Georgia sees record amount of early voting – report
The day is not over, but the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports that Georgia has seen a record amount of early voting on the first day polls have been open:
This is not necessarily indicative of how the swing state, where many polls have shown Donald Trump with a narrow lead, will end up voting in November.
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Updated at 15.18 EDT
Key events
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Harris was asked about her stance on reparations, too.
She said, “It has to be studied. There’s no question about that, and I’ve been very clear about that position.”
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Harris, in that response on her town hall, also pointed out that Donald Trump is selling bibles for US$60.
“Donald Trump and his followers spend full time trying to suggest that the measure of the strength of a leader is based on who you beat down, which is absolutely contrary to the church. Where our church, and my church, is about saying true leadership, the measure of that is based on who you lift up and right. And then he’s selling $60 bibles or tennis shoes and trying to play people as though that makes him more understanding of the black community. Come on.”
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In her interview with Charlamagne tha God on Tuesday, Kamala Harris was asked whether she had engaged enough with the Black church.
Harris said that allegations she had not engaged with the Black church “comes from the Trump team … they are trying to disconnect me from the people I have worked with and that I’m from,” she said.
“I grew up in the Black church. I grew up attending 23rd Avenue Church of God in Oakland, California. That’s church. My pastor is Amos C Brown, of Third Baptist Church in San Francisco, California. I have, throughout my career and as vice-president and recently, been actively engaged in the church and church leaders, not only so we can share in fellowship, but so we can share in what we can do together that is about supporting the community,” she said.
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Updated at 19.12 EDT
Here is a bit more on the record early voting numbers in Georgia.
Voters in Georgia turned out in record numbers as the battleground state opened early voting for the 5 November presidential election between Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump, state officials said on Tuesday.
At least 252,000 voters had cast ballots at early-voting sites as of 4pm ET (8pm GMT), nearly double the 136,000 who participated in the first day of early voting in the 2020 election, said Gabriel Sterling, Georgia’s No2 election official. “Spectacular turnout,” he wrote on social media.
Early voting, either in person or by mail, has become increasingly popular with US voters. Nearly one in seven voters cast their ballots ahead of election day in 2020, according to the University of Florida’s Election Lab. However, many Republicans opposed the dramatic expansion of mail voting that year, saying it was less secure than in-person voting, and Trump cited false claims of mail ballot fraud as he sought unsuccessfully to overturn his defeat byJoe Biden in 2020.
Some Republicans continue to insist that voters should be able to cast their ballots only in person on election day, though party officials are encouraging supporters to vote ahead of time.
Nationwide, 5.5 million Americans have already voted this year, according to Election Lab. By contrast, 27 million people had cast their ballots at this point in the 2020 election as voters sought to avoid crowded polling places during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Like some other states, Georgia has tightened its mail-in voting laws since then, requiring voters who want to cast an absentee ballot to provide proof of identity and limiting the number of places they can deposit their ballots.
Georgia, with 16 electoral college votes, is one of the seven competitive battleground states expected to play a decisive role in deciding the election.
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Updated at 18.44 EDT
Harris defends record as a prosecutor as she attempts to shore up support with black voters
Kamala Harris defended her record as a prosecutor and pledged to decriminalize marijuana as president in Detroit on Tuesday, as she aims to shore up support among Black men in an interview with radio host Charlamagne tha God.
Charlamagne, a Black comedian and author who hosts radio program The Breakfast Club, is known for his blunt interviews of celebrities.
Although he is a Harris supporter, he has been critical of her and Joe Biden in the past and called Democrats “cowards” for ineffectively prosecuting a case against Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. One of his first questions was asking Harris to address a common rumour – that she disproportionately locked up Black men over her more than a dozen years as San Francisco’s district attorney.
Harris said she was “one of the most progressive prosecutors” on marijuana cases, and would work to decriminalise it, because she knows how that has hurt certain populations, especially Black men.
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Updated at 18.26 EDT
Kamala Harris is holding a town hall in Detroit hosted by Charlamagne tha God.
“So can you imagine you go to a city and you say you want the votes of those people and you disparage that city,” Harris is saying now. She is referring to Trump’s comments last week in Detroit.
The former US president and Republican nominee was speaking on Thursday at the Detroit Economic Club in the city, which is the biggest city in Michigan – one of the most crucial swing states in the 2024 US election.
But Trump, whose speeches are frequently rambling and lengthy discourses rather than set piece deliveries, could not stop himself from lambasting the city in which he was speaking by pointing to Detroit’s recent history of economic decline from its heyday as the home of American car production.
As he was speaking about China being a developing nation, Trump said: “Well, we’re a developing nation too, just take a look at Detroit. Detroit’s a developing area more than most places in China.”
He later returned to the theme, warning of an economic disaster if his Democratic opponent, Kamala Harris, wins in November’s election.
“Our whole country will end up being like Detroit if she’s your president. You’re going to have a mess on your hands,” Trump said.
This is Helen Sullivan taking over the Guardian’s live US elections coverage.
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Updated at 18.24 EDT
Summary
Early voting has begun in several states including Georgia, where a record number of voters are casting ballots.
Donald Trump spoke at Economic Club of Chicago, where he dodged questions about the peaceful transfer of power, refused to say whether he had spoken with Russia’s Vladimir Putin since the election and promoted his tariff-heavy proposals that economic expects say will do little to address inflation and will likely push prices higher.
Meanwhile, Kamala Harris joined a town hall in Detroit hosted by Charlemagne Tha God.
Here’s what else has happened today so far:
Trump was scheduled to appear on CNBC this week, but backed out unexpectedly. It was the second time the former president canceled an interview recently, after declining to appear on the popular CBS News show 60 Minutes
There are many theories about why presidential polls have moved so little since Harris entered the race in July. In an interview today with CNN, veteran Republican pollster Frank Luntz said the atmosphere is beginning to remind him of 2016, when Hillary Clinton lost to Trump, despite winning the popular vote.
Tim Walz spent the day in the key swing state of Pennsylvania. Wearing a plaid shirt, Walz spoke at a farm in Volant, Pennsylvania – a small town with a population of just 125 – to tout his campaign’s agenda for rural America.
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George Chidi
More than a quarter-million Georgia voters cast ballots by 4pm on the first day of early voting Tuesday.
Lines stretched as much as two hours at some locations in Atlanta at peak times. For context, about 130,000 people cast early ballots in person on the first day of early voting in 2020. So far, about 260,000 Georgians have requested an absentee ballot.
Voters at the Buckhead branch of the Fulton county library said they were concerned about the economy, the tone of the election and attacks on immigrants, but particularly abortion rights.
John Dodson, an orchestra conductor from Atlanta, said he voted for Harris.
“I think she’s enormously capable, and I believe that she understands this moment, that she is the right person to lead us from this moment,” he said. “This moment is unique. We are divided as we have not been since the time just before the civil war. And while I hope it wouldn’t – and don’t think it would – rise to those kinds of outcomes, the foundations of the public are being shaken. Frankly, the way we have seen ourselves is being re-evaluated in ways I could never have imagined. So I think this is a very important moment for us to re-establish norms and return to what made us the ‘shining city on the hill’.”
With regard to the Ronald Reagan quote Dodson referenced, he said Reagan “was quoting someone else, and that is the point. He and I could disagree with a policy, and would have, but that isn’t what we’re discussing. We’re now talking about the functioning of the democracy and whether we simply seize power by hook or crook, or whether we actually allow people a voice in their governance. That’s the real issue underneath this contest.
“I think that election day plus one will be a very difficult day for a lot of people, and election day plus two, and election day plus three, but also Thanksgiving, and also December, at Christmas, or at the New Year’s party or at Hanukkah. I mean, I think that when you really think about it, one half of this country will be very, very unhappy with the results. But the question is, and you spoke about the tenor of this conversation, the conversation has degraded to a point of coarseness, and fear is ruling a huge amount of this discourse. And under fear comes this feeling of being threatened. And when you get threatened, people get angry. And so then, now we’ve filled a country with weapons, and I, too, worry that there are people who really do seem to feel that an outcome that is OK here is a violent outcome, So, this is the point: this is not the great experiment that has been us. And we’ve got to try to find our north star again and return.”
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Updated at 18.08 EDT
Harris has spent the town hall addressing very specific policies, focusing on a list of plans to boost the middle class, and help Americans though an affordability crisis.
“I’m going to extend tax deductions to $50,000. Every first-time homeowner, wherever they are, whatever their race, will benefit if they are (a) first-time homebuyer with a $25,000 down-payment assistance. Everyone is going to benefit from my plan to extend the child tax (credit to) $6,000 for the first year of their child’s life,” she said.
In a substantive discussion, Harris also repeatedly emphasized that policies that will benefit Black Americans will help everybody.
Charlemagne: ‘I had a politician tell me once that if you’re running for a national election, it’s bad electoral strategy to say you are going to do things for Black people, which is why a lot of politicians don’t speak directly to their plans for Black people.’
Harris: ‘I don’t know that that’s true. I think that what is true is that I am running to be president for everybody, but I’m clear eyed about the history and the disparities that exist for specific communities.’
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Updated at 18.02 EDT
Kamala Harris joins town hall hosted by Charlamagne tha God
The vice-president has joined a town hall in Detroit, hosted by Charlamagne tha God. “This is a margin-of-error race. It’s tight. I’m gonna win. I’m gonna win, but it’s tight,” she told him.
The event is being livestreamed on iHeartRadio. Prior to the town hall, Harris stopped by the Norwest Gallery of Art for a conversation with Black men about entrepreneurship.
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Updated at 17.59 EDT
As early voting begins in Georgia, a county judge in the state has ruled that local officials cannot refuse to certify election results.
The ruling from judge Robert McBurney on Monday night rebukes an argument from Donald Trump and his allies that local election officials should have the discretion to deny the certification of election results.
McBurney found that “the superintendent must certify and must do so by a certain time” – with no exemptions. The ruling could help protect the election against rogue officials, encouraged by Republicans who have falsely alleged widespread fraud in elections.
“While the (election official) must investigate concerns about miscounts and must report those concerns to a prosecutor if they persist after she investigates, the existence of those concerns, those doubts, and those worries is not cause to delay or decline certification,” McBurney wrote. “That is simply not an option for this particular ministerial function in the superintendent’s broader portfolio of functions.”
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Updated at 17.58 EDT
Tim Walz is spending the day in the key swing state of Pennsylvania.
Wearing a plaid shirt, Walz spoke at a farm in Volant, Pennsylvania – a small town with a population of just 125 – to tout his campaign’s agenda for rural America.
“When people think rural America, farm policy matters,” Walz said. “Crop insurance matters. Trade matters, tariff matters. But you’re bigger than that. Your families, your healthcare matters, your education matters, your roads matter, your retirement matters, all those things matter.”
He also tried to push an optimistic message, saying: “I saw the Wall Street Journal said: ‘Joyfulness isn’t a plan.’ Well, no one said it’s a plan. But it’s a hell of a lot better to be joyful than to be angry and terrible like they’re doing on the other side.”
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Updated at 16.35 EDT
Trump cancels CNBC interview – report
Donald Trump was scheduled to appear on CNBC this week, but backed out unexpectedly, CNN reports.
It was the second time the former president had canceled an interview recently, after declining to appear on the popular CBS News show 60 Minutes. He has instead given interviews to rightwing news outlets, and earlier today had a live conversation on economic policy moderated by Bloomberg News.
CNN reports that Trump’s campaign cited a scheduling conflict as the reason he could not appear on CNBC’s Squawk Box show.
“Trump canceled, and he was going to come on,” co-anchor Joe Kernen announced on air earlier today. He added that the network had also asked Kamala Harris to appear but that “she’s not coming on”.
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Updated at 16.14 EDT
There are many theories about why presidential polls have moved so little since Kamala Harris entered the race in July.
In an interview today with CNN, veteran Republican pollster Frank Luntz says the atmosphere is beginning to remind him of 2016, when Hillary Clinton lost to Donald Trump, despite winning the popular vote and polls generally showing her with the edge. Here’s what Luntz had to say:
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In other swing state news, Mark Robinson, the Republican candidate for governor of North Carolina, is suing CNN after the network revealed his history of lewd and offensive remarks on pornography websites, the Associated Press reports:
Mark Robinson, North Carolina’s lieutenant governor, announced a lawsuit Tuesday against CNN over its recent report alleging he made explicit racial and sexual posts on a pornography website’s message board, calling the reporting reckless and defamatory.
The lawsuit, filed in Wake county superior court, comes less than four weeks after a television report that led many fellow GOP elected officials and candidates, including Donald Trump, to distance themselves from Robinson’s gubernatorial campaign. Robinson announced the lawsuit at a news conference in Raleigh.
CNN “chose to publish despite knowing or recklessly disregarding that Robinson’s data – including his name, date of birth, passwords, and the email address supposedly associated with the NudeAfrica account – were previously compromised by multiple data breaches”, the lawsuit states.
CNN declined to comment, spokesperson Emily Kuhn said in an email.
Polls at the time of the CNN report already showed Josh Stein, Robinson’s Democratic rival and the sitting attorney general, with a lead over Robinson. Early in-person voting begins Thursday statewide, and well over 50,000 completed absentee ballots have been received so far.
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Updated at 15.37 EDT