Sixty-nine percent of adults say they are anxious about the looming election, according to the Annual Stress in America poll released this week by the American Psychological Association, with little difference among Republicans, Democrats, and independents. Anecdotal evidence — i.e., just ask anyone — suggests that number is say, oh, 99.7 percent?
Counting the votes doesn't end on Election Day, so voters shouldn't expect to know who the next president is on election night.
Trump's chances of winning the election had been steadily growing over the past few days, according to 538. But his chances are now beginning to take a dip.
GOP Vice Presidential Nominee JD Vance's pleas to vote early come after former President Donald Trump railed against mail-in voting in 2020.
They hope the issue helps their candidates. But some voters may support Republican candidates as well as abortion-rights ballot measures.
Vice President Kamala Harris plans to give a major campaign speech this coming Tuesday at the Ellipse in Washington, D.C., the park just outside the White House where Donald Trump in 2021 called on his supporters to march on Congress in the moments leading up to the January 6 insurrection.
Borrowing some aspects from 2020, former President Donald Trump and his allies are casting a wide legal net to contest a potential 2024 loss.
Byron York argued that Kamala Harris has been “an unprepared candidate” so far and that her lack of preparation “could extend” to her final argument.
A recent study by the American Psychiatric Association showed that 73% of adults in the United States are feeling “particularly anxious” about the upcoming election.
When Joe Biden was running for reelection, his strategy was to keep the focus squarely on Donald Trump and his treat to democratic institutions.