Several polls in crucial swing states, including Arizona, Nevada, North Carolina and Georgia, have shifted in the former president's favor.
Will Donald Trump or Kamala Harris be the next president. Here is what polls, odds and historians say as we head into Election Day on Nov. 5.
The roadmap laid out by the Justice Department in court this week for how former President Donald Trump tried to overturn the 2020 election feels eerily familiar to many election officials and voting rights advocates who are gearing up for November.
African Americans are a significant voting bloc in states like Georgia, Mississippi, and South Carolina, and rural Black voters are no exception. Black voters played a critical role in helping deliver Georgia to Biden in 2020, flipping a state won by Trump in 2016, and their turnout could be crucial again in 2024.
Former President Barack Obama is joining the final push to deliver the vice president a victory, starting with perhaps the most consequential battleground state of the election — Pennsylvania.
Donald Trump’s attempt to unravel American democracy to stay in power four years ago is suddenly back at the epicenter of another election — weeks before the ex-president could pull off a stunning White House comeback.
Unlike in 2020, when most false claims were thrown out, AI forgeries today are easy to make and could take weeks—or even months—to debunk. By then, the damage will be done. Worse still, the relationship between government officials and social media companies is more fractured than ever.
As Election Day 2024 approaches, Republicans desperately want voters to believe the economy is terrible. Reality keeps getting in the way.
While Nov. 5 is Election Day, voters in Illinois have the option of voting early and in person or by mail beforehand.
Arizonans will decide between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump for president on Election Day 2024. Here's what you need to know.