2024 Presidential Election | ELECTION DAY 2024

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Trump has 4 appearances in NC between now and election day. Sounds like fear to me.
Harris has a stop in NC today, as well.


On the final weekend before Election Day, Harris will travel to Atlanta on Saturday for a rally in the Peachtree State with remarks by Spike Lee, Victoria Monét, and performances by 2 Chainz, Big Tigger, Monica, and Pastor Troy.

The vice president will then head to Charlotte, North Carolina for a Get Out The Vote event featuring Kerry Washington and performances by Brittney Spencer, Jon Bon Jovi, Khalid, and The War And Treaty.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Harris’ running mate, will head to the Southwest on Saturday, starting in Las Vegas, Nevada, and will be joined by Eva Longoria. He will later travel to Flagstaff and Tucson, Arizona.

In the final 48 hours of the campaign, the vice president will visit Michigan State in East Lansing on Sunday and close out the election in Pennsylvania on Monday with rallies in Allentown, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh before returning to Washington, D.C.

Walz and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff will team up in Georgia on Sunday on behalf of the Democratic ticket. The governor will later travel to North Carolina for a rally.

On Monday, Walz and his wife, Gwen, will campaign in Wisconsin and Michigan. On Tuesday, they will campaign in Pennsylvania before heading to Washington, D.C.

On Tuesday, the Harris-Walz campaign will host its election night event at Howard University in Washington, D.C., Harris’ alma mater. Trump’s campaign will host an election night watch party at a convention center in West Palm Beach, Florida, but has not announced the former president’s election night plans, according to the Palm Beach Post, part of the USA TODAY Florida network.”

 

INSIDE THE RUTHLESS, RESTLESS FINAL DAYS OF TRUMP’S CAMPAIGN​

“What’s discipline got to do with winning?”


GIFT LINK —> Inside the Ruthless, Restless Final Days of Trump’s Campaign

TRIGGER WARNING — use of R-word

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“At the end of June, in the afterglow of a debate performance that would ultimately prompt President Joe Biden to end his campaign for reelection, Donald Trump startled his aides by announcing that he’d come up with a new nickname for his opponent.

“The guy’s a retard. He’s retarded. I think that’s what I’ll start calling him,” Trump declared aboard his campaign plane, en route to a rally that evening, according to three people who heard him make the remarks: “Retarded Joe Biden.”

The staffers present—and, within hours, others who’d heard about the epithet secondhand—pleaded with Trump not to say this publicly. They warned him that it would antagonize the moderate voters who’d been breaking in their direction, while engendering sympathy for a politician who, at that moment, was the subject of widespread ridicule.

As Trump demurred, musing that he might debut the nickname at that night’s event, his staffers puzzled over the timing. Biden was on the ropes. Polls showed Trump jumping out to the biggest lead he’d enjoyed in any of his three campaigns for the presidency. Everything was going right for the Republican Party and its nominee. Why would he jeopardize that for the sake of slinging a juvenile insult? (A campaign spokesperson, Steven Cheung, said the nickname “was never discussed and this is materially false.”)

Over the next several days—as Trump’s aides held their breath, convinced he would debut this latest slur at any moment—they came to realize something about Trump: He was restless, unhappy, and, yes, tired of winning. For the previous 20 months, he’d been hemmed in by a campaign built on the principles of restraint and competence.

The former president’s ugliest impulses were regularly curbed by his top advisers; his most obnoxious allies and most outlandish ideas were sidelined. These guardrails had produced a professional campaign—a campaign that was headed for victory.

But now, like a predator toying with its wounded catch, Trump had become bored. It reminded some allies of his havoc-making decisions in the White House. Trump never had much use for calm and quiet. He didn’t appreciate normalcy. Above all, he couldn’t stand being babysat. …”

 
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