Both tell supporters to get voters to the polls in tossup race to be won by the party that leaves no favorable ballot un-cast.
LAS VEGAS—Presidential candidates Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump took to the desert on Oct. 31 to make their last pitch to voters in the battleground state of Nevada.
In an afternoon rally in Henderson, Trump called on the battleground state’s voters to reject Harris, calling her a “radical left Marxist,” and hinted that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. could be appointed to “work on women’s health” in a second Trump administration.
In an evening address in North Las Vegas, Harris asked Nevadans to “turn the page on a decade of Donald Trump,” claiming he “would get rid of” the Affordable Care Act, approve a federal law banning abortion, and target immigrants including Latinos—20 percent of the state’s electorate. She urged them to vote the Democratic ticket in what she called “the most consequential elections in our lifetime.”
The one common theme both emphasized in appealing to enthusiastic supporters was not only to ensure they vote but to make sure family, friends, neighbors, and everyone they talk to does because the race—a statistical dead heat