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Live updates from the 2024 campaign trail, with the latest news on presidential candidates, polls and more.
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A single Republican state senator appears to be holding back a push by Donald J. Trump to net a potentially pivotal electoral vote even before ballots are cast.
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Kevin Mohatt/ReutersRobert F. Kennedy Jr is often described a black sheep amid the sprawling Kennedy family, but he has one thing in common with the men who made the Kennedy name: his reputation as a womanizer.
That characterization rang true yet again Thursday when a report alleged that New York magazine's star reporter, Olivia Nuzzi, engaged in a "personal relationship" with Kennedy after she penned a splashy profile of him in November, when his presidential run still had a glimmer of hope.
Nuzzi, 31, has been emphatic that she and Kennedy, 70, never got physical with each other. She's stopped short of detailing what their relationship entailed, but sources have told multiple outlets—including the New York Post—that it was "digital cheating."
Read more at The Daily Beast.
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Check out The Washington Post's presidential polling averages of the seven battleground states most likely to determine the outcome of the election.
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The U.S. presidential election is just 45 days away, and for antiwar voters, the policy differences between the two leading candidates are vanishingly thin. As the Biden-Harris administration continues to supply billions of dollars in military aid to Israel, the Uncommitted National Movement, which for months has attempted to steer the Democratic Party toward a more critical stance on Israel, has announced it is not endorsing Kamala Harris. Neither does the organization recommend casting a third-party vote, citing the risk of splitting the two-party vote and ushering in a second term for Donald Trump. "We were not met in good faith with our policy demands," says the Uncommitted National Movement's co-founder Lexis Zeidan about its attempts to parley with the Harris campaign. Zeidan says the organization will continue to pressure Democrats from within and outside of the party. "What we're asking is not outrageous."
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One measure, to be voted on Friday, would require hand counting of ballots. Critics say that it would create widespread confusion in a state pivotal to the presidential race.
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