Most Americans say they're stressed out over the future of the United States and the presidential election, a new poll shows.
Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are focusing on two pivotal swing states on Wednesday: Georgia and Pennsylvania.
Poll shows that a surprising percentage of former poll workers believe that poll workers might try to interfere with the election.
How likely is it that poll workers will attempt to tamper with the election in November? % who say it is very or somewhat likely U.S. adult citizens: 39% People who have been poll workers: 36% Democrats: 28% Republicans: 55% https://t.co/SJ2ktRHVie pic.twitter.com/om64hINTGY
Experts say these poll workers could sow distrust in democracy and bolster court cases challenging the election.
Motivating supporters to the ballot box on Election Day will be key to winning Pennsylvania this year, according to the final Franklin & Marshall College poll before Nov. 5.
Concerns over security, Israel, and anti-Semitism are drawing Jewish voters toward the Trump-Vance ticket, according to a new survey from the Manhattan Institute, suggesting that Vice President Harris in November could see the lowest Jewish support for a Democratic candidate in decades.
Prosecutors say John Courtney Pollard, 62, threatened a state political party operative, vowing to "skin you alive." He was arrested Monday in Philadelphia.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution poll of 1,000 likely voters was conducted by the University of Georgia’s School of Public and International Affairs, October 7-16. The margin of sampling error is 3.1 percentage points.
By Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter WEDNESDAY, Oct. 23, 2024 (HealthDay News) -- Most Americans say they’re stressed out over the future of the United States and the presidential election, a new poll shows.
Bettors are making stronger guesses at who will win the 2024 election. Recent polling has trended toward Donald Trump. See what that means.