Voter feelings about the economy could be the deciding factor in who wins the White House in November. NBC News' Hallie Jackson traveled to eastern North Carolina to ask voters there how they feel the economy is,
According to GDP data, the economy is overperforming in six swing states. Dennis Kneale, host of the “What’s Bugging Me” podcast, discusses why this report may not impact the 2024 election even though it is positive for the Harris-Walz ticket.
What if when some voters say “It’s the economy, stupid!” they’re actually just expressing a partisan viewpoint? That’s what a close look at Wisconsin polling data from the Marquette University Law School suggests is happening.
Most voters cite the economy as their top concern, but it’s impossible to pin down since it affects every voter in a personal, situational and unique way.
There may not be much she can do on immigration, given the baked-in median-voter perception that Republicans are the “tougher” of the two parties and therefore the most capable of handling anything that involves security or “law and order.” The economy, though, is a different matter.
With Erie being a critical county in a key swing state, the former president used his campaign resources to bring his platform to Erie County. With the November election just around the corner, former President Donald Trump took his campaign to Erie’s Bayfront Convention Center on Sunday.
Six of the seven battleground states expected to decide this year’s US presidential election saw faster growth than the US economy as a whole in the second quarter, adding to recent tailwinds for Vice President Kamala Harris close to a month out from the vote.
Harris advisers point to a number of brightening public polls showing that Donald Trump’s lead is eroding on the critical question of whom voters trust most on the economy.
The video was altered by splicing together different moments of an interview Vice President Kamala Harris gave to CNN in August.
Three economists across the policy spectrum analyze the impacts of the GOP presidential candidate's two major policies he's promising on the campaign trail: more tariffs and deportations.
Vice President Kamala Harris is hoping to reassure moderate voters that as president, she wouldn’t lurch radically to the left.