USA 2024, fight to the last vote: Trump reaches Harris in Pennsylvania
The latest New York Times poll reveals it: now both at 48%, neither candidate has a definitive advantagePer restare aggiornato entra nel nostro canale Whatsapp
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump continue to battle in swing states, with the tycoon improving his position in Pennsylvania, reaching the vice president at 48%. This is according to the latest New York Times/Siena College poll.
Harris is now slightly ahead in Nevada, North Carolina and Wisconsin, while Trump leads in Arizona. The race is getting tighter in Michigan, Georgia and Pennsylvania. The results in all seven states are within the margin of error, meaning neither candidate has a definitive advantage.
The final three days of campaigning for Kamala Harris and Donald Trump will be a frenetic zigzag from one swing state to another in an attempt to convince Americans to go to the polls en masse on November 5. More distant than ever in their two visions for America, the two opponents found themselves just a few miles apart in North Carolina, where no Democrat has won in 50 years but where in 2020 the tycoon beat Joe Biden by just 1%.
The president also took to the field this last weekend of the campaign, in his hometown of Scranton, Pennsylvania, accompanied by his granddaughter Natalie and surrounded by his hard core supporters, the unionists, in a sort of farewell to arms for the elderly commander-in-chief.
"Corrupt Joe has created millions of fake jobs," the tycoon attacked Gaston, recalling the employment data released a few days ago. "They are the worst ever, a disaster," insisted The Donald, who then accused his rival of "never talking about the economy" but of spending her time insulting him. "I will bring the American dream back to life," assured the Republican who, despite continuing to display confidence, according to people close to him, is increasingly "anxious and restless" in view of the vote.
Harris also wanted to focus on her economic agenda in her latest rallies, perhaps the only topic that truly excites most Americans, reiterating that she wants to "contain" the prices of food and basic necessities, provide incentives of 25,000 dollars for the purchase of a first home and support the middle class. "Trump is drawing up a list of enemies, I am drawing up a list of things to do," insisted the vice president in Georgia, another crucial state for the conquest of the White House. A classic message of her strategy but which according to some observers is a bit weak in a race in which her opponent has a knife between his teeth.
(Unioneonline/D)