and professional football games, according to an analysis by AdImpact. (The analysis captures most, but not all, ad airings.)

While one version of the ad is in heavy rotation as part of the Trump campaign's recent ad strategy, the specific decision to target those watching football games comes as the campaign tries to lean on the culture wars on television and during rallies. It's a strategy that Republicans have used with mixed success in past years and that has drawn criticism from Democrats who say that the attacks focus on comments long in Harris' past and that they now are aimed at demonizing transgender people.

Read the full story here.

Harris and Democratic allies descend on Arizona in all-hands push before early voting

Harris’ campaign is launching a blitz in Arizona this week, with plans to swamp the battleground state with events and canvassing efforts, all timed around the start of early voting.

This week, Harris, Walz, second gentleman Doug Emhoff and first lady Jill Biden, in addition to a group of surrogates, are all engaging in more than 200 events spread across the state, hitting each of its media markets, according to details first shared with NBC News. They include a marquee rally by Harris in Phoenix on Thursday, when she will work to drive up energy on getting out the vote.

Nearly 6,000 people have already signed up to canvass and staff phone banks this week. The campaign said over the weekend that it had scheduled more than 7,500 canvassing and phone-banking shifts.

Read the full story here.

Melania Trump plans to bring back her 'Be Best' initiative if Trump wins

Former first lady Melania Trump said in a Fox News interview today that she plans to bring back her "Be Best" initiative if her husband wins a second term.

"I will continue my Be Best initiative for children, for women, and also I will continue with Fostering the Future initiative that I established after I left the White House in 2021," she said.

The Be Best campaign, established in 2018, was aimed at raising public awareness about children's issues and highlighting the importance of their social, emotional and physical health. The campaign identified well-being, online safety and opioid abuse as key pillars.

Fostering the Future, an offshoot of Be Best, helps create educational opportunities and scholarships for foster care kids, according to the former first lady’s website.

Vance says his supporters have 'every right' to heckle reporters

Reporting from Detroit, Mich.

After boos interrupted several journalists’ questions to Vance at a campaign event in Detroit, Vance defended his supporters' expressing their disdain with the media.

“The First Amendment goes in both directions. Look, not a single person here is going to harm you,” he said, addressing reporters. “They’re just going to speak their mind, and they have every right to do it.”

Vance often invites members of the media to ask him question after he speaks at campaign events, where reporters are regularly met with jeers from rallygoers.

Today’s event, held in Detroit’s Eastern Market, drew a particularly vocal crowd whose heckles were amplified by the acoustics of the market’s lofted ceilings.

Critical Ohio Senate race has voters already at the polls

Armand Manoukian

Reporting from Canton, Ohio

In the neck-and-neck race for the Senate between incumbent Democrat Sherrod Brown and Republican Bernie Moreno, early voting in Ohio began today.

Steve Emerick, 58, of Canton, is voting for Moreno.

“I support the political movement to change the Constitution to limit terms, and Sherrod Brown has been in Congress way too long,” Emerick said. “I see it’s not just issues. I want to see new faces in Congress.”

Trump and other Republicans have criticized the Federal Emergency Management Agency for its response to Hurricane Helene, claiming the agency is providing only $750 in aid to affected people. In response, FEMA has launched a new webpage to clarify the facts about hurricane recovery efforts. NBC News’ Antonia Hylton reports for "TODAY."

Trump’s virtual town hall with RFK Jr. postponed

Trump’s virtual town hall tonight with former independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was postponed because of Hurricane Milton, according to Kennedy's team.

Kennedy's team said in a news release this afternoon that it would announce a new date for the event "soon."

Trump was originally scheduled to participate in a virtual event tonight titled the Make America Healthy Again Town Hall,alongside Kennedy and former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii. Robert Redfield, who was the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention during the Trump administration, was also scheduled to join the event.

Mitt Romney says he won't endorse Harris

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, said he won't endorse Harris even though he also says he doesn't want Trump to win.

During a discussion at the University of Utah's Hinckley Institute of Politics, Romney said he has "made it very clear that I don’t want Donald Trump to be the next president of the United States. And you’re going to have to do the very difficult calculation of what that would mean, all right?”

Romney said, “My own view is that I want to continue to have a voice in the Republican Party following this election, because I think there’s a good shot that the Republican Party is going to need to be rebuilt and reoriented either after this election or if Donald Trump is re-elected after he’s the president.”

Romney, who voted to convict Trump at his second impeachment trial, said where he stands is “pretty clear.” He declined to clarify further, however. Romney has said he didn't vote for Trump in 2016 or 2020, either.

“I believe I will have more influence in the party by virtue of saying it as I’ve said it. So I’m not planning on changing the way I’ve described it, but it shouldn’t be terribly hard,” he said.

Trump reiterates threat to imprison people who cheat in the election

Trump reiterated in a post on Truth Social his threat to imprison people who cheat in the election.

"ANYBODY THAT CHEATS ON THE ELECTION IS GOING TO JAIL!!!" he wrote.

Trump has made similar threats in recent weeks, saying in early September that he would imprison people who engage in "unscrupulous behavior" in the election.

While violating election laws is illegal, Trump has made false claims about widespread fraud in the 2020 presidential election ever since he lost while saying he would accept the election result in November only if it is "fair and legal and good."

Elon Musk called Gov. Josh Shapiro during the Steelers game to talk about investing in Pennsylvania

Sitting in a fellow billionaire’s box at Steelers-Cowboys game in Pittsburgh on Sunday, tech mogul and prominent Trump supporter Elon Musk had a surprise phone call with Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, according to three people familiar with the conversation. 

Musk told Shapiro, a Democrat, that he wants to invest in Pennsylvania, specifically the Pittsburgh area, according to two of the sources. He was in the early stages of the idea but expressed interest in expanding his factories to the region, they said. 

Read the full story here.

Early voting kicks off in Ohio

Armand Manoukian

Reporting from Canton, Ohio

Early in-person voting kicked off in the Buckeye State today, and a steady stream of voters have filed in and out of Stark County, Ohio’s Board of Election office in the city of Canton.

David Swart, 62, of Canton, Ohio wanted to vote as soon as he could.

“I love early voting. I know I can get it in on my schedule,” Swart said. “It’s real important election, and it’s a lot of fundamental rights at risk.”

Swart is voting for Harris and said of Trump, “he’s such a liar. He’s such a crook.”

Peter Boyd, 52, who lives in Massillon, Ohio, said Project 2025, the conservative Heritage Foundation’s 922-page policy document, was one of the top reasons he’s voting for Harris.

Chris Kienzle, 69, from Minerva, Ohio, said women’s rights were her top issue. “I’m worried if Trump gets in there, that a lot of them are going to go away,” Kienzle said. “I have granddaughters, and I’m really, really worried about those rights for my granddaughters.”

Still, the economy was still top of mind for others.

“I don’t like Trump as a person, but I like his policies and what he’s done,” said Steve Emerick, 58, from Canton, Ohio, citing the corporate tax cut the Trump Administration passed in 2017.

Gary Freeman, 81, of Canton, Ohio, has voted for Trump each time he’s run for office.

“I don’t like the border. I don’t like the direction of the country. I don’t like the economy. I don’t like how our military is being run,” Freeman said. “I don’t like the immigrants coming in and the money that’s being spent on them.”

Vance on Trump-Putin call claims: So what?

Asked about journalist Bob Woodward’s claims that Trump has had several private calls with Vladimir Putin since leaving office, Vance said, “Even if it's true, look, is there something wrong with speaking to world leaders? No. Is there anything wrong with engaging in diplomacy?”

Vance also took a shot at Woodward, calling him a "hack" and saying, “I honestly didn’t know that Bob Woodward was still alive until you asked me that question."

Trump and Putin have talked as many as 7 times since 2021, new book claims

Trump has spoken with Russian President Vladimir Putin as many as seven times since leaving the White House, including as recently as this year, according to new reporting by journalist Bob Woodward.

Woodward makes the claims in his forthcoming book, “War,” a dramatic account of the White House under President Joe Biden and Trump that details elements of their relationships with foreign leaders. The book is set to be published Oct. 15. 

The book details how Trump’s relationship with Putin has continued as he mounts another bid for the White House and amid the ongoing war in Ukraine.

Read the full story here.

Harris shrugs off concerns that U.S. isn't ready for a female president

Harris seemed unconcerned when asked by Stern what she'd say to people who feel the country's not ready for a female president.

“Listen, I’ve been the first woman in almost every position I’ve had. So I believe that men and women support women in leadership," the vice president said. "That’s been my life experience and that’s why I’m running for president,” she added.

Harris is the first female, Black and person of South Asian descent to be elected vice president. She previously broke the same barriers when she was elected district attorney in San Francisco and then California attorney general. She was also the first South Asian and second Black woman to be elected to the U.S. Senate.

Cleveland voter on potentially electing the first woman president: 'It's about time'

Reporting from Cleveland, Ohio

Wanda Payne, 65, a self-proclaimed “hippie,” woke up this morning feeling energized. On this first day of early in-person voting, her grandson was going to step into a voting booth for the first time.

“I couldn’t wait to get up this morning,” she said pointing to her Harris pin. “My grandson’s voting for the first time.”

Wanda Payne.
Wanda Payne.Christopher Cicchiello / NBC News

Payne hasn’t missed an election, and this one has her thinking of her four daughters and their access to abortion and necessary health care.

She didn’t mince words on what it meant to potentially be voting the first female president into office: “It’s amazing, it’s about time, and it should have happened a long time ago.”

Brett Favre stars in new pro-Trump ad financed by a personal injury lawyer

Embattled NFL Hall of Fame quarterback Brett Favre is appearing in a new television ad supporting Trump and arguing he will "protect our families and restore world peace."

The new spot, which AdImpact first captured running late last week, is being paid for by Dan Newlin, an Orlando-area personal injury attorney who has spent heavily on independent political ads this cycle, a departure from donors who usually give their money to groups that create those ads.

Last month, Favre announced he had been diagnosed with Parkinson's during an appearance on Capitol Hill related to allegations he misused taxpayer money, which he denies.

Harris rips Trump over report he sent Covid tests to Putin

+2

Elyse Perlmutter-Gumbiner

Elyse Perlmutter-Gumbiner, Vaughn Hillyard and Dareh Gregorian

In a freewheeling interview with Howard Stern, Harris blasted Trump for reportedly sending Covid tests to Russian President Vladimir Putin during the height of the pandemic.

"Everybody was scrambling to get kits" and people "couldn’t get them anywhere, right. This guy, who was president of the United States, is sending them to Russia to a murderous dictator for his personal use,” Harris said. He's "secretly helping out an adversary while Americans are dying by the hundreds every day," she said.

Harris was referring to reporting in journalist Bob Woodward's forthcoming book "War." The book, a copy of which was obtained by NBC News, reports that Putin asked Trump "don't tell anybody you sent these to me," and Trump agreed.

In a statement, Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung said, "None of these made up stories by Bob Woodward are true and are the work of a truly demented and deranged man who suffers from a debilitating case of Trump Derangement Syndrome."

Melania Trump details ‘legitimate reasons’ to get an abortion in her new book

In her new memoir, Melania Trump reveals that she backs abortion rights, but she leaves some grey area as to whether she supports restrictions.

In the book, titled “Melania,” she says that women should “have the power to determine what she does with her own body,” and expresses support for the slogan “My body, My choice.”

“A woman’s fundamental right of individual liberty, to her own life, grants her the authority to terminate her pregnancy if she wishes,” Trump wrote. “Restricting a woman’s right to choose whether to terminate an unwanted pregnancy is the same as denying her control over her own body.”

In the next paragraph, however, she then outlines “legitimate” reasons for a woman to get an abortion.

Read the full story here.

Crypto group runs TV ad to defend embattled GOP Rep. Steel on IVF

The pro-cryptocurrency Fairshake PAC is advertising in a competitive House race in Orange County, Calif., to boost GOP Rep. Michelle Steel, who is facing a serious challenge from Democrat Derek Tran.

A new TV ad features a female narrator praising Steel as "our champion in Congress."

"She's been an advocate for Southern California women voting to protect victims of domestic abuse and stop violence against women," the narrator says "Michelle Steele has long been an advocate of women's access to IVF, turning to IVF to help start her own family."

The ad seeks to ameliorate a vulnerability for Steel that Democrats are exploiting: her previous sponsorship of the Life at Conception Act, an aggressive anti-abortion bill that could also threaten access to IVF. Steel rescinded her sponsorship of the bill in March, just after she had won her primary and advanced to the general election in California's top-two system.

"I’m removing myself from the bill because it could create confusion about my support for the blessings of having children through IVF," Steel said in March.

Tran wrote on X last month: "@MichelleSteelCA will lie, cheat, and 'Steel' to win this election. She made it clear she does not support IVF or women’s bodily autonomy when she sponsored the 'Life of Conception Act.' Don’t let her TV ads or backpedaling deceive you. #CA45 deserves better."

Sen. Bob Casey criticizes Rep. Summer Lee and others for Oct. 7 statement

Sen. Bob Casey criticized a statement put out by some of his fellow Pennsylvania Democrats on the anniversary of the Oct. 7 attack on Israel that expressed concern for those killed by Hamas and by Israel in the ensuing conflict.

"Over the past year, we’ve seen how continued escalation, a lack of diplomacy, and a drive for power by right-wing leaders have pushed the region to the brink of regional war," the statement by Rep. Summer Lee, Allegheny County Executive Sara Innamorato and Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gaine said. "In these dark times, we remain committed to being voices for peace. The only way to bring peace is to de-escalate, not hasten another endless war."

“I could not disagree more with this statement," Casey said. "Hamas is a terrorist organization and its horrific attack which resulted in the murder of 1,200 innocent Israeli civilians must be categorically condemned. Hamas remains a threat to the people of Israel.”

In a second post, Casey wrote, “While we must all strive for an end to the conflict in Gaza for Israelis and Palestinians alike, this was an insensitive and inappropriate statement on a difficult day for so many Jewish Pennsylvanians.”

Casey's Republican opponent, Dave McCormick, also commented on Lee’s statement, posting on X, “Someone needs to tell Casey-endorsed Summer Lee that there there was a ceasefire in place BEFORE 10/7. We need moral clarity. The source of the pain, death and suffering in Israel and Gaza lies at the feet of Hamas. Blaming Israel for the chaos is dangerous & wrong.”

Jill Stein's running mate celebrates Oct. 7 attack

Green Party nominee Jill Stein's running mate celebrated the Oct. 7 terror attack and called Biden and Harris "Nazis" in a video posted on social media.

Butch Ware, a left-wing Muslim professor Stein selected to be her vice presidential candidate, recorded the video yesterday to "commemorate the one year anniversary of the modern equivalent of Nat Turner's rebellion," referring to the 1831 slave revolt in Virginia, saying "armed resistance to oppression" is always legitimate and that people who oppose it are "white supremacist."

He went on to call Harris "the black face of white supremacy" and said she and Biden "will go down in history as modern-day Nazis" for their support for Israel's response to last year's Hamas attack, which led to the death of about 1,200 people and the kidnapping of more than 200 more.

Last week, Ware criticized Harris for marrying a "committed Zionist" (her husband is Jewish) and said Muslims who support Harris will burn in hell for it.

Harris says she wouldn't have done anything differently the last four years

Harris said in an interview on ABC's "The View" that she wouldn't have done anything differently than President Joe Biden over the last four years.

"There is not a thing that comes to mind," Harris said. The vice president said she has been part of major decisions during the administration and has played a role in the progress made.

"For example, capping the cost of insulin at $35 a month for our seniors is something I care deeply about, about allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices and bring the cost of prescription medication down for seniors," she said.

"But my intention is to expand that for all Americans. The work we have done to invest in American industries, whether it be in terms of manufacturing and creating almost 800,000 new jobs around manufacturing, those were all a shared priority," she added.

Later, she clarified that one difference she said she would have if she’s elected president from Biden is choosing a Republican to serve in her Cabinet

Harris has tried to walk a fine line in distancing herself from Biden and the current administration and presenting herself as a change candidate while also touting the accomplishments made over the last four years.

Harris calls Trump's false claims about FEMA the 'height of irresponsibility'

Harris slammed Trump in an interview on ABC's "The View" this morning when she was asked about the former president falsely claiming that FEMA is diverting resources to "illegal migrants."

"It's profound, and it is the height of irresponsibility and frankly, callousness, the idea that somebody would be playing political games for the sake of himself," she said. "But this is so consistent about Donald Trump. He puts himself before the needs of others. I fear that he really lacks empathy on a very basic level to care about the suffering of other people."

Asked about Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' refusal to take Harris' calls about the response to Hurricane Helene, Harris said she's called and spoken to both Democratic and Republican governors throughout this crisis, adding it's not a partisan or political issue.

"I called the governor about what Florida has received in terms of impact," Harris said. "We have to have an agreement that at some point we all need to work together to combine resources, especially federal, state and local resources, around these kinds of disasters. And I think it's a shame that that hasn't happened."

Walz speaks about the recent VP debate on the Jimmy Kimmel show

Walz sat down with late-night show host Jimmy Kimmel to discuss various topics. The Democratic vice presidential candidate commented on his recent debate with Vance, adding that the election is a chance to “turn the page” on denial about the 2020 presidential results.

Biden postpones trip to Angola and Germany because of Hurricane Milton

President Joe Biden has postponed his overseas trip this week because of Hurricane Milton, according to two sources familiar with the planning. 

Biden was scheduled to depart for Berlin on Thursday and then travel to Angola in southern Africa, returning to the U.S. on Oct. 15. It would mark the first time Biden would travel to Africa as president.

Read more here.

Elon Musk again jokes that 'no one' is trying to assassinate Harris

In an interview with former Fox News host Tucker Carlson released on X yesterday, tech billionaire Elon Musk mocked Harris and the backlash he received over his now-deleted post last month about how “no one is even trying to assassinate” the vice president.

“I made a joke, which I realized I deleted, which is like no one’s even bothering to try to kill Kamala because it’s pointless,” Musk said, prompting laughter from him and Carlson. “What do you achieve? Nothing. Just find another puppet."

Carlson replied, “It’s deeply true though.”

“Some people interpreted it as I was calling for people to assassinate her, but I was like, doesn’t it seem strange that no one has even bothered to try?” Musk said, laughing.

The now-deleted post last month by Musk, who owns X and has endorsed Trump, came in response to a user on the platform who asked, “Why they want to kill Donald Trump?” in the wake of the second assassination attempt on Trump.

It drew widespread backlash from critics on the platform who argued that Musk’s post contains incendiary rhetoric and is a false assertion because of death threats Harris has allegedly received in recent months.

As the race for the White House enters the final stretch, Harris appeared in several high-profile interviews, including “60 Minutes,” discussing changes in some of her policy positions. Meanwhile, Trump opened up on Fox News about what a victory for him could mean for political rivals. NBC’s Peter Alexander reports for "TODAY."

Harris to propose Medicare expansion for seniors and child care on 'The View'

Harris plans to offer a new proposal on "The View" today that would expand Medicare to cover the long-term care needs of seniors, including at-home care.

In her interview on the daytime talk show, Harris plans to focus on the "sandwich generation" of Americans who care for children and aging parents, a senior campaign official said.

In addition to the seniors home care benefit, Harris plans to propose a new plan to lower child care costs, the official said.

Jill Biden to travel to battleground states for Harris-Walz campaign events

First lady Jill Biden will travel to Arizona, Nevada, Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania from Friday to Oct. 15 to campaign for the Harris-Walz ticket, the campaign said.

Biden will be in Yuma, Arizona, on Friday; Phoenix on Saturday; northern Nevada on Sunday; the Detroit suburbs and Madison, Wisconsin, on Monday; and the Philadelphia suburbs Tuesday, the campaign release said.

The first lady will highlight Harris’ agenda on protecting abortion rights and providing economic opportunities. She will also urge people to vote as early voting begins in Arizona and ballots are being sent out in other swing states she's visiting.

Walz to rally in Reno; Vance speaks in Detroit

Walz is scheduled to deliver remarks at campaign receptions in Seattle and Sacramento, California. He'll then deliver remarks at a campaign reception in Reno, Nevada, and hold a rally there at 9:30 p.m. ET.

Vance will deliver remarks in Detroit at 2 p.m. ET before heading to Denver for a private fundraiser. He ends the night in Tucson ahead of events in Arizona tomorrow.

Harris to participate in three interviews today; Trump attends virtual town hall led by RFK Jr.

Harris is scheduled to participate in three interviews today while she's in New York: at 11 a.m. on “The View,” at 1 p.m. on “The Howard Stern Show,” and at 6 p.m. on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.”

Trump is also in New York City and will join a health care-focused virtual town hall at 8 p.m. led by former independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. titled “Make America Healthy Again.” The former president was originally scheduled to participate in a Latino business leaders roundtable today, but it has been postponed because of severe weather forecasts from Hurricane Milton.

Harris-supporting group launches $4M effort to mobilize Black male voters

A new $4 million effort primarily aimed at engaging and mobilizing Black male voters ahead of Election Day in key battleground states is launching today, according to plans shared first with NBC News.

The push — dubbed Vote To Live — is affiliated with the Collective PAC, one of the country’s largest political action committees supporting Black candidates, which has endorsed Harris. 

The new effort will focus on nonpartisan ways to encourage largely Black men to vote, said Quentin James, founder and president of the Collective PAC. As part of that goal, Vote To Live will focus on such actions as educating Black men about where to register, providing free transportation to the polls during early voting, hiring people to directly engage with their communities and hosting events at historically Black colleges and universities.

Read the full story here.

Harris undergoes a ‘60 Minutes’ grilling as Trump sits it out

Harris for weeks was criticized for avoiding tough questions that came with long-form traditional media interviews.

In an interview with CBS News’ “60 Minutes” that aired yesterday evening, she faced many of them all at once.  

Chief among them was whether she regretted the initial border policy during the Biden administration that allowed a historic swell of immigrants across the border.  “Was it a mistake to loosen the immigration policies as much as you did?” “60 Minutes” correspondent Bill Whitaker asked.

“It’s a long-standing problem, and solutions are at hand, and from day one, literally, we have been offering solutions,” Harris said, pointing to an early attempt to advocate for an immigration bill in Congress. 

Read the full story here.

Foreign adversaries will try to cast doubt on election results after Nov. 5, U.S. intel officials say 

Foreign adversaries will try to shake Americans’ confidence in the legitimacy of election results in November by giving voice to false claims or spreading their own disinformation about ballot counting, U.S. intelligence officials said today.

“As we approach Election Day, the intelligence community is also stressing that foreign efforts to undermine America’s democracy won’t end on Nov. 5,” a senior intelligence official told reporters in a virtual briefing.

In the latest assessment of foreign threats to the election, intelligence officials said the main foreign powers seeking to shape the outcome of the vote — Russia, China and Iran — also were focusing on meddling in congressional and state races.

Read the full story here.

How the NBC News Decision Desk projects races on general election night 2024

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John Lapinski

Charles Riemann

John Lapinski, Stephanie Perry and Charles Riemann

When NBC News colors in a state or district red or blue on election night, that’s because the NBC News Decision Desk has determined it can project a winner in that race. Here’s how NBC News projects winners, the steps it takes to verify results and the answers to some frequently asked questions about the process. 

On Nov. 5, the Decision Desk will project 610 races across all 50 states, from the presidential election to statewide and congressional contests.

Projecting a winner means that the Decision Desk has determined that the trailing candidates cannot catch the leader and that the leading candidate will win the race. This determination is made through a comprehensive analysis, and the Decision Desk only projects a race when it is certain of the outcome.

Early on election night, the Decision Desk uses exit poll data to determine whether it can project uncompetitive races. Competitive races are called based on analyses of precinct- and county-level vote returns. The analyses also examine differences between early and Election Day votes. In competitive contests, a careful analysis of how much of the vote has not been counted is a crucial part of the process. To reiterate, no race is projected until the Decision Desk is fully confident of the winner.

NBC News will not project a winner until after the last scheduled statewide poll-closing time in that race.

Read the full story.

Supreme Court weighs challenge to Biden plan to crack down on untraceable ‘ghost gun’ kits

The Supreme Court today takes on another battle over restrictions on firearms as the justices consider the Biden administration’s move to restrict “ghost gun” kits that allow people to assemble deadly weapons at home while skirting existing regulations.

The administration wants the kits to be regulated the same way as other firearms, meaning that manufacturers and sellers would have to obtain licenses, mark the products with serial numbers, require background checks and maintain records.

The case comes just months after the court, which regularly backs gun rights, ruled that a federal ban on bump stocks — a gun accessory used to allow semiautomatic rifles to fire quickly — was unlawful. In another gun case that marked a win for the Biden administration, the court in June upheld a federal law that bars people subjected to domestic violence restraining orders from possessing firearms.

Read the full story here.

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