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Election 2024 live updates: Trump rallies in Pennsylvania; Walz and Vance campaign in Arizona
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LIVE COVERAGE
Updated 6 minutes ago

Election 2024 live updates: Trump rallies in Pennsylvania; Walz and Vance campaign in Arizona

Former President Donald Trump's and Vice President Kamala Harris' running mates, Sen. JD Vance of Ohio and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, held dueling events today in Arizona.
Former President Donald Trump is holding a rally today in Pennsylvania, while Vice President Kamala Harris is being briefed on Hurricane Milton before she travels to Las Vegas.
Former President Donald Trump is holding a rally today in Pennsylvania, while Vice President Kamala Harris is being briefed on Hurricane Milton before she travels to Las Vegas.Getty Images file

What to know about the campaigns today

  • Former President Donald Trump spoke this afternoon in Scranton, Pennsylvania, where he lashed out at Vice President Kamala Harris by calling her “a horrible person,” “a liar,” a “radical left Marxist” and “not a smart person.” He's now holding a rally in Reading.
  • President Joe Biden and Harris were briefed this afternoon on the administration's preparations for Hurricane Milton as Florida braces for landfall. Biden gave remarks about the hurricane in the early evening and called out Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., over her conspiracy theory about controlling the weather.
  • Harris' running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, joined an event honoring veterans and military families in the Phoenix area this afternoon with Rep. Ruben Gallego, the Democratic nominee for the Senate, who's facing off against Republican nominee Kari Lake in a debate tonight.
  • Trump's running mate, Sen. JD Vance, also campaigned in Tucson, holding a rally in the afternoon before speaking at an event in Mesa, Arizona.

Trump falsely claims Biden was 'essentially convicted' in his classified documents case

At a rally in Reading, Pennsylvania tonight, Trump referred to Biden's facing a classified documents probe, falsely claiming he was "essentially convicted" but did not have to stand trial because "he's incompetent."

Robert Hur, the special counsel tasked with overseeing Biden's handling of classified documents after he left office as vice president, declined to prosecute Biden. In a scathing report explaining his decision, Hur described Biden as "a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory,” who would likely present similarly to a jury at trial.

Third gunfire incident at Harris-Walz office in Arizona

Reporting from Phoenix, Arizona

Tempe, Arizona, police reported a third gunfire incident at a Democratic Party-coordinated campaign office for Harris. As in the two previous incidents, no one was injured.

The police department said the latest incident occurred at 12:21 a.m. local time Sunday. The office was hit by "BB Gun and firearm rounds," just as it had been in the two previous incidents — on Sept. 16 and Sept. 23 — at around the same time at night.

Police said the shooter was driving a silver Toyota Highlander during the incident. They're offering up to a $1,000 reward for information that could lead to an arrest or an indictment.

Harris speaks with mayor of St. Petersburg, Florida, ahead of Milton landfall

Harris spoke with the mayor of St. Petersburg, Florida, today "about ongoing preparations for Hurricane Milton," a White House official said.

"The Vice President discussed federal efforts to prepare for the storm, including the prepositioning of rescue teams and other resources," the official said. "More than 8,000 Federal personnel are on the ground across the Southeast, including in Florida, to continue Hurricane Helene recovery efforts and respond to the impacts of Hurricane Milton."

Harris will stay in touch with Florida officials over the next several days, the official said.

The call was in her official capacity as vice president, not as the Democratic presidential nominee.

Senate candidate Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., talked to NBC News about border politics, the presidential campaign and accusations that he’s campaigning as more of a moderate than his record would suggest. He also talks about why he wants to keep his divorce records sealed, arguing that his family deserves privacy.

On potential second debate with Harris, Trump says 'there will be no rematch'

Trump said in an all-caps post on Truth Social tonight that "there will be no rematch" with Harris, referring to a potential second debate.

Trump argued that he felt he won the debates against Biden in June and against Harris in September. He also pointed to early voting that's underway in some states. "It is very late in the process, voting has already begun," he said.

Trump participated in two October debates in 2016 and one in 2020.

CNN sets noon deadline tomorrow for Trump, Harris to agree to its debate

CNN wants Trump and Harris to agree to its Oct. 23 debate — or disagree — by noon tomorrow.

In a new statement, a spokesperson said the network sent invitations to both candidates on Sept. 21 but is "placing a deadline for a formal response from both campaigns for this Thursday, October 10 at 12pm ET to participate."

The Harris campaign accepted the invitation last month. But Trump has not committed to the debate, and he has said there “will be no third debate,” a reference to Trump's June debate against Biden on CNN.

Vance says Harris' comment on 'The View' shows she would 'double down' on Biden policies if elected

Vance criticized Harris tonight over a comment she made during her media blitz this week when she initially said she wouldn't have done anything differently from Biden in the past four years.

"It just drives home how everything that has been tried and found wanting over the last 3½ years. She’s offering to double down on it," Vance said at a campaign event in Tucson, Arizona.

The criticism came in response to Harris' remark in an interview on ABC’s “The View” that aired yesterday that "there is not a thing that comes to mind" when she was asked whether she would have done anything differently from Biden. She later said that if she’s elected, she would differ from Biden by asking a Republican to serve in her Cabinet.

‘It’s so stupid’: Biden shoots down Marjorie Taylor Greene’s conspiracy theory about controlling the weather

+2

Tara Prindiville

Rebecca Shabad, Tara Prindiville and Evan Bush

Reporting from Washington, D.C.

As Biden delivered a stark warning today about the dangerous hurricane barreling toward Florida, he shot down misinformation about the storm, including one particular conspiracy theory propagated by Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene.

“Marjorie Taylor Greene, the congresswoman from Georgia, is now saying the federal government is literally controlling the weather, we’re controlling the weather. It’s beyond ridiculous. It’s so stupid. It’s got to stop,” Biden said in televised remarks at the White House.

Read the full story here.

‘I don’t want to be nice’: Trump ramps up personal attacks on Harris at Pennsylvania rally

Reporting from Scranton, Pennsylvania

Trump rallied a raucous crowd in Scranton, Pennsylvania, today as he seeks to halt Harris’ gains in the polls on handling the economy, launching a wave of insults at her and painting a dark vision of the future if he loses the election.

Trump lashed out at Harris by calling her “a horrible person,” “a liar,” a “radical left Marxist” and “not a smart person,” often drawing jeers and boos as his supporters fed off his energy.

Read the full story here.

First to NBC News: House Dems to raise money with David Letterman and Hillary Clinton

The campaign arm for House Democrats is holding a high-dollar fundraiser tonight featuring some big names as they continue their efforts to take back the majority. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., will hold a conversation with former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and talk show host David Letterman in New York City, a source familiar with the event planning told NBC News.

The event is expected to raise $2 million for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.

The battle between Republicans and Democrats for control of the House is highly competitive, and it is playing out in several states that will not be competitive in the presidential election. As a result, the House campaigns are being forced to raise their own resources and sell their messages in swing districts in states like New York and California.

Jeffries has made fundraising a priority. In August, the DCCC raised $22.3 million and the Jeffries-aligned super PAC, the House Majority PAC, outraised its GOP counterpart, the Congressional Leadership Fund, for the first time in the third quarter of an election cycle. The DCCC ended August having raised $250 million over the cycle.

Letterman has been very active in boosting Democrats this year. He announced his endorsement of Biden in July and had planned to hold a fundraiser for him. He backed Harris after Biden dropped out and instead held a fundraiser for her. 

 

Walz approves sending Minnesota's National Guard to Florida

Walz, in his capacity as governor of Minnesota, has approved an executive order directing the Minnesota National Guard to provide emergency assistance to Florida ahead of Hurricane Milton. Thirteen airmen from the Minnesota National Guard are on their way to the storm zone today, his office said in a news release.

Minnesota National Guard soldiers have also transported over 30,000 pounds of cargo, including water, food, medicine, survival equipment and relief supplies, to areas that were hit hard by Hurricane Helene, the release said.

“Sometime this afternoon, Hurricane Milton is going to come ashore, and those are Americans, those are our neighbors, those are our family members, those are our friends," Walz said today at an event in Chandler, Arizona. "And the commitment to stop the politicking and to unify, to be there, is absolutely critical.”

Harris’ political operation crosses $1 billion raised for the 2024 election

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Carol E. LeeCarol E. Lee is the Washington managing editor.

Harris' presidential campaign operation crossed the $1 billion fundraising threshold in September, two months after she took over as the Democratic Party’s standard-bearer, according to two people familiar with the numbers.

The figure includes money raised by the campaign committee itself and by a campaign-affiliated joint fundraising committee that also collects cash for the Democratic National Committee and state parties.

The staggering pace suggests Harris has been able to sustain enthusiasm among donors, large and small, as the campaign enters the stretch run before the Nov. 5 election. But it comes amid a historic onslaught of outside spending from super PACs and other groups that has the Harris campaign concerned — particularly about direct mail, in which Republicans have opened a steep advantage in recent months, and on the ground, with groups like Elon Musk’s super PAC and others working to turn out voters for Trump.

Read the full story here.

Walz skewers Trump over reportedly tying disaster aid to how residents voted

Walz skewered Trump at an event in Chandler, Arizona, this afternoon as he discussed Hurricane Milton, claiming that when Trump was in office he had asked residents how they voted before he determined whether to provide disaster relief.

"When we have people coming out and saying that before decisions were made on about determining aid, former President Trump asked to see how those people voted — never in our life would we ask that," Walz said. "Never in our lifetime would we ask that."

Walz appeared to be referring to a recent Politico report that said that when Trump was president he hesitated to authorize disaster aid to areas where there were large numbers of Trump opponents and gave preference to regions that were known to be pro-Trump.

The Trump campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Former Democratic candidate, wife of late congressman, backs GOP incumbent in Nebraska's pivotal 2nd District

Ann Ferlic Ashford — a former Democratic congressional candidate whose late husband Brad Ashford represented Nebraska's 2nd District for one term before being defeated by Republican Don Bacon — is appearing in a new ad emphasizing her endorsement of Bacon.

"Both my husband, Brad, and I were political opponents of Don Bacon. Now, I'm endorsing Don because character always counts more than party," Ashford says in the new ad, before lamenting the "lies they keep telling about Don Bacon" and praising him for bipartisan votes in Congress.

Brad Ashford won the House seat in 2014, bucking the midterm trends and defeating Republican Rep. Lee Terry in what was largely a good election year for Republicans. In 2016, Bacon beat Ashford, lost a comeback bid in the Democratic primary in 2018 before Ann Ferlic Ashford lost the 2020 Democratic primary for the seat.

Brad Ashford endorsed Bacon in the 2020 general election. He died in 2022.

According to the Nebraska Examiner, Ferlic Ashford referred to herself as a "Harris-Bacon" voter when she announced her endorsement of Bacon late last month.

Democrats call for Trump to be prosecuted under Logan Act

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Abigail Williams

Daniel Barnesis reporting from the federal courthouse.

Gabe Gutierrez

Abigail Williams, Daniel Barnes, Zoë Richards and Gabe Gutierrez

Some Democrats have been calling for Trump to be prosecuted under a federal law that makes it illegal for private citizens to communicate with foreign officials amid reporting that the former president allegedly had as many as seven phone calls with Vladimir Putin since leaving the White House.

Democrats have suggested that Trump may be in violation of the Logan Act, which prohibits private citizens from communicating with foreign leaders “with intent to influence the measures or conduct of any foreign government or of any officer or agent thereof, in relation to any disputes or controversies with the United States, or to defeat the measures of the United States.”

Asked by NBC News about the calls, which were reported in Bob Woodward's forthcoming book, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said, "We’re not aware of those calls."

She added, "If true, it is concerning."

Trump, who once called on his Justice Department to prosecute John Kerry for Logan Act violations, is unlikely to face charges under the seldom used 1799 law, which has only been used in two cases that did not yield convictions, according to the Congressional Research Service. (Kerry was not charged.)

Legal scholars have raised questions about the law’s constitutionality over the years, perhaps another reason prosecutors have been reluctant to use the statute in the modern era. The law has never faced a First Amendment challenge, and at least one federal judge has written (in 1964) that the law might be unconstitutionally vague. Bringing charges against anyone, let alone a former president, for Logan Act violations would almost certainly end with the Supreme Court reviewing the constitutionality of the law. 

Despite the law never amounting to a successful conviction, there is a long history of people accusing their political adversaries of violating the Logan Act. 

Harris blasts DeSantis storm accusations, says it's 'not a time for us to point fingers'

Following her interview on CNN, Harris called into The Weather Channel, speaking with a reporter on the ground in Florida ahead of Hurricane Milton's landfall.

Asked to address Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has accused Harris of politicizing the storm, Harris said, "This is not a time for us to just point fingers at each other as Americans. It’s really not."

She added, "Anybody who considers themselves to be a leader should really be in the business right now of giving people a sense of confidence that we’re working together … on behalf of the people of our country.”

Harris also called on leaders to hang up their partisan hats for the duration of the hurricane, telling the reporter that she welcomes "every and anyone to work with me and for us to be able to work together. I don’t care who you voted for in the last election or who you’re voting for in the next election.”

Doug Emhoff, Tim Walz and family meet in Arizona ahead of campaign events

Reporting from PHEONIX, Arizona

While both campaigning in Maricopa County yesterday and today, Gov. Tim Walz and the second gentleman Doug Emhoff met this morning for coffee with their children at Otro Cafe in Phoenix.

Hope Walz and Cole Emhoff were in attendance, along with Cole’s wife, Greenley. They ordered coffee and pastries before sitting down together on the first day of early voting here in Arizona.

Second gentleman Doug Emhoff and Gov. Tim Walz
Second gentleman Doug Emhoff, right, and Gov. Tim Walz in Phoenix today.Katherine Koretski / NBC News

Harris blasts GOP hurricane misinformation

Following a joint briefing on the hurricane, Harris on CNN blasted Republican leaders who have spread conspiracy theories about FEMA, a federal organization that helps hurricane victims with evacuation and resources during emergency.

“[Local officials] are doing an extraordinary job in trying to combat the misinformation. I’m talking about sheriffs, I’m talking about mayors, I’m talking about local officials,” the vice president told the network on Wednesday afternoon. “I don’t even know their party affiliation, by the way. But leaders on the ground who know it is not in the best interest of the people living in those areas … to be afraid of seeking help.”

Though Harris didn’t address any Republicans by name, she said it was “dangerous” and “unconscionable, frankly, that anyone who would consider themselves a leader would mislead desperate people to the point that those people would not receive the aid to which they are entitled.”

“We know the desperation and the fear” of the people evacuating, she added. “The last thing they deserve is to have a so-called leader make them more scared.”

Biden slams Trump for spreading 'reckless' misinformation on hurricane disaster relief

Tara Prindiville

Tara Prindiville and Summer Concepcion

In remarks at a storm briefing on Hurricane Milton and response efforts to Hurricane Helene, Biden slammed Trump for spreading misinformation on disaster relief for people affected by Helene.

“The last few weeks, there’s been a reckless, irresponsible and relentless promotion of disinformation and outright lies that are disturbing people,” Biden said. “It’s undermining confidence in the incredible rescue and recovery work that has not already been taken and will continue to be taken. It’s harmful who need help the most. There’s simply no place for this to happen.”

Biden said Trump “has led the onslaught of lies” that are “simply not true.” The president cited false claims of properties of hurricane victims being confiscated, victims being limited to $750 in cash for disaster relief, and FEMA disaster funds being distributed to migrants who entered the country illegally.

“What a ridiculous thing to say, it’s not true,” Biden said.

The president also called out Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., a Trump ally, for pushing “bizarre” claims insinuating that government officials control the weather

“It’s beyond ridiculous. It’s got to stop,” Biden said.

Kari Lake and Ruben Gallego let rip with fiery criticisms ahead of their Arizona Senate debate

PHOENIX — Arizona starts its first day of early voting Wednesday and ends it with a pivotal moment in its battleground Senate race, as Republican Kari Lake and Democrat Ruben Gallego are set to face off in their first and only debate for the seat left open by retiring Sen. Kyrsten Sinema.

Like the presidential contest, the Senate race offers deep contrasts in a state that’s been divided neatly in half for years. And despite the uncertainty in the close race for the White House, both Senate candidates are more than happy to associate themselves with the top of their ticket.

Gallego, a veteran, son of immigrants and five-term member of the House, is challenging Lake, a pro-Trump former newscaster who narrowly lost the 2022 governor’s race to Democrat Katie Hobbs. 

In an interview with NBC News after a Sunday night town hall with veterans in Scottsdale, Gallego said it helps sharing the ticket with someone like Harris rather than Biden, who dropped out of the race in July.

“It is, honestly, night and day, in terms of what I’m hearing from people,” Gallego said on how Harris is perceived compared to Biden. 

Read the full story here.

Biden and Harris spoke to Netanyahu in wake of Iran's missile attack on Israel

Biden spoke to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu this morning, according to the White House, following Iran's missile attack on Israel last week.

The call, which Harris also joined, was the first time Biden and Netanyahu spoke since Aug. 21 as their relationship has been strained over how Israel has handled the fallout of Hamas' Oct. 7 terror attack.

Separately, Trump spoke to the Israeli prime minister following the missile attacks from Iran on Israel, according to two Trump campaign officials.

Israel was able to prevent fatalities during the attack, which involved 180 missiles fired from Iran, because of its aerial defense system.

DNC to fly banner over Tigers game calling Trump 'an anti-union scab'

A day before Trump is scheduled to visit Detroit to deliver remarks about his economic agenda, the Democratic National Committee is flying a banner over the Detroit Tigers home playoff game today at Comerica Park that reads: “Trump is an anti-union scab. Vote Kamala!”

“Detroit workers lived through the consequences of Trump’s catastrophic policies and have made a comeback under the Biden-Harris administration,” DNC spokesperson Stephanie Justice said in a statement.

She referred to Trump as an "anti-union scab who weakened the rights of workers, and he’ll push them to the bottom of his priority list once again to give handouts to his billionaire friends.”

The Democrats have sought to paint Trump as anti-union throughout the campaign, pointing to his policies as president and remarks he made to Elon Musk in August praising the SpaceX founder's firing of striking workers.

Harris campaign launches ‘Hombres con Harris' in effort to mobilize Latino men in battleground states

The Harris-Walz campaign launched “Hombres con Harris,” an effort to expand the campaign’s outreach to Latino men in battleground states across the country.

The initiative comes as Walz is scheduled to join Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., who is running for an open Senate seat in the state, and actor Jaime Camil for a campaign event in Chandler this afternoon.

Other events for the initiative includes stops in Phoenix, Tucson, Yuma, Nogales in Arizona; Sparks, Reno and Las Vegas in Nevada; Philadelphia and Lehigh Valley in Pennsylvania.

Each stop is set to feature members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, digital creators and celebrities including Aaron Dominguez, Guillermo Diaz, Nick Gonzales, Al Madrigal and more, the campaign said in a news release.

“At Latino-owned small businesses, sports bars, carnes asadas, union halls, and other community centered venues, the travel blitz will be focused on meeting Latino men where they are, in environments to discuss the issues that matter most to them and mobilize them to reach out to other Latino men, encouraging them to vote for Kamala Harris,” the campaign said.

Attendees at the events will discuss key issues to Latino communities, including health care, lower costs and an economy that gives people the opportunity to succeed, the campaign said.

Harris warns against price gouging and fraud during Hurricane Milton and Helene recovery

Harris warned in a statement released by the White House this morning against price gouging and fraud during Hurricane Milton and in the wake of Hurricane Helene as states continue to recover from the destruction.

The Biden administration is monitoring for allegations of price gouging and fraud and will hold people accountable for taking advantage of the natural disasters, Harris said.

"I have seen firsthand the devastating impact of price gouging during an emergency," Harris said. "As Attorney General of California during devastating wildfires that displaced thousands of residents, I took on those attempting to take advantage of the situation by raising hotel prices. As Senator, I worked to stop price gouging during the pandemic."

The vice president has been proactive in weighing in on current events as she tries to emulate the position of the president ahead of the presidential election.

"Those evacuating before Hurricane Milton or recovering from Hurricane Helene should not be subject to illegal price gouging or fraud — at the pump, airport, or hotel counter," she said.

Biden called on airlines and other companies yesterday not to engage in price gouging.

Trump slams Harris' plan to raise taxes on the wealthy: 'You don't tax the rich'

Trump bashed Harris' plan to raise taxes on the wealthiest Americans last night, telling Newsmax, "You don't tax the rich."

"You don’t tax the rich, because the rich are going to — look the rich pay most of the tax in the country. First of all, you know, people hate to say it, they hate to hear it, but you take a certain very small percentage and most of the tax is paid by the rich," Trump said, predicting the wealthy would leave the country to avoid paying higher tax bills.

"The problem that she has is, she’s going to the communist method. Take all incentive," Trump said, claiming — as he did when he was running against Biden in 2020 — that the country would enter a financial depression if he loses.

Trump was the first major presidential candidate in decades not to make his tax information public after he first clinched the Republican nomination in 2016. The then-Democratic-controlled House Ways and Means Committee released six years of his tax returns in 2022, which showed he paid relatively little in federal taxes in the years before and during his presidency.

Trump criticized Democrats for releasing the information, but said at the time the returns “show how proudly successful I have been and how I have been able to use depreciation and various other tax deductions as an incentive for creating thousands of jobs and magnificent structures and enterprises.”

 

GOP Rep. Carlos Giménez of Florida lashes out at Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene

GOP Rep. Carlos Giménez of Florida lashed out at his fellow Republican colleague, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, on X this morning, implying that she should have her "head examined" after suggesting people can control the weather.

Giménez represents Florida's 28th Congressional District, which covers the Florida Keys and many of Miami's suburbs. His comment comes as his state is preparing for Hurricane Milton, a dangerous Category 4 storm expected to hit the west coast of Florida tonight.

"[NEWS] FLASH —> Humans cannot create or control hurricanes," Giménez wrote on X. "Anyone who thinks they can, needs to have their head examined."

He was responding to Greene's post on X from Oct. 3 in which she peddled a conspiracy theory, suggesting people, whom she identifies only as "they," can control the weather.

"It’s ridiculous for anyone to lie and say it can’t be done," she wrote. NBC News has reached out to Greene's office for comment.

Trump to hold campaign events in Pennsylvania while Vance campaigns in Arizona

Trump heads to the critical battleground state of Pennsylvania today, delivering remarks in Scranton at 3 p.m. and a campaign rally in Reading at 7 p.m.

Vance will hold a rally in Tucson, Arizona, at 3 p.m. ET, setting up split-screen appearances between him and Walz, who's holding a rally there tonight. Vance will also deliver remarks at a CPAC town hall in Mesa at 5:30 p.m. ET

During an appearance on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” Harris accused Trump’s campaign of spreading misinformation on hurricane relief. She added, “Have you no empathy, man?” and insisted that a “leader means lifting people up.”

Trump suggests CBS News broke the law with Harris' '60 Minutes' interview

Trump suggested in a post on Truth Social this morning that CBS News broke the law in its "60 Minutes" interview with Harris, which aired in an election special Monday night.

The former president claimed that the show's producers "sliced and diced" Harris' answers to their questions "over and over again," though there's no evidence that they did so.

He said it seemed to be "all in an effort, possibly illegal as part of the 'News Division,' which must be licensed, to make her look 'more Presidential,' or a least, better."

"It may also be a major Campaign Finance Violation," he continued. "This is a stain on the reputation of 60 Minutes that is not recoverable — It will always remain with this once storied brand. I have never heard of such a thing being done in 'News.' It is the very definition of FAKE NEWS! The public is owed a MAJOR AND IMMEDIATE APOLOGY! This is an open and shut case, and must be investigated, starting today!"

It's unclear exactly what would have been considered a campaign finance violation. NBC News reached out to the Trump campaign for clarification. NBC News has also reached out to CBS News for comment.

Trump's campaign press secretary Karoline Leavitt called last night for CBS to release an unedited transcript of the interview with Harris, saying in a statement that it was "deceptively edited to lessen Kamala's idiotic response."

Harris' interview was part of the same election special in which Trump was invited to participate in a separate interview but ultimately pulled out. CBS host Scott Pelley said that the Trump campaign gave "shifting explanations" for pulling out of the interview, including that CBS wanted to fact-check the interview and that Trump needed an apology for an interview CBS did with him in 2020.

N.C. Republican debunks Helene weather conspiracy pushed by Marjorie Taylor Greene

Rep. Chuck Edwards, R-N.C., who represents parts of western North Carolina impacted by Hurricane Helene, called out “outrageous rumors” pushed by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., suggesting that government officials control the weather.

“Yes they can control the weather. It’s ridiculous for anyone to lie and say it can’t be done,” Greene wrote in a post on X last week after Hurricane Helene devastated parts of southeastern states.

In a statement yesterday, Edwards condemned “an uptick in untrustworthy sources trying to spark chaos by sharing hoaxes, conspiracy theories, and hearsay” about response efforts in the aftermath of the hurricane, without naming Greene.

“While it is true, the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s response to Hurricane Helene has had its shortfalls, I’m here to dispel the outrageous rumors that have been circulated online,” he said. “Hurricane Helene was NOT geoengineered by the government to seize and access lithium deposits in Chimney Rock. Nobody can control the weather.”

Edwards noted that Charles Konrad, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Southeast Regional Climate Center, has confirmed that it is impossible for someone to geoengineer a hurricane.

“Current geoengineering technology can serve as a large-scale intervention to mitigate the negative consequences of naturally occurring weather phenomena, but it cannot be used to create or manipulate hurricanes,” he said.

NBC News has reached out to Greene’s office for comment.

Trump to rally at Madison Square Garden

Trump will host a rally at Madison Square Garden in Manhattan on Oct. 27 per a campaign official. This will kick off an “arena tour” for the former president. The campaign intends to host “major arena rallies” in battleground states in the final push, per the official. 

The campaign has long floated the idea of a Madison Square Garden rally. Trump is set to campaign in two other nonswing states this week: Coachella, California and Aurora, Colorado.

Trump team appoints Harmeet Dhillon to run Arizona 'election integrity team'

The Trump-Vance campaign announced last night a new “election integrity team” in Arizona led by former California GOP Chair and RNC Committeewoman Harmeet Dhillon. 

This announcement comes on the heels of Kari Lake adviser Caroline Wren complaining that the RNC had recruited 5,000 attorneys across the country but none had been stationed in Arizona. 

Dhillon ran unsuccessfully for RNC chair in 2022 and was a vocal critic of the then-chair Ronna McDaniel.

Here's what Harris, Biden and Walz are doing today

Harris and Biden will receive a briefing on preparations for Hurricane Milton and updates on recovery efforts from the impacts of Hurricane Helene across the southeastern part of the country at noon.

Walz participates in a veterans and military families event with Arizona Rep. Ruben Gallego and Jim McCain, son of late Republican Sen. John McCain, in Chandler, Arizona, at 2 p.m. ET. Gallego is the Democratic nominee in the Arizona Senate race this year.

The Minnesota governor and Democratic vice presidential nominee will also participate in an event with Gila River Indian Community Gov. Stephen Roe Lewis and other tribal leaders in the Greater Phoenix area, Arizona at 3:30 p.m. ET and deliver remarks at a campaign rally in the Tucson area at 6:30 p.m. ET.

First to NBC News: Gun safety group Everytown pours $9 million into state legislative races

The political arm of Everytown for Gun Safety plans to spend $9 million to boost Democratic candidates in state legislative contests in five states, the group’s first investment in such races this election cycle.

The investment, first reported by NBC News, will be directed primarily toward digital and TV ads in state House and Senate races in Arizona, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania. Partisan control of at least one legislative chamber in each of those states is up for grabs in November, with the fate of a litany of hot-button issues — including gun safety — on the line along with it.

The announcement is part of Everytown’s broader $45 million spending plans up and down the ballot.

Read the full story here.

Harris’ mission critical in final push: Wipe out Trump’s advantage on the economy

Harris is zeroing in on a monumental task that could make or break her prospects in the final month before Election Day: wiping out Trump’s persisting advantage among voters on whom they trust to handle the economy.

While Harris has gained ground on stewardship of the economy, Trump still leads in most surveys about the issue, which frequently ranks as the top concern for voters. The Harris campaign and Democratic allies believe she must erode that advantage and at least fight it to a draw.

“With four weeks to go, we’re going to be laser-focused on this and be talking about this,” a Harris aide said.

The aide, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss strategy, said Harris and her team will spend the final stretch of the campaign presenting her as the candidate fighting for the middle class, citing her upbringing and agenda, while portraying Trump as caring more about cutting taxes for wealthy Americans like himself and hitting his plan for aggressive tariffs as a de facto middle-class tax hike.

Read the full story here.

Analysis: Why control of the House will shape the next presidency

One of the more remarkable aspects about the current political era is how closely contested control of all parts of the federal government is these days.

It’s not just the presidency that’s on a knife’s edge — so is the House, and even the Senate is highly competitive, though a GOP takeover this cycle is looking closer and closer to inevitable.

We could see all three change party control in the same election cycle, without their all ending up in the hands of the same party — an outcome that would be quite astonishing and unprecedented. And yet, as unusual as that would be, in another way, it would be sort of par for the course, considering how polarized and closely divided we are as a country.

Read the full analysis here.

Kremlin confirms Trump sent Putin Covid test machines, denies Putin phone calls since he left office

David Hodari

Trump did send coronavirus testing devices to Russian President Vladimir Putin at the height of the pandemic, the Kremlin confirmed yesterday. 

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Bloomberg News in a written statement that “we also sent equipment at the beginning of the pandemic.”

The story was initially reported in “War,” a new book by veteran Washington Post journalist Bob Woodward, which reports on Trump and Biden’s relationships with foreign leaders.

The book claims that Trump secretly sent Abbott Covid testing devices to Putin when the machines were in short supply. NBC News has not been able to independently verify this.

Peskov also denied Woodward’s claim that Trump and Putin have spoken on the telephone several times since Trump left office. “No, that’s not true,” he told Russian outlet RBC.

Trump also denied the reporting in an interview with ABC News’ Jonathan Karl. “He’s a storyteller. A bad one. And he’s lost his marbles,” Trump said of Woodward.

Read the full story here.

Mark Cuban says Trump 'is not right for the United States of America'

Annemarie Bonner

Annemarie Bonner and Chuck Todd

In an interview on "The Chuck Toddcast" released this morning, billionaire entrepreneur Mark Cuban, who formerly supported Trump in 2016, criticized the former president as unfit for the job.

“He can be a realtor, he could be a TV guy, he could be whatever he wants and I don’t care," Cuban said. "But obviously, this is a different job, and I don’t think he’s qualified for it."

Trump's campaign did not immediately respond to NBC News' request for comment.

Cuban emphasized that he tries to be "as apolitical as possible" on the issues, and is not a Democrat or a Republican, despite endorsing Harris. He said when he first got involved in the 2016 presidential race, he initially supported Trump, but "as I got to know him, realized he was not who I thought he would be." Cuban later endorsed Clinton.

Cuban said his reason for endorsing Harris centered on his children's futures, citing the need to grapple with climate change as one concern. Later in the interview, he circled back on Trump.

"I’m a believer character is destiny, and what I look at is how he’s done business with people," Cuban said. "As an entrepreneur, I see what he’s done," he said, adding, "the number of contractors he’s stiffed."

Cuban cited in particular former longtime Trump fixer Michael Cohen's testimony in the New York hush money trial, in which he said the former president would short pay vendors.

"Because to me, that’s the worst thing you can say about an entrepreneur or business person — I didn’t pay my vendors — because no one’s going to want to do business with you"

"That’s who Donald Trump is," he said. "That’s what you need to know about Donald Trump. He’s going to put his pocketbook above and beyond all other things."


Democratic super PAC launches new ad on abortion in key Pennsylvania Senate race

The main Democratic super PAC involved in Senate races is out with a new ad airing in the Philadelphia market criticizing Pennsylvania Republican Dave McCormick for his past statements on abortion.

The ad, part of Senate Majority PAC’s $42 million fall ad buy, begins with the narrator saying, "In 2022, this was Dave McCormick’s website, where he called himself 'staunchly pro-life' and said 'life begins at conception.'"

It then cuts to McCormick saying, “I’m someone who is pro-life.”

The rest of the ad accuses McCormick of trying to hide his position and erase his website to hide his views.

The ad ends calling him, “Dishonest Dave: you just can’t trust him.”

McCormick has spoken at length about his views on abortion.

Less than a week ago, during the first Senate debate, McCormick said his stance is that abortion should be a states' rights issue.

"I believe states should decide. Pennsylvania has a law. It’s been supported by Democrats and Republicans alike, it was signed into law by the senator’s father," McCormick said. "I support the three exceptions. I would not favor an abortion ban of any kind, legislation to support the national abortion ban."

Hannah Menchoff, a spokesperson for Senate Majority PAC, told NBC News: “Dave McCormick can delete as many words from his website as he wants to try and run from his extreme abortion agenda — but it’s not going to work. Pennsylvanians have a right to know that Dave McCormick supported abortion bans with no exceptions for rape and incest and can’t be trusted.”