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Harris and Trump hit battleground states as US election day looms

DETROIT: Democrat Kamala Harris made her closing pitch for the US presidency at a historically Black church in the battleground state of Michigan on Sunday (Nov 3), while her Republican rival Donald Trump rallied in Pennsylvania.
Opinion polls show the pair locked in a tight race. Vice President Harris, 60, is bolstered by strong support among women voters, while former president Trump, 78, gained ground with Hispanic voters, especially men.
Voters overall view both candidates unfavourably, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling, but that has not dissuaded them from casting ballots.
More than 76 million Americans have already done so ahead of Tuesday’s Election Day, according to the University of Florida’s Election Lab, approaching half the total 160 million votes cast in 2020, in which US voter turnout was the highest in more than a century.
Control of the US Congress is also up for grabs on Tuesday, with Republicans favoured to capture a majority in the Senate while Democrats are seen as having an even chance of flipping Republicans’ narrow majority in the House of Representatives.
Presidents whose parties have not controlled both chambers have struggled to pass major new legislation over the past decade.
“In just two days we have the power to decide the fate of our nation for generations to come,” Harris told parishioners at Greater Emmanuel Institutional Church of God in Christ in Detroit.
“We must act. It’s not enough to only pray; not enough to just talk. We must act on the plans (God) has in store for us, and we must make them real through our works, in our daily choices, in services to our communities, in our democracy.”
Trump, at his first of three rallies on Sunday, frequently abandoned his teleprompter with off-the-cuff remarks in which he denounced polls showing movement for Harris.
He called Democrats a “demonic party”, joked about the news media covering him being shot, ridiculed Democratic President Joe Biden and complained about the price of apples.
Trump, who survived an assassination attempt in July when a gunman’s bullet grazed his ear in Butler, Pennsylvania, on Sunday complained to supporters about gaps in the bulletproof glass surrounding him as he spoke and mused that an assassin would have to shoot through the news media to get him.
“To get me, somebody would have to shoot through the fake news and I don’t mind that so much,” said Trump, who has long criticised the media and sought to rile public sentiment against them.
Last week he suggested prominent Republican critic former congresswoman Liz Cheney should face gunfire in combat over her hawkish foreign policy, leading an Arizona prosecutor to open an investigation.
Campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung issued a statement saying Trump was not directed toward the media but rather, “it was about threats against him that were spurred on by dangerous rhetoric from Democrats”.
Trump later spoke in Kinston, North Carolina, and was due to end his day with an evening rally in Macon, Georgia.
Of the seven US states seen as competitive, Georgia and North Carolina are the second-biggest prizes up for grabs on Tuesday, with each holding 16 of the 270 votes a candidate needs to win in the state-by-state Electoral College to secure the presidency. Pennsylvania is first with 19 electors.
Non-partisan US election analysts reckon Harris would need to win about 45 electoral votes in the seven swing states to win the White House, while Trump would need about 51 when accounting for the states they are forecast to win easily.
Near the end of his Pennsylvania speech, Trump – whose false claims that his 2020 loss was the result of fraud inspired his supporters’ Jan 6, 2021, assault on the US Capitol – mused that he would have preferred not to have handed over power.
“We had the safest border in the history of our country the day that I left. I shouldn’t have left. I mean, honestly, because we did so, we did so well,” Trump said.
Trump said during his remarks that election results should be announced on Election Night, despite warnings by officials in multiple states that it could take days to ascertain the final outcome.
Democrats say they have plans in place should Trump try to prematurely claim victory this time.
Harris told reporters on Sunday that she trusts the US election system.
“We have, and support, free and fair elections in our country. We did in 2020 – he lost,” she said. “And the systems that are in place for this election in 2024 have integrity.”
After her Detroit appearance, Harris is due to head to East Lansing, Michigan, a college town in an industrial state that is viewed as a must-win for the Democrat.
She faces scepticism from some of the state’s 200,000 Arab Americans who are frustrated Harris has not done more to help end the war in Gaza and scale back aid to Israel.
Trump visited Dearborn, Michigan, the heart of the Arab American community, on Friday and vowed to end the conflict in the Middle East without saying how.
Harris, who has met behind closed doors with selected Arab American and Muslim leaders, will focus her energy on Black neighbourhoods on Sunday.
Samah Noureddine, 44, a Lebanese American from Grosse Ile, a town near Detroit, said she voted for Biden in 2020 but was casting a ballot for Jill Stein of the Green Party this year.
“I’m upset because Harris is funding the genocide and if we get Trump we’re going to suffer too,” she said. “I’m sick of both of them.”
In the campaign’s final days, Harris has sought to convince voters that she will bring down the cost of living, a top concern after several years of high inflation.
Trump has argued that Harris, as the sitting vice president, should be held responsible for rising prices and the high levels of immigration of the past several years, which he has portrayed as an existential threat to the country.

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