Presidential hopefuls Kamala Harris and Donald Trump took a break from the campaign trail Sunday, and remain deep in preparations for Tuesday's debate in Philadelphia, the first time the two will face off onstage.
Now, Harris and Trump are effectively tied in the polls, and it’s the vice president’s turn to take on Trump at what may end up being the only debate between the two nominees before Election Day. Below are all the details.
The most important moment in the race between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump comes this week, as the vice president prepares for what could be her only opportunity to directly confront a former president whose political dominance she is pledging to end.
Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald J. Trump will leave the campaigning to surrogates on Sunday, as their high-stakes debate looms on Tuesday night.
For the first time in weeks, former President Donald Trump pulled ahead of Vice President Kamala Harris in one of the most-watched national polls — raising the prospect that her momentum has
It’s a crazy-close race, but Harris’s relatively strong favorability ratings could give her a better shot at winning.
The DNC flew planes over four college football games that carried Banners with anti-Trump messaging as Kamala Harris has lost ground in the polls lately.
As Kamala Harris, Donald Trump and their aides scheme out their strategies for this week’s much-anticipated debate, one big question is how the two candidates will approach a great strength for Democrats and a major weakness for Republicans: abortion rights.
That’s how many points Harris leads Trump by in RealClearPolitics’ latest polling average. Meanwhile, FiveThirtyEight’s weighted average shows Harris with a
A bit more than 48 hours before Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump battle it out for the first time on a Philadelphia debate stage, a new poll shows the two opponents essentially neck and neck.
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump are running neck and neck ahead of this week’s high-stakes presidential debate, according to a new poll. The vice president and her Republican rival are separated by just one point days before they take the debate stage in Pittsburgh, the poll by The New York Times/ Siena College found.