Swing-state scorecard: Harris and Trump in coin-flip contest in battlegrounds The Washington Examiner ranked Kamala Harris's chances of winning the seven battleground states that will determine the 2024 election. 10/22/2024 - 12:04 am | View Link
Swing-state Dems’ telling ads, Trump has the edge — for now and other commentary Conservative: Swing-State Dems’ Telling Ads Democratic Sens. Bob Casey (Pa.), Sherrod Brown (Ohio) and Tammy Baldwin (Wisc.) and Senate candidate Rep. Elissa Slotkin (Mich.), all “in tight races,” 10/21/2024 - 10:23 am | View Link
The 7 swing states, explained In 2016, Trump became the first Republican presidential candidate to win Pennsylvania since 1988. He won by fewer than 50,000 votes but gained across much of the state, roughly doubling ... 10/21/2024 - 10:32 am | View Website
Election live updates: Trump, Harris hit swing states; latest polls As of Sunday afternoon, Harris leads Trump by 0.9 percentage points in the national polling average. In key battleground states, Trump holds narrow leads. He’s up by 0.7 percentage points in ... 10/21/2024 - 6:57 am | View Website
State of the Race: A Slight Shift Toward Trump but Still No Clear ... There’s only one state where the Times average has swung at least a point toward Ms. Harris: North Carolina. This past week, a Quinnipiac poll found Ms. Harris ahead by three points, even as Mr ... 10/21/2024 - 5:02 am | View Website
Election 2024 Polls: Harris vs. Trump With less than three weeks to go, The New York Times’s polling average shows Kamala Harris and Donald Trump essentially tied across the seven key battleground states. 10/21/2024 - 12:59 am | View Website
Swing state analysis: Harris and Trump stay tied, but the ... Surveys in the past couple of weeks have moved in Trump’s direction, and the leads Harris had in the most competitive and critical states have mostly evaporated. 10/20/2024 - 7:19 am | View Website
Every election is a direct reminder of the power — and complexity — of democracy. This year’s is also an outlet for anxieties, across the political spectrum, about how democracy itself is faring.
“Democracy and good government” ranked as a top issue for a quarter of the Coloradans who participated in the Voter Voices survey by media outlets across the state, including The Denver Post.
Jeff VanderMeer insists that he does not predict the future. Yet mere weeks before his new novel, Absolution, hit shelves, Hurricane Helene tore through the part of Florida where he lives, sharing an uncanny likeness to the fictional hurricane in his book. Of course, there’s a difference between art and reality.
Steve Bannon was indicted in 2020 for allegedly helping defraud Donald Trump fans who donated to a nonprofit that promised to privately fund a border wall. The other defendants in the plot went to prison. But in the final hours of his presidency, Trump pardoned Bannon, reportedly over the objections of various advisers, due to what the Washington Post described as Bannon’s “vociferous support” for Trump’s efforts to steal the 2020 election.
Trump doled out pardons and commutations throughout his presidency, culminating in a deluge of clemency during his final weeks office.
This story was originally published by the Guardian and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.
Fracking has burst back on to the national stage in the presidential election contest for the must-win swing state of Pennsylvania. But for one town in this state that saw its water become mud-brown, undrinkable and even flammable 15 years ago, the specter of fracking never went away.
Residents in Dimock, a rural town of around 1,200 people in northeast Pennsylvania, have been locked in a lengthy battle to remediate their water supply, which was ruined in 2009 after the drilling of dozens of wells to access a hotspot called the “Saudi Arabia of gas” found deep underneath their homes.
The company behind the drilling, Texas-based Coterra, was barred from the area for years for its role in poisoning the private water wells Dimock relies upon and, in a landmark later move in 2020, was charged with multiple crimes.
The below article first appeared in David Corn’s newsletter, Our Land. The newsletter comes out twice a week (most of the time) and provides behind-the-scenes stories and articles about politics, media, and culture. Subscribing costs just $5 a month—but you can sign up for a free 30-day trial.
Walking my dog.