Kamala Harris entered the race against Donald Trump with one big disadvantage: Voters trust him more on economic issues. Now she is putting forward an economic plan aimed at narrowing the gap.
A conservative commentator got a harsh reminder of life in the last year of Donald Trump's presidency.Mark Lotter, the communications director for the right-wing America First Policy Institute and a former aide to vice president Mike Pence,
Vice President Harris is seeing a surge in enthusiasm among women on the economy, a top issue for voters ahead of November, according to a new survey released this week. The poll, conducted by American University (AU) and the Benenson Strategy Group,
What if when voters say “It’s the economy!” they’re just expressing a partisan viewpoint? That’s what a look at polling data suggests.
Voter feelings about the economy could be the deciding factor in who wins the White House in November. NBC News' Hallie Jackson traveled to eastern North Carolina to ask voters there how they feel the economy is,
The union has demanded a total ban on the use of efficiency-improving automation at East Coast ports, which the industry group says will lead to
In the survey conducted in late September, 34% say the economy is the most important issue, with immigration a distant second at 17%.
An American University poll shows a majority of women trust Harris over Trump to address inflation and bring down the cost of living.
A surge in hiring offers Vice President Kamala Harris a fresh defense in her fight with Donald Trump over the economy, as the pair jockey to frame their visions in the home stretch of the campaign.
Vice President Kamala Harris spoke with CBS News Pittsburgh politics editor Jon Delano about the top issues for Pennsylvania voters, including fracking, the proposed acquisition of U.S. Steel by the Japanese company Nippon Steel,
Trump's deportation plan would devastate the construction and agriculture industries, in particular, with each losing one out of every eight workers they currently employ. The hospitality industry would lose about one in 14 workers, exacerbating the already significant labor shortage since the pandemic.