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Coral Murphy Marcos

Trump visits battleground Pennsylvania as Harris campaign attacks rival as ‘unhinged and angry’ – as it happened

Trump at a town hall in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
Trump at a town hall in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP

Closing summary

Thanks for joining us today. This blog is closing soon. Here’s where things stand:

  • Kamala Harris celebrated her 60th birthday rallying Black voters in Georgia today with “souls to the polls” visits to two community churches. At the second rally, Stevie Wonder joined Harris and sang Bob Marley’s “Redemption Song”.

  • Donald Trump visited a McDonald’s franchise in Pennsylvania, where he wore an apron and began handing out orders to customers waiting in the drive-thru lane. He was also manning the fryer while he answered questions from reporters.

  • The former president also attended a town hall in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, where he was joined by former ESPN anchor Sage Steele and answered questions from the audience.

  • Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla and owner of X, hosted a town hall in Pittsburgh in support of Trump. In a short speech, Musk repeated false and fear-mongering claims, telling attendees “the constitution is literally under attack”.

Donald Trump concluded his remarks at a town hall held in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on Sunday.

His final question came from moderator Sage Steele, who asked him why he chose to do such a “dangerous job”.

“We’re going to make America greater than ever before, and we can’t do that sitting on a beach,” Trump said.

Donald Trump has spent most of his town hall in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, attacking immigrants coming into the US through the southern border, boasting about his harsh immigration policies during his presidency, and promising to increase fracking in the state.

“Drill, baby, drill. Frack, baby, frack,” he said, a usual campaign slogan.

He also invited Republican representatives Lloyd Smucker and Dan Meuser to the stage to make brief remarks.

Kamala Harris sits down with Reverand Al Sharpton in MSNBC interview

During an interview on MSNBC’s PoliticsNatio, Kamala Harris spoke with Reverand Al Sharpton in a one-on-one interview in Atlanta.

Harris discussed the death of Yahya Sinwar and the conflict between Israel and Hamas.

“We have got to get this war over with. We got to get the hostages out. We need the war to end,” Harris said. “The death of Sinwar I believe has removed an obstacle to that end. And so, we’ve got to work at it and we’ve got to work at it through diplomatic means and that’s what we intend to do.”

The Democratic presidential nominee also spoke about the latest polling on support from Black men.

“This narrative about what kind of support we are receiving from Black men that is just not panning out in reality,” she said. “I must earn the vote of everyone regardless of their race or gender.”

Updated

Donald Trump said he’s completed two cognitive tests as opponents have increasingly questioned the 78-year-old Republican presidential nominee’s mental and physical fitness.

“I aced the both of them,” Trump said during a town hall in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. “And the doctor in one case said, ‘I’ve never seen anybody ace them.’”

“I’d like to see cognitive tests for anybody running for president or vice-president”, Trump added. He later expressed age is but a number, using media mogul Rupert Murdoch as an example.

Updated

Trump makes anti-migrant remarks at Pennsylvania town hall

During the town hall in Pennsylvania, a woman with a tattoo of Donald Trump on her leg asked the former president about his plan to lower taxes for working Americans.

Trump accused migrants arriving from Central America of hampering the economy.

“We’re not going to let foreign countries come in and steal our businesses, our jobs and everything else,” he said, continuing to make anti-immigrant remarks during his answer.

“We want to have people come in, but they have to come in legally. We have to know they love our country,” he added.

Updated

Musk entered the stage at the Roxian Theater in Pittsburgh as the sound system blared “Sabotage” by the Beastie Boys.

He carried a yellow “terrible towel” of the Pittsburgh Steelers, the city’s beloved NFL team, and jumped up and down as the crowd chanted his name.In a short speech, Musk told attendees, many wearing red Maga hats, that “the constitution is literally under attack” and urged a “clean sweep of those who believe in the constitution” in November.

He then issued his second check for a million dollars to a signatory to his petition backing the first and second amendment. Kristine Fishell, who had sat on the balcony level, received the giant novelty check and smiled for the cameras before being whisked away.

The event then pivoted to a lengthy town hall, where attendees asked a variety of conspiracy tinged questions and whether Musk would run for president in 2028.

He could not, he explained, due to the natural born citizen clause of the US constitution, and did not want the job either. “I hate politics,” Musk said, explaining his purported reason for injecting himself into the 2024 race. “But the stakes are so high.”

As the town hall began to wrap up, no attendee had asked whether Donald Trump’s promise to bring Musk, who is worth an estimated $247bn, into government as a “secretary of cost cutting” might be a conflict of interest. He told the crowd he was ready for the position, adding “I’d like to say it’s a hard job, but it’s not”.

A few seconds earlier a member of the crowd had shouted “taxation is theft!”.

Updated

Donald Trump speaks at town hall in Lancaster, Pennsylvania

Former ESPN anchor Sage Steele is moderating the town hall in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, where Donald Trump is taking questions from the audience.

His first question was on whether he would protect social security and Medicare benefits.

“Number one, no tax on social security for our seniors, that’s a big deal,” Trump said. “No tax on tips,” he said, and “no tax on overtime.”

Updated

Trump speaks at Pennsylvania campaign event

Former president Donald Trump has started delivering his remarks at an event in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

His speech in the Lancaster County Convention Center follows a visit to a local McDonald’s, where he wore an apron and worked the french fries station.

We’ll be following his comments as he rallies in the battleground state.

Updated

Stevie Wonder performs at church service in Georgia in support of Kamala Harris

The legendary singer Stevie Wonder rallied congregants at a church in Atlanta with a rendition of Bob Marley’s Redemption Song in support of Vice-President Kamala Harris.

Wonder performed during a church service and early vote event at Divine Faith Ministries International. He also sang “Happy Birthday” as Harris celebrates her 60th birthday today.

Updated

The Harris campaign responded to comments made by former president Donald Trump calling Democratic representatives “the enemy from within” during an interview with Fox News that aired on Sunday.

“Even in his Fox News safe space, Donald Trump cannot help but show himself as the unhinged, angry, unstable man that he is – focused on his own petty grievances and tired playbook of division,” Ammar Moussa, a Harris-Walz campaign spokesperson, wrote in an email.

“This is precisely why his handlers are hiding him from major mainstream interviews and refusing to let him debate again. They don’t want the country to see this candidate in decline,” he added.

The legality of the America Pac $1m prize draw is unclear, and a justice department spokesperson did not immediately respond to an inquiry.

But several legal experts said on Saturday the petition appeared to violate federal election laws that prohibits paying or offering to pay for someone to register to vote or actually vote under title 52 of the US code.

According to the justice department’s election crimes manual, for an offer of payment to violate federal election law, it must have been intended to induce or reward the prospective voter for engaging in one or more acts necessary to cast a ballot.

The election crimes manual distinguishes between making it easier for people to vote, such as offering free rides to a polling station, and inducing people to vote, which is unlawful.

UCLA law professor Rick Hasen said in his blog that the America Pac $1m prize draw appears to be an illegal scheme because it offered the payments to registered voters.

“Though maybe some of the other things Musk was doing were of murky legality, this one is clearly illegal,” he wrote.

Elon Musk delivers remarks at a town hall in Pennsylvania in support for Donald Trump

At a town hall in Pennsylvania, billionaire Elon Musk has commented on his aims to expedite government agency procedures and his role under Trump’s presidency if he were to be elected.

“I will do my best to ensure that that actions are taken that maximize the benefit to the American people,” Musk said. “I don’t know at the end of the day how much influence I’ll have. But I’ll do my best to be as helpful as possible.”

“There are actually a huge number of of drugs that are stuck in approval at the FDA that can help people and they’re just stuck in bureaucratic molasses,” Musk said. “Simply expediting drug approval and the FDA, I think, will save millions of lives.”

Updated

The CEO of Tesla and owner of X, Elon Musk, is speaking at a town hall in Pittsburgh today in support of former President Donald Trump.

Musk is in McKees Rocks to promote voter registration and mail-in balloting ahead of the November election and a promise of cash for those who attend.

He’s currently taking questions from the audience.

Updated

Trump doubles down on 'enemy within' comments

Fromer president Donald Trump doubled down on his comments labeling Democrats as “the enemy from within,” this time specifically attacking Representatives Nancy Pelosi and Adam Schiff.

During an interview that aired Sunday on Fox News with Howard Kurtz, Trump said that “radical left lunatics… the enemy from within… should be very easily handled, if necessary, by the National Guard, or if really necessary, by the military.”

“These are bad people. We have a lot of bad people. But when you look at ‘Shifty Schiff’ and some of the others, yeah, they are, to me, the enemy from within,” Trump said on Fox News’ “Mediabuzz.”

“I think Nancy Pelosi is an enemy from within,” he added. “She was supposed to protect the Capitol.”

The former president sparked outrage last week after calling for the US armed forces to be turned against his political adversaries when voters go to the polls at next month’s presidential election.

Updated

Former president Donald Trump, while working at a McDonald’s in Pennsylvania, sarcastically congratulated Kamala Harris on her 60th birthday.

“Maybe I’ll get her some fries,” Trump said.

He also took a moment to boast about his time in office while he was working the fryer at the fast food chain.

“We had the best economy ever. We had the strongest borders ever, a military that knocked out ISIS in a few weeks,” he said.

Michigan Secretary of State accuses Elon Musk of 'spreading dangerous disinformation'

Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson accused SpaceX founder Elon Musk of “spreading dangerous disinformation.” The comments come after Musk alleged that “Michigan has more registered voters than eligible citizens.”

“Here are the facts,” Benson wrote in a post on X. “There aren’t more voters than citizens in Michigan. There are 7.2 million active registered voters and 7.9 citizens of voting age in our state.”

“Don’t feed the trolls,” she added.

Vice President Kamala Harris is not planning to appear on the campaign trail with President Joe Biden, nearly two weeks ahead of Elections Day.

In an interview with NBC News, a Harris campaign official said that Joe Biden plans to help Kamala Harris by leveraging his longtime political relationships, specifically with labor leaders, and by holding official White House events.

“He’s out there doing the job as president, and she’s out there campaigning,” the official said. “It’s clear voters want something new.”

White House officials told NBC News they believe at this time that “the most important role he can play is doing his job as president.”

Donald Trump makes campaign stop to McDonald's in Feasterville, Pennsylvania.

Former president Donald Trump was working at a McDonald’s in Pennsylvania, manning the fryer as a way to attack Vice-President Kamala Harris stint working at the fast food chain when she was younger, an experience he calls into question frequently.

Updated

Vice-President Kamala Harris spoke at New Birth Missionary Baptist church on Sunday, before a congregation of about 4,000 in south DeKalb, a Black suburb of Atlanta.

Her comments focused on how religious experiences in her youth at a church in Oakland, California, influenced her politics. Drawing on the parable of the Good Samaritan in the Bible’s Book of Luke, Harris argued for policies that embrace compassion.

“When we come across our brothers and sisters in need, let us, as the Good Samaritan, did see in the face of a stranger, a neighbor, and let us recognize that when we shine the light in moments of darkness, it will guide our feet into the path of peace. And let us remember that while weeping may endure for a night, joy cometh in the morning.”

Harris was accompanied by her pastor Amos Brown of San Francisco’s Third Baptist church. Brown, a contemporary of Martin Luther King Jr and other civil rights leaders in the lexicon of Atlanta’s history.

New Birth Missionary Baptist is a megachurch which owns more land than any other Black church in America, said it’s pastor, Jamal Bryant, in opening remarks. The church plays a prominent role in Atlanta politics, counting many of the region’s most powerful Black elected and appointed officials as regular members. Bryant noted that its sanctuary has hosted five different presidents. The funeral service for Coretta Scott King was moved to New Birth to accommodate the demands of space. New Birth gave away $83m in scholarships this year.

Updated

Trump campaign launches out-of-context ad slamming Kamala Harris

The Trump campaign launched a new ad on Saturday, posting a video of Kamala Harris calling young adults aged 18 to 24 “stupid”. The video ends with text on the screen urging voters to “vote Kamala out”.

The ad, which is running on Facebook, Instagram, and Google in several battleground states, has been described as lacking context. In the longer video, Harris is talking about a program aimed at lowering recidivism among young offenders with better reintegration.

The Harris campaign also launched an ad, though it holds back on the aggressiveness. The video, posted on Facebook, features basketball legend Magic Johnson encouraging voters to vote early, saying, “I’m counting on you to vote, and so is America.”

Updated

Tim Walz slams Donald Trump for selling branded Bibles

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz delivered his remarks at a church in Saginaw, Michigan, where he took a stab at former president Donald Trump for selling branded Bibles.

Walz told the crowd that he feels “pretty uncomfortable with this idea”.

“We understand in our faith, the Bible is to be read and followed and absorbed. It’s not to be branded and sold for $59,” Walz said.

The Democratic VP pick also allded to the topic of religion and how it came up during the vice-presidential debate against JD Vance, Trump’s running mate.

“A couple weeks ago, I was in a little discussion with somebody who disagreed with where we were at, and I mentioned at that time when they were continuously denigrating newcomers to this country,” Walz said. “I mentioned the one thing of my faith that was very central. ... And that was Matthew, Chapter 25, Verse 40; ‘What you do to the least amongst these brothers and sisters, you do unto me.’”

Updated

In his new book, Bob Woodward, the legendary Watergate reporter, says Donald Trump is far worse than former president Richard Nixon and “most reckless and impulsive president in American history.”

The Middle East and Ukraine are ablaze, the US mired in turmoil. An octogenarian president recedes from view. The threat of a second Trump term hangs like the sword of Damocles. Fifty years ago, with Carl Bernstein, Bob Woodward captured Watergate and the downfall of Richard Nixon. Now, the US sits at an inflection point once again. Woodward’s fourth book at least in part about Donald Trump is a sober but alarming must-read.

War depicts an administration under Joe Biden that is often behind the curve, at times captive to its own wishful thinking. The withdrawal from Afghanistan haunts. Trump mesmerizes. Yet as Woodward tells it, Biden and his team did clearly see the menace Russia posed. Unlike George W Bush, Biden did not need to gaze into Vladimir Putin’s blighted soul. Unlike Trump, he did not feel compelled to fluff his ego like a besotted fanboy.

True to form, Woodward gets his sources to talk. “All interviews were conducted under the journalist ground rule of ‘deep background’,” he notes. Unless the source agreed to be named. “It’s still a mystery to me how he deals with Putin and what he says to Putin,” Dan Coats, director of national intelligence under Trump, says of his former boss. “Is it blackmail?” There’s something there, Coats is sure.

In the fall of 2021, the Biden administration concluded that Russia would soon invade Ukraine. They had the intelligence to prove it. They mounted a full-court press. On the front pages of the Washington Post, they laid out what was coming. They warned and later armed the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, despite his initial skepticism, and they rallied the west.

Read Lloyd Green’s full analysis here:

North Carolina grapples with holding election in hurricane disaster zone.

In a normal life Jon Council would be holding his last campaign fundraiser of the 2024 cycle, exhorting local small business owners in Watauga county to back his bid to become a county commissioner over a plate of spaghetti and garlic bread.

But in the wake of the devastation wrought by Hurricane Helene, which left western North Carolina reeling from massive floods that swept away buildings, downed power lines, and left thousands of people stranded in their homes, life is anything but normal in this part of the Appalachians. Instead of wooing donors, the candidate is seeking winter feed for sheep.

“We’re talking hay bales, so we really need a truck,” he pleads down the phone.

With just over two weeks to go to election day, Council is wrestling with a problem that is common to anyone running for office in this rugged mountainous stretch of western North Carolina, from local candidates like him all the way up to Kamala Harris and Donald Trump. How do you hold an election in a disaster zone?

Can you meaningfully talk to people about their electoral choices at a time when they are fighting for daily survival? How do you reach them, let alone engage them, when the internet is down, there is scant cellphone coverage, the roads are broken, power is still out, and mail boxes swept away?

“The voting landscape has totally changed,” Council said. “Polling places have been destroyed, people have been unable to leave their homes, absentee ballots and IDs are lost – given all that, talking to folk about why they should vote for me just feels wrong.”

Council, who is unaffiliated with any political party, was gearing up his campaign for the final stretch when Helene struck on 26 September. The flooding and landslides killed at least 115 people in North Carolina, with almost 100 still missing.

Here’s more on the hurricane’s effects on the elections:

Stevie Wonder to join Kamala Harris at campaign event in Georgia

Later today, Vice President Kamala Harris will attend another ‘Souls to the Polls’ event at Divine Faith Ministries International in Jonesboro, Georgia, where she will be joined by Stevie Wonder.

Meanwhile, Governor Tim Walz is attending services in Saginaw, Michigan, and Minnesota. His wife Gwen Walz is attending services in Las Vegas, Nevada.

The visits comes as the Harris-Walz campaign centers on reaching Black voters through churches and religious communities.

During an interview with Meet the Press, Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said he disagrees with General Mark Milley, who allegedly called former president Donald Trump a “fascist” in Bob Woodward’s new book.

“To General Milley, you have a right to your opinion, but I don’t fear Donald Trump,” Graham said. “I fear what’s going on in the world today. If you want the world to stay on fire, vote for her,” he said referring to Vice President Kamala Harris.

Former president Donald Trump doubled down on calling the January 6 attack on the Capitol a ‘day of love’ during an interview with Fox News.

“They protested an election,” Trump said on Sunday. “They had a right to.”

The former president previously said the thousands of people who traveled to Washington DC that day did so because “they thought the election was a rigged election”.

“And when I say we, these are people that walked down, this was a tiny percentage of the overall which nobody sees and nobody, nobody shows. But that was a day of love,” he said in a town hall held in Miami recently.

Updated

Despite a revitalization, Donald Trump wrongfully claimed Charleroi, Pennsylvania, is “virtually bankrupt” with “massive crime”.

There is one thing about her community that makes Kristin Hopkins-Calcek prouder than anything: her city is now one of the few boroughs in Pennsylvania with a growing population.

“We haven’t invested in our borough for a long time,” says the Charleroi council president, “and now we are finally able to do that – it’s because we have a need to.”

Surrounded by retired power plants, railway lines and steel mills, Charleroi in south-west Pennsylvania was once the epitome of Rust belt America. For decades, factories here and in the surrounding area closed and people moved away, its population falling by about 60%.

But in recent years, immigrants have descended on the town of 4,200 people, drawn by well-paying jobs and cheap housing. According to the 2020 census, for the first time in a century, more people chose to make this quiet community on the banks of the Monongahela River their home rather than flee it.

The first jobs Rodny Michel could find when he arrived in Charleroi four years ago were line work at a food-preparation company and, later, similarly grueling work at an Amazon factory in a nearby town. Today, as the native of Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince, sees his community grow in Charleroi, his work day involves turning an empty, dated store on Fallowfield Avenue into a Caribbean restaurant that will serve the town’s growing immigrant community.

“Sometimes I work for 12 hours a day,” he says from inside the Global Food Mart, a Caribbean grocery store where shoppers play arcade games and sift through boxes of tropical fruit.

“It will be the first for our community and I’m proud of that.”

But while locals such as Michel and Hopkins-Calcek see Charleroi as being in the midst of a revitalization, others have tried putting the town’s immigrant communities to political use. It is something that has thrust this tiny community into the national spotlight of America’s bitterly fought and divisive 2024 election.

Read more on Charleroi’s revitalization:

Updated

Elon Musk’s extensive influence over US government agencies is both financially beneficial and fraught with conflicts, as his companies rely on federal contracts while also facing numerous investigations, according to a review of documents by the New York Times.

If Donald Trump wins the presidency, his promise to give the Tesla CEO a powerful regulatory role could create significant conflicts of interest, allowing Musk to oversee agencies that regulate his own businesses.

Updated

In an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper, Speaker Mike Johnson was pressed on Donald Trump’s comments over the size of Arnold Palmer’s genitalia.

Yesterday, during a rally in Pennsylvania’s Arnold Palmer Regional Airport, Trump recounted some the stories he shared with the now deceased legendary golfer. In one instance, he praised Palmer’s genitals. “Arnold Palmer was all man, and I say that in all due respect to women,” Trump said. “This is a guy that was all man.”

Tapper told Johnson that, if it were President Joe Biden who would’ve made these comments, he would be labeled as cognitively impaired.

“You can cherry-pick a few words or lines that have a two-hour event,” Johnson said. “We could do that with Kamala Harris after a 20 minute event because she does word salads and she couldn’t hold court like that without a teleprompter.”

“We all know that the facts the American people see it and, you know, the media can pick it apart, but people are going to vote,” Johnson added. “They’re going to vote what’s best for their family and they see that in Trump.”

Updated

Biden’s economic legacy could decide the presidential race in Scranton.

From the north, motorists pull into Scranton via the Joseph R Biden Jr Expressway. Cutting through the scenic Pocono Mountains, now at the start of autumn color season, they are greeted with a towering, electric billboard, blaring an encapsulating – if divisive – message to this working-class town: “Democrats for Trump,” it reads. “Economy,” it continues, with a green checked box next to the word.

The sign in Biden’s hometown is the perfect fall 2024 welcome mat in this crucial swing state filled with voters whose economic anxiety or satisfaction will decide next month’s election.

The US has staged a remarkable recovery since the pandemic and Biden has successfully pursued an economic agenda, Bidenomics, that should benefit Scranton and the state – $13bn has been earmarked from his infrastructure bill for repairing highways and bridges alone. But poll after poll shows deep-seated worries about the economy – worries that could sink Democrats’ chances of keeping the White House come November.

Like many mid-sized upper midwest cities that have faced post-industrial decline, Scranton, a longtime Democratic stronghold, has grown more conservative in recent elections. With the city’s native son leaving office, and pocketbook issues top of mind, some believe Trump could finally take Scranton - a more-than-symbolic win.

But with Kamala Harris, Biden’s successor, and Donald Trump tied in the polls, guessing who will take Scranton, Pennsylvania, and the White House is a fool’s errand. And this politically split town shows why the race is so close. On the street, one person’s economic reality may be entirely different to the next.

The complicated political mix of fears about the local economy, faith and mistrust in both Harris and Trump and shifting political allegiance was evident at the Marketplace at Steamtown, a downtown mall filled with local mom-and-pop shops.

Read more about what people in Scranton have to say:

Governor of Pennsylvania Josh Shapiro questioned the legality of Elon Musk promising $1m giveaways to voters who sign his super PAC’s petition.

During an interview in NBC’s “Meet the Press,” governor Josh Shapiro called into question Elon Musk’s promise to give $1m every day until election day to someone who signs his petition that effectively encourages Republicans in the key battleground states to register to vote. The money would come from his Trump-supporting political action committee, America Pac.

“I think there are real questions with how he is spending money in this race, how the dark money is flowing, not just into Pennsylvania, but apparently now into the pockets of Pennsylvanians,” Shapiro said. “That is deeply concerning.”

“Musk obviously has a right to be able to express his views,” Shapiro told moderator Kristen Welker. “But when you start flowing this kind of money into politics, I think it raises serious questions that folks may want to take a look at.”

Shapiro added: “I think it’s something that law enforcement could take a look at.”

Updated

Kamala Harris concluded her remarks at the New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Georgia.

She asked the crowd: “What kind of country do we want to live in, a country of chaos, fear and hate, or a country of freedom, compassion and justice?”

“The great thing about living in a democracy is that we, the people, have the power to answer that question,” Harris said. “So let us answer not just through our words, but through our action and with our votes.”

Kamala Harris, speaking at a service at an Atlanta church, continued talking about acts of kindness recently taking place in the US, especially in the wake of Hurricane Helene.

“Right here in the Atlanta area, I saw the story of a reporter who was outside covering the storm live on television when he heard some screams, he dropped everything and waded into chest deep water to rescue a woman trapped in her car, carrying her on his back to safety,” Harris said.

The service at the church Kamala Harris is attending is honoring breast cancer survivors during National Breast Cancer Awareness month.

Harris spoke about her mother, who was a breast cancer researcher.

“She had two goals in her life, to raise her two daughters, my sister, Maya and me, and to end breast cancer,” Harris said.

The Vice President later narrated the parable of the Good Samaritan to connect the story to a message of approaching others with kindness.

“As the Good Samaritan reminds us, it is not enough to preach the values of compassion and respect. We must live them,” Harris said. “Faith is a verb.”

Kamala Harris kicks off her birthday at a church in Stonecrest, Georgia

Kamala Harris is delivering remarks at a service in New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in the Atlanta suburb of Stonecrest, Georgia. The crowd sang happy birthday when the Vice President, who turns 60 today, took the stage.

Harris began her speech by turning the attention towards the ferry dock collapse on Georgia’s Sapelo Island, where at least seven people were killed during a fall celebration by the island’s tiny Gullah-Geechee community of Black slave descendants.

“Our administration has been in touch with state and local officials to offer any needed support,” Harris said.

Good morning, and welcome to our continuing coverage of the run-up to the US election. We’re nearly two weeks away from election day.

Today, Vice-President Kamala Harris will kick off her 60th birthday with two church visits in Georgia. The Democratic presidential nominee is slated to to rally early voters in the state a day after a star-studded campaign Saturday in Detroit with rapper Lizzo and in Atlanta with pop icon Usher.

Former president Donald Trump is heading to a McDonald’s fast food place in Pennsylvania. The visit will probably be used to undermine Harris’s stint at McDonald’s, which Trump constantly puts into question during his rallies. He will later hold a rally in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, his second event in the battleground state this weekend.

Both candidates are laser focused on rallying support from voters in battleground states, including Pennsylvania, Georgia and Michigan.

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, Harris’s running mate, will take part in a “Souls to the Polls” event aimed at using gospel performances, national and state faith leaders, elected officials and others to mobilize voters.

Here’s what else is happening today:

  • Elon Musk promised to award $1m every day to voters as he steps up campaigning for Trump. The commitment, which started on Saturday as Musk handed a lottery-style check to the first winner of his contest at a town hall event, could mean Musk is on the hook for $17m if he remains the sole donor to his own Pac.

  • A Pennsylvania town is thriving with Haitian immigrants – and is the latest target of Republican hate. Despite a revitalization, Donald Trump wrongfully claimed Charleroi is “virtually bankrupt” with “massive crime.”

  • Incarcerated Californians can’t vote. A prison held an election anyway. Voters in a mock election at San Quentin revealed strong feelings about prison labor, wages and the presidential race.

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