Former President Trump’s refusal to accept his 2020 election loss is back in the headlines because of his own comments and those of his running mate, putting an issue that could be problematic for Trump front and center in the closing weeks of the 2024 campaign.
In Michigan’s Macomb County, the Republican head of the board that will certify November’s election results called on former U.S. President Donald Trump to fight to stay in power after his election loss in 2020.
Kamala Harris' chances of winning the election in November have plunged, according to an online betting platform. Polymarket, funded partly by longtime Donald Trump backer Peter Thiel, gave the vice president a 49.8 percent chance of winning on October 4, to Trump's 49.6 percent.
More than 500 people collect vote data from around the country to undergo scrutiny and statistical checks — and the analyses that allow the Decision Desk to project winners.
Donald Trump and Kamala Harris represent very different futures when it comes to science-related policy issues that deeply affect our lives. Scientific American has rounded up the U.S. presidential candidates’ stances on some of the most important of these areas,
Headway has received more than 500 questions from teens about this year’s presidential election. Here are their most frequently asked questions — and our answers.
A big Trump lead in the state paradoxically adds to evidence of a smaller Electoral College edge for him. And a choice by pollsters may cause them to miss state shifts.
The US presidential election is just weeks away and one essential voting bloc is getting a lot of attention from both parties: young voters. But it’s economic woes – from inflation to housing – that could drive them to the polls.
The US presidential election is starting to give emerging-market investors the jitters, judging by the most sustained increase in currency volatility in six years.
Tax negotiations are thus guaranteed to occupy much of Kamala Harris’s or Donald Trump’s first year in office, giving them a chance to put their stamp on America’s tax code. Mr Trump favours broad, sweeping cuts that he believes would energise investment and innovation, whereas Ms Harris hopes to use tax changes to reduce inequality.