Harris and Trump are blitzing throughout the battleground states as the highly anticipated Sept. 10 debate is less than a week away.
An election filled with plot twists is entering its final 60 days as Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump remain locked in a dead-heat race.
Much is on the line as both campaigns lean into the final two months of a historic election cycle, with a much anticipated Sept. 10 debate on ABC, the beginning of early voting in many states, and Trumpâs scheduled sentencing in New York looming in the background.
Both candidates have recently expressed a keen awareness of whatâs at stake in the remaining weeks. Harris, speaking in New Hampshire on Sept. 4, reiterated how she sees herself as an underdog against the former president.
âNew Hampshire, we have 62 days to go. … Iâm going to tell you what you already know. This race is going to be tight until the very end. So please, letâs not pay too much attention to the polls, because we are running as the underdog,â Harris said.
National and Statewide Polling Trends
Harris is ahead by 3.1 percent in FiveThirtyEightâs national polling average and leading Trump by 4 percent in recent Outward Intelligence and Emerson College polls, while remaining tied in others.
The race is even closer in the battleground states of Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Nevada, Arizona, and North Carolina, with most remaining toss-ups.
Pennsylvania is considered a critical battleground with its coveted prize of 19 electoral votes. Part of the Democrat-leaning âBlue Wall,â Trump won the Keystone State by less than 1 percent in 2016. Four years later, President Joe Biden won it by a similar marginâ1.17 percent.
Bill McInturff, the co-founder of Public Opinion Strategies, emphasized the importance of Pennsylvania in a Sept. 4 roundtable discussion with the American Enterprise Institute.
âI think the race is sort of a Pennsylvania race,â McInturff said. âDemocrats had a 10-point registration advantage over Republicans. In 2020, it was about 7.5 percent, now itâs 4.8 percent. ⌠Republicans have shifted, and the registration margin is half of the Democratic advantage it used to be,â McInturff said.
McInturff said it would be difficult for Harris to win over voters in places like Scranton and western Pennsylvania after endorsing a ban on fracking in 2019 and walking that position back just a year later.
American Enterprise Institute senior fellow Chris Stirewalt called Pennsylvania the âmother of all swing statesâ and said the state falls in the middle of partisanship among all battlegrounds, making it most likely to swing toward either party.
Race for the Electoral College
Looking at the Electoral College, Harris could lose Pennsylvania, Arizona, and North Carolina and still win the election if she holds onto Nevada, Georgia, Michigan, and Wisconsin.
Trump, however, could lose all of the battlegrounds besides Pennsylvania, Georgia, and North Carolina and still win the Electoral College. The Trump campaign has sent both the former president and his running mate, Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio), to Pennsylvania repeatedly in the past two months, highlighting its significance to Trumpâs success.
Harris has also visited the Keystone State since becoming the new Democrat candidate on July 21, and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, is conducting a âbarnstormâ across the state this week.
Stirewalt discussed another Trump path to victory: turning Michigan, Wisconsin, or Pennsylvania red, âbecause they move in a [similar] direction.â
However, Stirewalt forecasts a similar win for Harris if the vice president wins Arizona, Georgia, or North Carolina.
Joining the Sept. 4 roundtable, Cook Political Report publisher and editor-in-chief Amy Walter said the remaining 60 days of the election are critical for both candidates, but for different reasons.
â[Now] voters are finally going to be engaged with candidates, especially one candidate who they donât know particularly well, and thatâs Kamala Harris, and so the ability for her to basically make her case effectively is the question for the next ⌠60 days we have left,â Walter said.
âThe question for Trump is whether he can undermine that. Opinions of Donald Trump arenât going to change between now and the election. Opinions of Kamala Harris can change between now and the election. And that, to me, is going to impact not just who wins the presidential election, but the kinds of people who fundamentally show up to vote in those key swing states,â she said.
Another potential wild card on the horizon is Trumpâs sentencing in his Manhattan criminal trial.
Robert Y. Shapiro, a political science professor from Columbia University, said that in the remaining 60 days of the election, âTrumpâs campaign has to emphasize that he is a better choice over the poor performance of the Biden administration and that the election is a referendum on that.â
âHarris and the Democrats need to focus on whatever her positions are that make her stand out from Biden on the positive side, and they need to focus on making sure the enthusiasm the Democrats have leads to new voters and her other supporters actually voting on Election Day or earlier,â Shapiro told The Epoch Times.
Tom Ozimek and Sam Dorman contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
Running For Office? Conservative Campaign Consulting – Election Day Strategies!