Vice President Kamala Harris sits atop the Democratic ticket, and she is taking a different tack when approaching Latino voters: hammering a middle-class message on the economy, while speaking about immigration only sparingly.
Arizona lawmakers will tonight debate over a Republican-devised migration control measure voters will see on the ballot this November.
The Trump-Vance ticket’s unbridled racist attacks on Haitian immigrants in Ohio – as a proxy for attacking immigrants and people of color everywhere – continue unabated deep into the second week of serving as a centerpiece of a campaign that was searching for a way to gain traction against Kamala Harris.
After Tropical Storm Debby forced him to cancel a visit last month, Ohio senator JD Vance made his first appearance in Raleigh Wednesday afternoon.
Both presidential candidates are on the trail firing up their supporters with Vice President Harris in Michigan and former President Trump in Washington. While touting his economic record Thursday, President Biden also gave a brief but clear statement of support for Harris and warned of the economic ramifications of a second Trump presidency.
MinnPost/Embold Research poll finds Greater Minnesotan residents most concerned about the cost of living and illegal immigration.
Concerns about Haitian immigration surfaced at city council meetings in Sylacauga. One city council member said residents were worried about Sylacauga “becoming the next Springfield, Ohio,” where there are about 15,000 Haitian immigrants.
Latios are a crucial and growing electorate that can swing the Nov. 5 election, especially in Arizona and Nevada.
The Arizona Media Association is hosting a discussion with Arizona State Senate District 3 candidate John Kavanagh and Arizona State Senate District 24 candidate Analise Ortiz regarding immigration.
The role that mass immigration plays in driving up housing costs has come under renewed scrutiny as soaring housing prices and rents have become a topic of debate in the presidential campaign. Both campaigns have called for boosting the construction of homes to lower prices — that is,