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2024 presidential election live updates: Donald Trump and Kamala Harris tied in Pennsylvania as Jack Smith filing is unsealed

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Donald Trump and Kamala Harris are tied in the key state of Pennsylvania as the race for the White House is on a knife edge with just over a month to go. 

A new poll shows both candidates on 48 percent in the Keystone State, which is shaping up as perhaps the most crucial battleground.

On Thursday, Harris will be joined by Liz Cheney, one of Donald Trump's fiercest Republican critics, on the campaign trail in Wisconsin. Trump will be in Michigan.

It comes one day after a federal judge unsealed a 165-page court filing outlining prosecutors' case against Trump over January 6.

11:50

Trump and Harris tied in Pennsylvania, new poll shows

In this combination of photos taken in Pennsylvania, Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign event, Aug. 18, 2024, in Rochester, left, and Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign event, Aug. 19, 2024, in York. (AP Photo)

Donald Trump and Kamala Harris are tied in Pennsylvania, the battleground state that could decide the election, a new poll shows.

Trump and Harris each saw support from 48 percent of respondents in the Emerson College Polling/RealClearPennsylvania survey released earlier this week.

The Keystone State is seen as critical in the path to victory for each candidate, and DailyMail.com’s election model has consistently shown the result there will ultimately determine the race.

Fifty-one percent of voters in the survey said Trump would be better for their financial situation, compared to 48 percent for Harris.

Among independent voters, 50 percent sided with Trump while just 38 percent selected Harris.

Half of the respondents said the economy was the top issue, with 60 percent saying they are worse off than they were five years ago.

15:30

Biden: You're 'brain dead' if you don't think Hurricane Helene was caused by climate change

President Joe Biden berated climate change science skeptics on Wednesday, during a visit to survey the storm damage from flooding caused by Hurricane Helene.

The president toured both South Carolina and North Carolina, traveling aboard his Marine One helicopter to view the historic flooding and devastation, six days after the storm first made landfall in Florida.

Over 160 people are now confirmed dead in six states as historic rainfall from the hurricane flooded entire towns, washed away homes, damaged many of the highways, and devastated the region.

'Nobody can deny the impact of the climate crisis anymore. At least I hope they don't,' he said. 'They must be brain dead if they do.'

Biden blamed climate change for fueling the strength of hurricanes like Helene.

'Scientists report that with warming oceans powering more intense rains, storms like Helene are getting stronger and stronger,' he said. 'Today in North Carolina I saw the impacts of that fury.'

The president described the storm as a 'storm literally of historic proportions' and promised continued federal aid to help victims of the storms.

15:02

Congressional Task Force on Trump assassination announces ATF review

By Jon Michael Raasch, U.S. Political Reporter for DailyMail.com

The Task Force on the Attempted Assassination of Donald J. Trump has requested additional information from the Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, according to a new statement.

Chairman Mike Kelly and the top Democrat Jason Crow have requested a trove of documents from the ATF which was present at the Butler, Pennsylvania, rally on July 13.

'The ATF provided 'critical incident' response functions on July 13 at both the Butler, Pa. rally site, and the home of Matthew Crooks,' the Task Force letter states.

They requested the ATF turn over documents by September 15.

(FILES) Republican candidate Donald Trump is seen with blood on his face surrounded by secret service agents as he is taken off the stage at a campaign event at Butler Farm Show Inc. in Butler, Pennsylvania, July 13, 2024. Courts, bullets and verbal stumbles have made their mark on this year's US election campaign -- one of the most extraordinary in the nation's history. A sun-baked Trump rally in Pennsylvania on July 13 provides the election campaign's most shocking moment yet. Popping sounds ring out, Trump touches his ear, sees blood, and drops to the stage floor. Secret Service officers surround him as screams ring out in the crowd. Within seconds Trump is helped back to his feet. "Fight, fight, fight!" he mouths to a now cheering audience, raising his fist to create one of the most iconic images in US political history. (Photo by Rebecca DROKE / AFP) (Photo by REBECCA DROKE/AFP via Getty Images)

15:00

Five key takeaways from Jack Smith's filing on Trump election interference claims

Special Counsel Jack Smith submitted a new filing against Donald Trump on Wednesday as part of his allegedly fraudulent activity in the 2020 election.

The case against Trump - who resided in the White House between 2017 and 2021 - accuses him of conspiring to overturn his 2020 election defeat to Joe Biden.

Prosecutors allege that he pressured officials to reverse the results and knowingly spread lies about election fraud while using the events of 6 January 2021 - when a riot occurred in the Capitol - in an attempt to stay in power.

Trump has responded by repeating false claims that the 2020 vote was 'rigged', while suggesting that the timing of the filing's release was designed to hurt his 2024 presidential campaign.

Following the filing, MailOnline takes a look at some of the key claims that emerged from the evidence given by Smith.

14:39

Biden says they're 'making progress' on dockworkers' strike

President Joe Biden sounded optimistic Thursday that negotiators could bring the dockworkers strike to a close.

'I think we're making progress,' the president told reporters as he exited the White House for travel to survey Hurricane Helene damage in Georgia and Florida.

When asked how much progress the 81-year-old replied, 'We'll find out soon.'

He played coy when asked what steps he was considering.

'I'll tell them before I tell you,' Biden said.

epa11639722 US President Joe Biden speaks to the media before departing on Marine One from the White House, Washington, DC, USA, 03 October 2024. President Biden is visiting areas in Florida and Georgia which have been affected by Hurricane Helene.  EPA/CHRIS KLEPONIS / POOL

14:37

Trump supporters brawl ahead of rally in Saginaw, Michigan

14:34

Melania Trump finally explains the 'I really don't care' jacket

Former First Lady Melania Trump is finally addressing her controversial and highly criticized decision to wear an 'I really don't care' jacket while touring a migrant detention center in 2018.

In her explosive new memoir, she claims she forced her husband Donald to drop his hardline immigration policy of separating children from their parents at the border under the administration's 'zero tolerance' policy.

But when on a surprise visit to survey a migrant detention center in June 2018, she caused a frenzy when she wore a jacket with the message 'I really don't care. Do U?'

It caused an avalanche of criticism as she left the world guessing what she meant by making such a bold statement.

She addresses the controversial attire in her tell-all book coming out next Tuesday.

14:11

Pundits react to Melania separating from Donald on abortion

13:44

Former Trump aide Cassidy Hutchinson backs Harris and calls for fellow Republicans to 'salvage' the party

Former Mark Meadows chief of staff in the Trump White House Cassidy Hutchinson said she is voting for Kamala Harris and called on other Republicans to publicly take on Trump.

‘I am really, really proud, as a conservative, to have the opportunity to vote for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz in this election,’ she told MSNBC.

She said on ‘Morning Joe’ she didn’t know ‘why so many Republicans are cloaking themselves in cowardice.’

She praised former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), who is campaigning with Harris today who she said were trying to ‘salvage what’s left of the party, but we need more people to step forward.’

Hucthinson was a witness during the hearings conducted by the January 6 select committee.

Her controversial testimony included the claims that Donald Trump lunged at a Secret Service agent and tried to grab the wheel of his presidential limo to drive to the Capitol while the rioters caused mayhem.

Her allegations have since been disputed.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Nathan Posner/Shutterstock (14363986aj) Cassidy Hutchinson, former White House aide to Mark Meadows, participates in a discussion on "Leading with Principles: Speaking Up For The Truth" with Alyssa Farah Griffin and Sarah Matthews at the Principles First conference in Washington, DC on February 24, 2024. Principles First Summit, Washington, DC - 24 Feb 2024

13:31

Speaker Mike Johnson to tour Hurricane Helene damage in Florida

By Jon Michael Raasch, U.S. Political Reporter for DailyMail.com

Speaker Mike Johnson is expected to examine the fallout from Hurricane Helene Thursday.

The Republican speaker will be joined by GOP Reps. Cat Cammack and Neal Dunn during a tour in Steinhatchee, Florida.

Earlier this week Johnson told a group of investors at the NYSE that Congress 'will have to address' the historic storm.

The hurricane has caused 180 deaths across the southeast, making it the deadliest hurricane in the U.S. mainland since Hurricane Katrina.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Decker/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock (14747134l) Crime scene tape covers sections of the DUNEDIN MARINA suffered severe damage to docked boats and and the entire pier was destroyed due to the adverse affects of the record high storm surge caused by HURRICANE HELENE. Hurricane Helene 2024: Florida Storm Surge Recovery, Dunedin, USA - 29 Sep 2024

13:09

American father-of-our killed during Israeli strikes on Lebanon was helping care for his elderly mother

An American father-of-four has been killed in Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon, US officials have confirmed.

Kamel Ahmad Jawad from Dearborn, Michigan was killed in a strike on Tuesday 'while trying to save innocent lives' his daughter Nadine said in an emotional statement, describing how he offered food and shelter to the most vulnerable in his final days.

She added that her father chose to stay near a hospital in Nabatieh to help the elderly, injured and the disabled while taking care of his elderly mother.

Shortly before he died, as Israeli strikes began landing nearby, Kamel told his daughter not to worry as he was 'doing what he loves the most: helping others live in the land he loved the most'.

'We are deeply saddened by the death of Kamel Ahmad Jawad and our hearts go out to his family and friends,' a White House spokesperson said on Wednesday. 'His death is a tragedy, as are the deaths of many civilians in Lebanon.'

13:07

Harris leads Trump by four points in Wisconsin

Kamala Harris is leading Donald Trump by four points in the battleground state of Wisconsin, even though voters trust the former president more on the key issues.

The new poll from Marquette Law Schoolhows Harris ahead of Trump 52 percent to 48 percent.

Yet Trump is leading on voters’ biggest concerns in the race including the border, the economy and the Israel-Hamas war.

On immigration, the Republican nominee leads 49 to 37 percent.

When it comes to the economy, 50 percent of Wisconsin residents trust Trump to handle the economy better than Harris.

Six percent of the respondents are undecided in a state that has often been decided than a few thousand votes, or less than a point.

The survey revealed almost half of people have stopped talking to someone about politics because of the presidential race.

13:03

Biden heads to Georgia and Florida to tour more Hurricane Helene damage

U.S. President Joe Biden greets Esther Manheimer, mayor of Asheville, North Carolina, at Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport in Greer, South Carolina, U.S., October 2, 2024. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein       TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

By Geoff Earle, Deputy U.S. Political Editor

President Joe Biden heads back to the path of Hurricane Helene Thursday, in another show of solidarity just a day after touring storm damage in North Carolina by air.

Biden was at his Delaware beach house when the full impact of the monster Category 4 hurricane was first coming into view. He expressed concern about steering clear of recovery efforts when first asked when he would visit the wreckage in the storm’s path.

On Thursday, he heads to Tallahasee, where he will take a helicopter tour. Biden will get an ‘operational briefing’ in Perry Florida, where he will hear more about the devastation. The White House said he would ‘tour areas impacted by Hurricane Helene and meet with affected communities.’

Biden also spends time in Georgia, one of a handful of southeastern states that got battered by the storm as it made its way north after making landfall on Florida’s Gulf Coast. He’ll tour more storm damage in Ray City, Georgia and give remarks.

For the second day in a row, the events will have the president commiserating with Americans who lost their homes and livelihoods in the storm. There is no mistaking the political significance of several of the battered states. Two of them, North Carolina and Georgia, are tossup contests that could determine control of the White House, and both parties are keeping an eye on Florida.

13:01

How Kamala Harris is trying to bleed support from Donald Trump by infiltrating rural Pennsylvania counties

While it is not unheard of to be a Democrat in rural Pennsylvania, it is not the norm.

But as the campaign season heads into overdrive with 33 days to go before Election Day, Democrats in the deep red areas are growing more confident coming out of the woodwork and voicing their support.

It helps that Democrats running for office are making a play in every corner of the state.

The latest Emerson College poll shows Harris and Donald Trump tied 48 percent to 48 percent with voters in the state.

With Pennsylvania perhaps the most important battleground state in the presidential election and polls showing a razor-thin race, Kamala Harris’ campaign and party officials are not leaving anything to chance.

With their effort, supporters on the ground are growing increasingly hopeful the trend of rural areas in the crucial state growing increasingly red will reverse or at least slow.

12:50

Melania Trump releases new video on freedom for women after abortion bombshell

Melania Trump has doubled down on her abortion stance after the bombshell revelatons from her memoir.

The formert first lady stated 'there can be no room for compromise' in a statement contradicting her husband's views.

Individual freedom is a fundamental principle that I safeguard.
Without a doubt, there is no room for compromise when it comes to this essential right that all women possess from birth.
Individual freedom.
What does my body my choice really mean?

12:38

Squad Democrats hatch plan to 'push Kamala Harris farther to the left' if she beats Donald Trump

Kamala Harris has been praised for leading a more moderate campaign to appeal to all Americans, but progressives say they are waiting to radicalize her if she beats Donald Trump.

Harris was ranked as one of the most progressive senators during her brief tenure in the upper chamber of Congress, second only to self-proclaimed Democratic Socialist Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

She has championed the Green New Deal, fought for sweeping abortion rights and vociferously decried the terrors of deportation and building a U.S.-Mexico border wall.

These policies, however, do not go over well in a presidential election, so Harris has been instead focusing on centrist issues like enhancing small business tax breaks, immigration reform and lowering the cost of goods, including that of energy.

Seeing this as a winning strategy, progressives have decided to bide their time and wait until Harris wins the White House before pushing her further left.

12:09

Jack Smith makes bombshell new January 6 claims against Trump

12:07

Pro-life activists react to Melania Trump backing abortion rights

Pro-life activists have warned that Melania Trump's backing of abortion rights could undercut former president Trump's message on this issue in the lead up to the November election.

The former First Lady, 54, reveals in her upcoming memoir, due out next week, that she supports a woman's right to choose as a staunch defender of 'individual liberty' and 'personal freedom' - a position she has held for her 'entire adult life'.

'It is imperative to guarantee that women have autonomy in deciding their preference of having children, based on their own convictions, free from any intervention or pressure from the government,' she writes in the book.

But pro-life activists were quick to blast Melania for having an opinion that differs from her husband's.

Kristan Hawkins, president of the Students for Life of America, wrote on Twitter/X: 'It’s hard to follow the logic of putting out the former First Lady’s book right before the election undercutting President Trump’s message to pro-life voters. What a waste of momentum.'

12:02

Kamala Harris to be joined by Liz Cheney on visit to birthplace of Republican Party

Kamala Harris will be joined by Liz Cheney, one of Donald Trump's fiercest Republican critics, on the campaign trail in Wisconsin on Thursday.

The two will appear together in a historic white schoolhouse in Ripon, where a series of meetings held in 1854 to oppose slavery's expansion led to the birth of the Republican Party.

The move sees Harris aiming to reach out to moderate voters and rattle the former president.

Cheney was the top Republican on the House committee that investigated Trump's role in the events of January 6, 2021.

It earned her Trump's disdain and effectively exiled her from her own party.

Cheney lost her Wyoming seat to a Trump-endorsed candidate two years ago and she endorsed Harris, the Democratic nominee, last month.

11:53

Poll shows Gaza could be devastating for Kamala Harris' election chances

Vice President Kamala Harris is slightly trailing former President Donald Trump with Arab Americans, according to polling released Wednesday from the Arab American Institute.

The survey found that 42 percent of likely voters preferred Trump, while 41 percent backed Harris. Twelve percent plan to back a third-party candidate.

Normally Democrats have a 2-to-1 advantage with this group.

But polling found that 'it's Trump who is the beneficiary of the community's anger and despair over the Biden Administration’s failure to prevent the unfolding genocide in Gaza,' a release said.

The poll found that by a small percentage - 46 percent to 43 percent - Arab Americans also preferred that Republicans have control of Congress.

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