Both campaigns see Pennsylvania as a fulcrum of the 2024 election, and for good reason. The Economist’ s forecast model suggests that the state—with its 19 electoral-college votes, the most of any swing state—is the tipping-point in 27% of the model’s updated simulations,
According to the latest CBS News Poll, if the presidential election were held today, 59% of likely voters would vote for Vice President Kamala Harris compared to 41% for former President Donald Trump. "We are the future," said DaJaun Wortham, a student at Community College of Philadelphia. "Young people are the future."
Voters in Pennsylvania are not yet able to cast ballots, despite confusion over a state law concerning applications for mail ballots
On Friday, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania vacated a case surrounding undated or misdated ballots. The majority ruled that the legal battle should involve all 67 boards of elections, not just Philadelphia and Allegheny counties. The Pennsylvania ALCU brought that case.
Bluestack Strategies founder Maura Gillespie discusses the presidential campaign strategies of former President Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris on 'Fox News Live.'
Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, a former Democratic vice presidential short-lister, will campaign in Wisconsin with U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin.
Here are some of the most pivotal races on the 2024 ballot in Pennsylvania. Democrats can go a long way toward securing their tenuous control of the U.S. Senate if they can defend the seat of U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa. Sign-up for Your Vote: Text with the USA TODAY elections team.
Former President Trump and Vice President Harris remain deadlocked, a pair of polls released Thursday, but the Democratic nominee maintains a four-point lead in the battleground state of
Vice President Harris and former President Trump are virtually tied in the battleground state of Pennsylvania, according to a Washington Post poll released early Thursday. Harris leads Trump by 1 point in the Keystone State,
Arizona: Trump leads Harris by one point, 49% to 48%, in the Emerson survey, while a CNN/SSRS survey from Aug. 23 to 29 found him up by five points, 49% to 44%—Trump trailed Harris by two points, 49% to 47%, here in a Bloomberg News/Morning Consult survey of registered voters taken just after President Joe Biden’s exit from the race.