Bettors are making stronger guesses at who will win the 2024 election. Recent polling has trended toward Donald Trump. See what that means.
Vice presidential candidate JD Vance said “no” former president Donald Trump did not lose the 2020 election “by the words” the Ohio Republican would use, when asked at a rally Wednesday what message it sends to independent voters that he has not directly answered that question.
In his most direct answer yet of this election cycle, vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance said he doesn't believe former President Donald Trump lost the 2020 election
"I think there are serious problems in 2020, so did Donald Trump lose the election? Not by the words that I would use," the Ohio senator said at a Pennsylvania rally.
Suspicion about the vote count is pervasive even in small rural communities, where volunteers are preparing for potential violence.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s escalating assaults in Gaza and Lebanon have become a growing liability for Kamala Harris as Election Day nears.
A judge in Georgia has struck down a slate of controversial new election rules passed by Donald Trump allies, including two that Democrats say would inject post-election “chaos” into the critical battleground state.
A judge in Georgia has invalidated several new election rules, including requirements for a “reasonable inquiry” before elections are certified, hand-counting ballots on election night, and more access for partisan poll watchers.
Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance boldly said “no,” Donald Trump did not lose the 2020 election, when pressed on the issue at a campaign event Wednesday in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. The Ohio senator has avoided directly denying the results over the past few weeks.
Polls show the doubts are slightly more pronounced than they were four years ago, when those doubts led to chaos and insurrection.
American officials expect Israel will retaliate against Iran for its attack earlier this month before November 5, sources tell CNN, a timeline that would thrust the growing volatility in the Middle East squarely into public view within days of the American presidential election.