With just over five weeks to go until Election Day, the candidates are campaigning in battleground states and making their case for why they should lead the country.
Former President Donald Trump spoke to a crowd in Erie, Pa., on Sunday after an event on Saturday in Wisconsin.
Vice President Kamala Harris, meanwhile, was scheduled to speak in Las Vegas on Sunday night after fundraisers in San Francisco on Saturday and in Los Angeles on Sunday.
CBS News has released the rules for next week's vice presidential debate between Democratic vice presidential nominee Gov. Tim Walz and Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance.
Unlike the Biden-Trump and Harris-Trump debates, the microphones will not be muted.
Harris assails Trump's 'broken promises' to auto workers ahead of his Michigan town hall
Harris is out with a new ad blasting Trump over his "broken promises" to autoworkers ahead of his town hall in Warren, Michigan, as she hints she would look to scrap one of his signature trade deals.
The digital ad juxtaposes a clip of Trump promising at a 2016 rally that if elected, "You won't lose one plant, you'll have plants coming into this country, you'll have jobs again," to the closure of a Stellantis plant in that town two years later. (Stellantis owns the Chrysler, Jeep and Dodge brands.)
In a statement overnight, Harris lambasted the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, the trade deal Trump renegotiated to replace the Clinton-era North American Free Trade Agreement.
"Once again, he is repeating the same playbook and telling the same old lies about how he'll fight for working people, including those in Michigan," Harris said of the former president. "Yet it was Trump's trade deal that made it far too easy for a major auto company like Stellantis to break their word to workers by outsourcing American jobs. As one of only 10 senators to vote against USMCA, I knew it was not sufficient to protect our country and its workers."
"Many who voted for this deal conditioned their support on a review process, which as president I will use," Harris said. The agreement is up for review in 2026, when parties can choose whether or not to extend it.
United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain, who endorsed Harris, told reporters Friday that her statement was "spot on."
"It's criminal that Donald Trump shows up in places like Flint, Michigan, and Warren, Michigan, or anywhere else in this country, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Wisconsin, and wants to tell workers how much he cares about them, that he's got their back," Fain said. "He doesn't give a damn about working class people, especially auto workers."
ABC News' Fritz Farrow
Sep 27, 2024, 10:18 AM EDT
Trump and Zelenskyy now meeting
Trump and Zelenskyy are now meeting at Trump Tower.
"We're going to have a discussion and see what we can come up with, but a great honor to have you," Trump told reporters.
Trump and Zelenskyy then shook hands, with Zelenskyy thanking Trump for the meeting.
"The war in Ukraine has to be stopped and Putin can't win and Ukraine has to prevail. And I want to discuss with you in detail about our plan," Zelenskyy said.
Sep 27, 2024, 8:51 AM EDT
Trump to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy
After sources said Trump might not meet with the foreign leader while he is in the U.S., Trump told reporters on Thursday they will meet at 9:45 ET this morning at Trump Tower.
"It's a shame what's happening in Ukraine. So many deaths, so much destruction," Trump said. "It's a horrible thing. And one of the things that are very bothersome to me is the fact that Europe is paying only a small fraction of the money that the United States of America is paying, and we have an ocean between Russia and ourselves."
ABC News Senior Congressional Correspondent Rachel Scott asked Trump if he believed Ukraine should cede its own territory to Russia in order to end the war -- what Kamala Harris called "surrender."
"We'll see what happens," Trump said. "Let's get some peace. We need peace. We need to stop the death and destruction, don't you think? Wouldn't that be nice?"