Election 2024 recap: Latest Trump, Harris polls show neck-and-neck race
Editor's note: This page reflects the news from the campaign trail for the 2024 election from Thursday, Oct. 24. For the latest news on the presidential election, read USA TODAY's live election updates for Friday, Oct. 25.
Arizona. Nevada. Georgia.
These three states could ultimately decide the 2024 race for the White House. They're also the states where former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris will make their pitch to voters on Thursday.
Trump held a rally in Tempe, Arizona, and addressed an event with the conservative group Turning Point Action in Las Vegas in the evening.
Harris held a campaign stop on Thursday in Atlanta, and she was joined by former President Barack Obama and music icon Bruce Springsteen.
Keep up with the USA TODAY Network's live coverage.
Springsteen says Trump is 'running to be an American tyrant'
Music giant Bruce Springsteen told a crowd of 20,000 people that Donald Trump is “running to be an American tyrant.”
Springsteen, a longtime Democratic activist, played an acoustic set of three hits – “The Promised Land," "Land of Hope and Dreams" and "Dancing in the Dark” – before Harris and former President Barack Obama took the stage at the James R. Hallford Stadium in Atlanta.
“I’m Bruce Springsteen and I am here today to support Kamala Harris and Tim Walz for president and vice president of the United States and to oppose Donald Trump and JD Vance,” Springsteen said.
Springsteen said Harris “wants to protect and guide our great democracy, believes in the rule of law and the peaceful transfer of power.” He said Harris will “fight for a woman’s right to choose” and “create a middle class economy that will serve for all our citizens.
"There is only one candidate in this election who holds those principles dear: Kamala Harris. She's running to be the 47th president of the United States. Donald Trump is running to be an American tyrant. He does not understand this country, its history or what it means to be deeply American," Springsteen said.
– Joey Garrison
Trump denounces Kelly, rejects Hitler comparison
Trump remains on the defensive over John Kelly, the former White House chief of staff who described him as basically a fascist who sometimes said nice things about Adolf Hitler.
"I fired him (Kelly)," Trump told Fox News Channel’s Bill Melugin in an interview broadcast Thursday evening. "He made a statement that I'm like Hitler . . . Just couldn't be further from the truth. It's just the opposite, actually."
Trump also called Kelly "a bully. He was a bad guy and he ended up being a weak guy, because all bullies end up being weak. And he wasn't a smart guy. It's a bad combination."
Harris and her allies, meanwhile, are trumpeting Kelly's remarks published earlier this week in The New York Times.
On his personal X account, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said: "It’s one thing for some leftist group to call you a fascist. Quite another when it’s a fellow Republican. And absolutely astonishing when it’s your own chief of staff."
- David Jackson
Obama mocks Trump COVID checks: 'Don't be bamboozled'
More than four years after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, some Trump voters credit the former president sending Americans stimulus checks as one reason for their support.
But at a Harris campaign rally outside Atlanta, Obama sought to smack down that rationale.
“The other thing I hear – some folks will be like, ‘Donald Trump sent me a check during the pandemic,’” Obama said in remarks introducing Harris to the stage. “I’ve heard this, and I know some of ya’ll have heard that.”
The $1,200 checks from the Treasury Department in the spring of 2020 included Trump’s signature. One year later, COVID-19 checks also went to Americans in the Biden administration.
“Let me make sure y'all understand this,” Obama said, prompting laughter and cheers. “Joe Biden sent you a check during the pandemic, just like I gave people relief during the Great Recession. The thing is, we didn't put our name on it because it wasn't about feeding our egos. It wasn’t about advancing our politics. It was about helping people. That’s the difference.
“He sent you a check,” Obama said with a strong hint of sarcasm. “Do not fall for that okey-doke. Don’t be bamboozled.”
- Joey Garrison
JD Vance addresses comments about migrants
During a NewsNation town hall on Thursday, Republican Vice-Presidential candidate JD Vance addressed the baseless claims he spread in September that Haitian immigrants were eating pets in Springfield, Ohio.
“What I said then, and I'll say now, is, you're hearing a lot of things from your constituents. They're telling you things, and I think it's important for me to listen to the people that are coming to me with their problems,” Vance said during the Detroit town hall.
“Do I wish that I had been better in that moment? Maybe,” Vance, who represents Ohio in the Senate, said. “But it's also people in my community, people that I represent are coming to me and saying, this thing is happening. What am I supposed to do?”
Vance in September pushed false claims that Haitian migrants in the small Midwestern town were abducting and eating their neighbors' pets. Donald Trump echoed the claims during his debate with Kamala Harris the same month. But the mayor of Springfield and local police have said the accounts are untrue.
Vance wore socks during Thursday’s town hall with pictures of his family dog who passed away earlier this year.
– Karissa Waddick
Harris urges voters to 'imagine oval office in three months'
At a raucous campaign rally outside Atlanta Thursday night, Harris framed her race against Trump by having voters visualize the scene in the Oval Office after Inauguration Day next year.
“Just imagine the Oval Office in three months. Picture it in your mind,” Harris said. “It's either Donald Trump in there, stewing – stewing – over his enemies list, or me working for you, checking off my to-do list.
“You have the power to make that decision. It is your power.”
Harris debuted the “enemies list/to-do list” line during a CNN town hall Wednesday night. It's the centerpiece of her closing argument to voters.
In the homestretch of the 2024 campaign, Harris has aggressively attacked Trump as a threat to democracy, casting him as a vengeful dictator who wants to go after his political adversaries.
“Georgia, I ask you: Are you ready to make your voices heard?” Harris said, 12 days before the Nov. 5 election. “Do we believe in freedom? Do we believe in opportunity? Do we believe in the promise of America? And are we ready to fight for it?”
The crowd roared in applause.
“And when we fight, we win!” Harris said, ending on one of her campaign’s go-to slogans.
- Joey Garrison
Trump calls into JD Vance town hall
JD Vance received a question from a special guest during his NewsNation town hall in Detroit on Thursday night: Donald Trump.
Anchor Chris Cuomo joked with Vance that, “Not unlike Beetlejuice, if you invoke the former president's names too many times in a row, he's going to want to weigh in on what is being said.”
Trump had called to ask Vance a pressing question – “How brilliant is Donald J Trump?”
Vance told his running mate that the town hall was supposed to be for undecided voters. “I would hope that I have your vote of all people,” he quipped.
Trump also asked Vance “How brilliant is Kamala?” but the Ohio Senator deflected. “Oh, that’s a tough one, sir,” he told Trump.
– Karissa Waddick
Samuel L. Jackson jokes that he and Kamala Harris have the same favorite curse word
At a Harris campaign rally Thursday night in Atlanta, actor Samuel L. Jackson joked that he and the Democratic nominee have something in the common – they have the same favorite curse word. Jackson, star of Pulp Fiction and other films, is known for his variations of “mother f---er.”
In a video that surfaced over the summer, Harris indicated it is also her go-to curse word.
“She’s running on a proven track record of fighting for the people, standing up to bullies, protecting the most vulnerable and taking on the toughest fights,” Jackson said. “And we heard her favorite curse word is a favorite of mine, too! But I ain’t gonna say – uh- that word.
“I don’t know about you, but that’s the kind of president I can stand behind. That’s the kind of president I can see leading our country forward.”
Jackson, film director Spike Lee and others were among the warm-up acts for a Harris campaign rally featuring musician Bruce Springsteen, former President Barack Obama and Harris.
- Joey Garrison
Trump once again suggests he should have won Nobel Prize
Donald Trump on Thursday suggested that he should have won a Nobel Peace Prize during his presidency for facilitating the Abraham Accords, an agreement establishing diplomatic relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates.
Trump also argued that former President Barack Obama didn’t deserve his Nobel Prize.
“I got elected in a much bigger, better, crazier election, but they gave him the Nobel Prize,” Trump said of Obama. “He didn't even know why the hell he got it right. He still doesn't.”
Obama was given the Nobel Prize less than a year into his first term for “extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples.”
Trump has previously suggested that he should have been awarded the Nobel Prize, including in 2020 when he alleged that he helped broker peace between broker peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea.
- Karissa Waddick
Trump uses dehumanizing language about migrants at Arizona rally
Trump is talking more and more about immigration issues at his rallies as Election Day approaches.
During his Thursday rally in Arizona, he told the crowd of supporters "When we win on November 5th, the migrant invasion ends and the restoration of our country begins."
Trump, who once made inflation and the economy his top issues on the campaign trail, said earlier this week that immigration is now "the number one thing to campaign on." In denouncing the U.S. immigration system, Trump said, "we're like a garbage can for the world."
Opponents have accused Trump of exaggerating the impact of illegal border crossings and criticized his plans for mass deportations.
Donald Trump 'concerned' about RFK's environmental record
Donald Trump on Thursday told voters at a rally in Las Vegas that he was “concerned” about Robert F. Kennedy’s past as an environmental lawyer who fought to protect waterways.
“I don't know if I'm going to have him working too much on the environment. I'm a little concerned about that with Bobby. I don't know if I want to play it around with our with our liquid gold under our feet,” Trump said during his keynote speech at Turning Point PAC and Turning Point Action’s United for Change rally Thursday night.
Kennedy endorsed Trump after ending his independent presidential bid earlier this year. Trump has suggested he would give Kennedy, an anti-vaccine advocate, a federal post related to healthcare if he is elected president.
When it comes to the environment, Trump is found of saying that he would “drill baby drill” and allow housing development on public lands preserved by the Bureau of Land Management or Forest Service.
The issue of public land is particularly salient in Nevada, where Trump was speaking. More than 80% of Nevada’s land mass is controlled by the federal government.
- Karissa Waddick
Election official in Reno, Nevada tells AP she was forced out before 2024 election
The top election official in a key swing county in Nevada told the Associated Press Wednesday that she was forced out of her job just weeks before the presidential election.
Her comments are just the latest election-related dustup in the Reno-area county where right-wing activists who dispute election results have mounted a yearslong pressure campaign focused on the workers who run elections and officials who certify them.
Cari-Ann Burgess, who served as the interim voter registrar for Washoe County took a stress-releated leave of absence starting in September, a county spokesperson previously told the USA TODAY Network.
But she told the Associated Press she had a conflict with the county manager and offered to return to her previously held position as deputy registrar, but instead was forced to make a written request for a leave of absence.
– Erin Mansfield and Trevor Hughes
Trump and Harris neck-and-neck in swing state polls
A new batch of polls released Thursday show the presidential race remains tight in many of the states likely to matter most.
Trump is leading Harris by one percentage point in polls by Marist College and Emerson College in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Arizona. The GOP nominee is leading the vice president by two percentage points in polls by the same institutions in North Carolina.
The two candidates are tied 49% to 49% in another poll by Marist College in Georgia.
Trump's leads and the tie all fall within the polls' margins of error.
– Rachel Barber
Obama calls Trump a 'wannabe king'
Former President Barack Obama called former President Donald Trump “a wannabe king” and a “wannabe dictator” Thursday night at a Harris campaign rally outside of Atlanta as he seized on recent comments from Trump’s former chief of staff, John Kelly.
“In politics, a good rule of thumb is don’t say you want to do anything like Hitler,” Obama said in front of 20,000 people in Clarkston, Georgia.
Obama was referencing Kelly’s recent interview with the New York Times in which the former general and ex-Trump aide said Trump exhibited fascist tendencies in the White House and made admirable statements about Hitler.
“I happen to know John Kelly and Mark Milley,” Obama said, also singling the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff who has also criticized Trump. “They are not quote, unquote, ‘woke liberals,’ They are people who have never in the past even talked about politics because they believe that the military should be above politics.”
Obama said Kelly and Milley have spoken out “because they have seen that in Donald Trump's mind, the military does not exist to serve the Constitution or the American people.” Obama said Trump thinks the military is to “serve his interests.”
“And so my question to you, then, Georgia is: How is any of that going to help you? We do not need four years of a wannabe king, a wannabe dictator running around trying to punish his enemies. That is not what you need in your life America is ready to turn the page.”
- Joey Garrison
In Pennsylvania, Democrats have early voting lead
With Election Day just two weeks away on Nov. 5, more than 11.5% of Pennsylvania’s more than 9 million registered voters have returned a mail ballot so far in the all-important 2024 battleground.
Approximately 1 million of the 1.78 million voters who requested a mail-in or absentee ballots for the presidential election featuring Democratic nominee Kamala Harris and Republican nominee Donald Trump have returned them to their respective county’s board of election, according to data from the Pennsylvania Department of State last updated Tuesday morning.
Democratic voters lead in both mail ballot requests and ballots returned as of Friday, with that party’s voters making up almost 58% of applications and 62% of returned ballots, according to the state’s data.
Democrats have historically favored voting by mail in Pennsylvania with no-excuse mail ballots since 2020, the first election after Act 77 of 2019 allowing the ballot option was signed into law for the commonwealth.
- Chris Ullery
When will the election results be announced?
It is not clear exactly when the election results will be announced, as the timing depends on a variety of factors. Each state handles its elections differently, ranging from weeks-long early voting to strict voter ID laws.
But you can anticipate delays.
Some key swing states that Donald Trump and Kamala Harris are vying for, like Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, aren't permitted to start processing absentee and mail-in ballots until Election Day, which is expected to slow down the count.
-- Sudiksha Kochi and Sam Woodward
Did Beyoncé back Joe Biden? What about Hillary Clinton?
Beyoncé is expected to appear with Kamala Harris on Friday in her home state of Texas. It's not the first time the "Cowboy Carter" singer has backed the vice president's White House bid – she also gave her blessing for Harris to use her song "Freedom" as an unofficial campaign anthem.
Beyoncé has weighed in on politics before. She posted a clip of herself ahead of Election Day 2020 wearing a Biden-Harris face mask, and she headlined a concert alongside her husband, rapper Jay Z, for Hillary Clinton's 2016 campaign.
– Marina Pitofsky
Beyoncé set to perform at Kamala Harris rally in Houston
Beyoncé is taking the stage with Kamala Harris.
The pop queen will appear with the Democratic presidential nominee at rally in Houston on Friday, according to Reuters.
Harris, who is locked in a close race against Republican Donald Trump, is heading to Texas to support another Democrat, Colin Allred, who is trying to unseat Republican Sen. Ted Cruz.
Beyoncé, who hails from Houston, is expected to perform, Reuters reported, and will come with her mother Tina Knowles.
- Michael Collins and Caché McClay
Joy no more: Harris takes sharper tone while campaigning against Trump
Gone is the joy. In it's place, rising alarm.
Vice President Kamala Harris has taken an increasingly fatalist approach to campaigning that centers on the threat she says former President Donald Trump would present to democracy if he returns to office.
"He's going to sit there unstable, unhinged, plotting his revenge, plotting his retribution, creating an enemies list," she said Wednesday evening during a town hall on CNN.
Harris referred to Trump as a "fascist" during the town hall, echoing comments made by his former chief of staff John Kelly in an interview this week, and hit him for reportedly praising aspects of Hitler's leadership, also according to Kelly.
Standing outside the vice president’s mansion at the Naval Observatory in Washington earlier in the day, Harris warned that Trump “is increasingly unhinged and unstable” and said “people like John Kelly would not be there to be the guardrail against his propensities and his actions" in a second term.
Over the past week, Harris has hammered Trump at most campaign events for comments he's made in the final days of the race about wielding the power of the presidency to muzzle dissenters and punish his political opponents.
If her approach has taken a darker turn, Harris says, it's because Trump's conduct has made it necessary.
"He’s becoming increasingly unstable and unhinged, and it requires that response," she told reporters over the weekend. "I think the American people are seeing it, witnessing it in real time."
- Francesca Chambers and Michael Collins
By the numbers: Latest polling on the 2024 presidential election
Polling numbers updated Thursday reaffirm what has been clear for weeks now: it is an incredibly close race between Trump and Harris.
Here are some of the latest surveys:
Trump leads Harris 47% to 45% in new national poll by the Wall Street Journal
Trump leads 48% to 46% in a new national poll by CNBC
TIPP Tracking Poll shows Harris ahead 50% to 47%.
Bloomberg polling of likely swing state voters show Harris and Trump statistically tied at 49%
Learn more about the latest presidential election polling results 12 days ahead of the election.
- Kinsey Crowley
Shootings and a bombing escalate threats against election, government workers
Threats against election workers and other public officials have moved beyond calls and texts to shootings and a bombing in this incendiary political season.
Threats that resulted in charges this week include a Philadelphia man vowing to "skin" and kill a state party official for recruiting poll watchers and an Alabama man threatening to execute election officials in Arizona.
An Arizona man was charged with shootings at a Democratic Party campaign office. And a California man was charged with bombing a courthouse.
“As we approach Election Day, the Justice Department’s warning remains clear: anyone who illegally threatens an election worker, official, or volunteer will face the consequences,” Attorney General Merrick Garland said in announcing action in four cases this week.
- Bart Jansen
Bill Clinton calls Trump ‘Mr. Brand and Blame’
Former President Bill Clinton called Donald Trump “Mr. Brand and Blame” while addressing a group of Black leaders in Phoenix, Arizona, Wednesday.
Considered one of the “must-win” swing states in the 2024 election, polls show the presidential race is tight in Arizona. Clinton, who flipped the state blue when he ran for reelection in 1996, said Kamala Harris might be in better shape there than in other states that are typically “more Democratic.”
“He's gotta take the election away from them by distraction and division,” Clinton said of the 2024 Republican nominee Wednesday. “She’s the clear choice.”
- Stephanie Murray and Rachel Barber
Trump makes it public: He would fire Special Counsel Jack Smith
Trump made it official on Thursday: If he is re-elected, he would dismiss Special Counsel Jack Smith, who is prosecuting two cases against him.
"I would fire him within two seconds,” Trump told radio show host Hugh Hewitt.
Smith is the top prosecutor in two cases against Trump, one involving efforts to overturn the 2020 election and the other dealing with the mishandling of classified documents.
It's always been understood that these federal cases would go away if Trump reclaims the White House.
What's less understood is what might happen with Trump's conviction in the New York hush money case and another 2020 election case out of Georgia.
- David Jackson
Tucker Carlson likens Trump to a dad giving U.S. a “vigorous spanking”
Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson riled up the crowd at a Georgia rally Wednesday with an unusual metaphor.
He compared former President Donald Trump to a “pissed” father coming home to punish his daughter, the country, in the case he is reelected on Nov. 5.
“He’s not vengeful. He loves his children, disobedient as they may be,” Carlson said. “When dad comes home, you know what he says? ‘You’ve been a bad girl. You’ve been a bad little girl and you’re getting a vigorous spanking right now.’”
Later when Trump took the stage, members of the audience chanted “Daddy’s home.”
Carlson’s comments quickly drew criticism online from Democrats
- Rachel Barber
Former GOP representative Fred Upton endorses Harris
Republican former U.S. Rep. Fred Upton, a respected legislator who represented Michigan for 36 years and became chairman of the powerful Energy and Commerce Committee, has endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris for president, her campaign said Thursday morning.
"I have already cast my ballot for Vice President Kamala Harris to be our next president of the United States," Upton said in the statement.
He added that he’s never voted for a Democratic president, until now. Upton was one of the 10 Republicans who split with his party to vote to impeach Trump for his role in instigating the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol as Congress met to certify the 2020 election for Democratic President Joe Biden.
- Todd Spangler and Sudiksha Kochi
What time do polls open and close on Election Day?
Across the country, polling hours on Nov. 5 will vary by location.
Most states will allow voters to cast their ballots between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. However, in some areas of Vermont, polls will open as early as 5 a.m. and in New York, polls will close as late as 9 p.m. Check with your state or local election office or its website to find the correct window when you can vote in your area.
USA TODAY’s Voter Guide details everything you need to know about making sure your voice is heard in this year’s general election.
- Rachel Barber
Trump locked in tight battle against Harris, new WSJ poll finds
A new Wall Street Journal poll released Wednesday found that Trump is leading Harris by two percentage points, 47% to 45%, among 1,500 registered voters when asked who they would choose if the general election were held today.
Three percent of voters said they were undecided and 2% of voters chose Robert F. Kennedy Jr., according to the Journal poll. The poll, conducted between Oct. 19 to Oct. 22, has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.
- Sudiksha Kochi
New poll finds Angela Alsobrooks leading in closely watched Senate race
A Washington Post/University of Maryland poll released Thursday found Democrat Angela Alsobrooks, running for Maryland’s Senate seat, in a 12 point lead against her Republican opponent Larry Hogan among likely voters, 52% to 40%.
The findings come as Alsobrooks could make history as the first Black senator from Maryland if she wins this election cycle.
In a September Washington Post/University of Maryland Poll, Alsobrooks led Hogan by 11 points among likely voters.
- Sudiksha Kochi
DNC to display anti-Trump ‘Hitler’ billboard in Las Vegas
The Democratic National Committee plans to display a mobile billboard in Las Vegas reading, “I need the kind of generals that Hitler had,” a statement that The Atlantic reported a top Trump aide recalling the former president saying. Trump is scheduled to appear in Nevada’s largest city for a rally Thursday evening.
His former chief of staff John Kelly alleged in separate interviews with the New York Times published Tuesday that Trump had “fascist” traits and would govern like a dictator.
- Savannah Kuchar
Bruce Springsteen to rally with Harris in Atlanta
Harris is looking to get a campaign boost from music icon Bruce Springsteen, as is tradition for many Democratic presidential candidates.
Springsteen will headline a series of concerts in the final weeks of the election, beginning with an appearance in Atlanta Thursday and Philadelphia on Monday. Former President Barack Obama will be at both events and Harris plans to attend today, according to her campaign.
The vice president is the latest in a series of Democrats for whom Springsteen has turned up on the campaign trail. The Boss backed Hillary Clinton in 2016, Obama in 2008 and 2012, and John Kerry in 2004. He also performed at a star-studded Inauguration Day rally for Biden on Jan. 20, 2021.
- Savannah Kuchar and Joey Garrison
Did Eminem endorse Kamala Harris?
Yes. At Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign rally in Detroit Tuesday, Eminem told the crowd that he thinks Harris “supports a future for this country where these freedoms and many others will be protected and upheld.”
“I also think that people shouldn’t be afraid to express their opinions, and I don’t think anyone wants an America where people are worried about retribution, of what people will do if you make your opinion known,” Eminem said at the rally.
- Sudiksha Kochi
When will Trump be on Joe Rogan’s podcast?
Former President Donald Trump is set to appear on podcasting giant “The Joe Rogan Experience” on Friday. Rogan is set to interview Trump in his studio based in Austin, Texas, as reported by Politico.
This would mark Trump’s first appearance on Rogan’s wildly popular podcast. Vice President Kamala Harris is also making her own podcast appearances, including one on “Call Her Daddy” hosted by Alex Cooper.
- Sudiksha Kochi and Fernando Cervantes
Early in-person voting in Maryland begins today
Maryland in-person early voting for this year’s general election begins Thursday, Oct. 24, and runs through Thursday, Oct. 31. Early voting centers will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Registered voters in Maryland can also vote by mail or on Election Day, which is Nov. 5. Mail-in ballots returned by mail must be postmarked by or before 8 p.m. on Nov. 5. If returned by hand, ballots must be dropped at a ballot drop box or local board of elections by 8 p.m. on Nov. 5.
To find your Election Day polling place, visit Maryland’s State Board of Elections Find My PollingPlace portal at https://voterservices.elections.maryland.gov/PollingPlaceSearch.
-- Sudiksha Kochi and Salisbury Daily Times
What Trump said at Georgia rally
Former President Donald Trump used a rally in Georgia on Wednesday evening to tout the Peach State's record-breaking early voting turnout - and its potential swing-state impact.
Trump emphasized the importance of turnout in a neck-and-neck election. He also praised the millions of Georgia voters who have already cast their vote.
He also talked about his economic plan and vision for bolstering cities like Detroit; criticized the Biden administration and his opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris, over immigration; and repeated claims of political persecution.
He said nothing on stage about recent allegations by his longest-serving chief of staff.
- Savannah Kuchar
Harris says Trump is a fascist at CNN town hall
Harris said Wednesday that she believes former President Donald Trump is a fascist and his ex-chief of staff is "putting out a 9-1-1 call" to the American people to consider the implications of his potential return to the White House.
Appearing at a CNN town hall in Delaware County in Pennsylvania, Harris invoked former White House chief of staff John Kelly's claim that Trump made positive comments about Hitler and agreed with his assessment that Trump is a "fascist."
"Yes, I do," she said. "And I also believe that the people who know him best on this subject should be trusted."
--Francesca Chambers
Why a majority of voters think Donald Trump should face charges even if he's elected
A majority of Americans think it would be “wrong” for Donald Trump to have the Justice Department drop federal charges against him if he wins back the White House, according to a new USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll.
Legal observers say there's no chance a Trump Justice Department would continue the two federal cases he has asked judges to dismiss as a "witch hunt" led by a prosecutor he calls "deranged." But nearly 58% of likely voters who responded to the poll said it would be "wrong" for Trump to direct the department to drop the charges, compared to 30% saying it would be the "right" thing to do. Nearly one in 10 were undecided.
- Bart Jansen
What time do polls open on Election Day?
In some states, like Arizona and Connecticut, polling locations can open as early as 6 a.m. on Election Day, which is Nov. 5. In other places, locations will open later in the morning like at 7 a.m. or 8 a.m.
You can find your polling location and its hours by contacting your state and local election office or visiting usa.gov for more information.
?Sudiksha Kochi
Ask us anything! Want to learn more about how election results are certified as the 2024 election gears up? Don’t miss your chance to ask us your pressing questions about election law on r/law for a Reddit AMA on 10/25 at 3 p.m. ET.
Join USA TODAY journalists Aysha Bagchi and Sarah Wire for an election Reddit AMA on Oct. 25 at 3 p.m. ET on the r/law subreddit.
Where do Harris, Trump stand in the polls?
Trump and Harris have been neck-and-neck in national polls and battleground surveys for weeks. An exclusive USA TODAY/Suffolk University poll released Monday put Harris at 45%, Trump at 44%, a closer race than the poll found in August.
In a Marist survey released Thursday, Trump led Harris 50%-49% among likely voters in Arizona and 50%-48% in North Carolina, and rivals were tied in Georgia.
– Marina Pitofsky, Francesca Chambers
Election Day is Nov. 5. Sign up for USA TODAY's On Politics newsletter for breaking news and exclusive analysis.
Where is Donald Trump campaigning on Thursday?
Donald Trump is hitting up two western battlegrounds: Arizona and Nevada. He's holding a rally in Tempe, Arizona in the afternoon on Thursday, and he'll address an event with the conservative group Turning Point Action in Las Vegas in the evening.
? Marina Pitofsky
Where is Kamala Harris campaigning on Thursday?
Kamala Harris is holding a campaign stop on Thursday in Atlanta, and she'll be joined by former President Barack Obama and music icon Bruce Springsteen. Springsteen is set to perform for Harris' supporters in the pivotal Peach State.
? Marina Pitofsky
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Election 2024 recap: Trump, Harris polls; Beyoncé to perform