Donald Trump’s fourth scheduled stop in eight days in Wisconsin is a sign of his increased attention as Republicans fret about the former
The former first lady spoke on Sunday about abortion and what she would say to women voters amid this year's election.
Sunday on "Meet The Press," NBC elections analyst Steve Kornacki ran down some of the voter registration data and demographic polling in Pennsylvania that sounds like pretty good news for the Trump campaign.
I can’t tell you how staggering this is,” a social psychologist previously told Stat News. “He does not think in a complex way at all.”
The tech CEO literally jumped for joy while stumping for the former president in Pennsylvania over the weekend.
Former President Donald Trump is scheduled to deliver remarks at a campaign rally in Juneau, Wisconsin, this afternoon—his fourth campaign appearance in the battleground state in nine days.
The campaigns of Kamala Harris and Donald Trump made strategic adjustments to the content of their TV advertisements between August and September, a CNN analysis of ad tracking data shows, amid a contentious fight to define the transformed race for the White House.
The Times, you’ll recall, demanded Biden withdraw from the race (June 28) before calling Trump unfit (July 11). Interestingly, in Sunday’s piece, the Times calls Trum’s condition a “cognitive change,” while the story’s URL says it’s “cognitive decline.” Even in this instance, it’s likely a telling hedge.
Wisconsin is seen as a must-win swing state for either former President Donald Trump or Vice President Kamala Harris.
The latest Trump clam is that the alleged inadequacy of his Secret Service detail is a “kind of election interference,” on the theory, I guess, that the tautly stretched protective agency is interfering with his beloved outdoor rallies by encouraging him to utilize smaller and easier-to-secure venues for his ranting and raving events.
Donald Trump is setting aside what are now near-constant worries for his physical safety in order to fulfill what he says is “an obligation."