Vice President Kamala Harris will be in Washington for Election Day, while former President Trump will host his watch party in Palm Beach County, Florida. Harris, a graduate of Howard University, will be back at her alma mater as results start rolling in. Her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, will join her in Washington this evening.
While Trump's critics have accused him of fomenting an insurrection with the US Capitol riot of 6 January 2021, his allies insist it was a peaceful transition of power, pointing to the fact that he left Washington DC on his final day in office on 20 January.
As dawn broke on Nov. 5, 2024, the country was choosing between two radically different directions, embodied by Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump, locked in a coin-flip race to be decided in a handful of battleground states.
The 98-year-old entertainment legend took to YouTube on Monday, November 4 to endorse Democratic candidate Kamala Harris in a lengthy video — in which he read an excerpt from a speech he delivered at a 1964 civil rights event with Martin Luther King Jr.
"The View" co-host Alyssa Farah Griffin revealed she voted for Vice President Kamala Harris on Tuesday and said it was the first time in her life she voted for a Democrat.
Margaret Knegter was born in 1921, just one year after the 19th Amendement guaranteed women the right to vote. Now at 103 years old, she's cast her ballot for Kamala Harris.
In a presidential election that couldn’t be closer, it seemed fitting that the first votes cast on Election Day were evenly split.
As millions of Americans gear up to cast ballots in U.S. elections, Kamala Harris, the Democratic nominee for president, has people rooting for her from thousands of miles away in a tiny south Indian village.
They haven't won the state since 2008, when Barack Obama narrowly defeated John McCain by one percentage point. Election Day 2024 live updates: Hoosiers head to the polls to vote for president,
Vice President Kamala Harris made her first appearance on Election Day at the Democratic National Committee headquarters, where she briefly took time to call voters.
Georgia's secretary of state called the video "targeted disinformation." Federal intelligence officials said it was produced by Russian influencers.