Election Day is just 14 days out, and Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are hitting the campaign trail to make their final pitches to voters. Follow for live updates.
Demographic changes are why Harris is trying to consolidate gains with white college-educated voters, while Trump focuses on Black and Latino voters.
A federal judge also ordered Giuliani to turn over various assets to the two election workers who won a $148-million defamation judgment against him.
Vice President Kamala Harris plans to spend election night in Washington D.C., with her campaign eyeing her alma mater, Howard University, as a possible venue.
The Georgia Supreme Court won’t let the state election board enforce a slate of controversial new election rules that were passed by allies of Donald Trump, ruling Tuesday against Republicans who asked for them to be revived as early voting got underway in the critical battleground state.
Their efforts could help lay the groundwork for what could become another push to undermine the results if former President Donald Trump loses again.
If the Biden administration’s most impactful health care policies cease to exist, experts say hundreds of thousands of people in Massachusetts could lose access to affordable health insurance options. At the same time, some experts believe these benefits could have unintended negative consequences in the long term.
Vice President Kamala Harris tells NBC News’ Hallie Jackson that her campaign has teams ready to push back against any possible election challenges from former President Trump.
Nearly 800 ballot drop boxes and voting centers opened across the state this week — the most Colorado has ever had for any single election — state officials said. “Today, we have 433 drop boxes and 365 voting centers open statewide — the most we have ever had in any election,
People will be staying up late to see what comes out of Orange County on Election night, said one political analyst.
A decision blocking Republican-backed changes to election rules in Georgia will not be reviewed by the state's high court on an expedited basis, making the new rules unlikely to go into effect for the Nov.