Obama calls Trump 'wannabe king' at Harris event

“That's not what you need in your life," he said.

Last Updated: October 25, 2024, 6:37 AM EDT

The race for the White House is heading into the final stretch with most polls showing Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump neck-and-neck in key states with less than two weeks to go.

Oct 25, 6:54 am

More than 31 million Americans have voted early

As of Friday morning, more than 31 million Americans cast an absentee ballot or voted early in person, according to the Election Lab at the University of Florida.

Roughly 13.7 million people voted early in person, the lab reported, and more than 17.7 million returned their ballot by mail.

A man votes on the second day of early voting in Wisconsin at the American Serb Hall Banquet in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, October 23, 2024.
Vincent Alban/Reuters

Oct 24, 2024, 5:11 PM EDT

NBA great Kevin Garnett launches GOTV basketball tour

NBA Hall of Famer Kevin Garnett announced a get-out-the-vote tour "that merges basketball and voter registration."

The Hoop it Up 2 Vote campaign will tip off in Milwaukee on Saturday, then goes to Detroit on Sunday and Philadelphia on Nov. 2. It includes a 3-on-3 tournament, 3-point contest and other games.

Attendees will also have access to complimentary rides to polling locations and voter registration booths, organizers said.

"Everybody needs to get out to vote on November 5. This isn’t the time to sit on the sideline talking about your vote doesn’t count," Garnett said in a statement.

Oct 24, 2024, 4:16 PM EDT

NC election official pushes back against changes to early voting sites

As lawmakers in North Carolina consider legislation to expand early voting in counties hard-hit by Hurricane Helene, the state’s top election official pushed back Thursday against making last-minute changes to early voting sites.

"Poll workers don't grow on trees, and they certainly don't when you're in a disaster situation where people may have been displaced," North Carolina State Board of Elections Chair Karen Brinson Bell said during a press call.

Brinson Bell said that legislation requiring countries to expand their early voting sites could "present challenges" to strained election officials in western North Carolina.

Over 2 million voters have cast their ballot in North Carolina since early in-person voting began in the state last week. Despite the damage from Helene, 76 early voting sites are in operation across the 25 counties covered by the federal disaster declaration.

"What has happened thus far is that in most of these counties, we are seeing turnout that's on par or greater with 2020. We feel like the early voting sites that they've identified that are right for their counties are working," Brinson Bell said.

-ABC News Peter Charalambous

Oct 24, 2024, 4:08 PM EDT

'Nervous optimism' in Harris' camp

In the final campaign stretch, ABC News Senior White House Correspondent Selina Wang reports she is hearing the phrase "nervous optimism" from multiple Harris campaign officials and donors.

Harris' team knows this race is still locked in a dead heat, but the optimism comes from the Democrats' "strong ground game." The hope is that their better organization and canvassing on the ground will tip the scales in their favor, but they're keenly aware that Republicans could outperform in the polls as Trump did in 2016.

The Harris campaign is doubling down on peeling away disaffected Republicans. As one donor put it: "We're now the party of AOC and Dick Cheney -- that's crazy."

PHOTO: Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a CNN town hall in Aston, Pa.,  Oct. 23, 2024
Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a CNN town hall in Aston, Pa., Oct. 23, 2024
Matt Rourke/AP

While Harris started her campaign with a message about joy and the future -- with her catchphrase "we're not going back -- Harris is ending her campaign with a message that sounds a lot like President Joe Biden's when he was still in the race: that Trump is a fundamental threat to democracy.

Her campaign is betting this will make the difference with those swing voters, but the risk is overemphasizing the anti-Trump message versus a positive message about a future Harris presidency.

But campaign sources highlight the fact that Harris has all the big superstar surrogates who can help make the pitch in other ways, including Barack and Michelle Obama, Bill Clinton, Magic Johnson, Beyonce, Bruce Springsteen, Eminem and more while Trump has Elon Musk.

One campaign source, when asked what made them most nervous (such as the gender gap, turnout from Black men or something else), said: "Everything is on the margins, so everything makes me nervous."

-ABC News' Selina Wang

Oct 24, 2024, 3:10 PM EDT

Walz delivers chilling message to young voters

Gov. Tim Walz told organizers and volunteers at Duke University on Thursday that their youth vote in the battleground state could make a difference for "generations to come."

"What a privilege to be in this moment," he said. "They are going to write about Americans who stood up in this moment and said "hell no" to this, the tendencies of totalitarianism, and the division and racism, the hatred, the misogyny, everything else that goes with that. You're going to get asked, 'When you're my age, what did you do?' And your answer is, 'I did every damn thing possible.'"

Minnesota Governor and Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Walz speaks at a campaign rally in support of Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris at Alliant Center in Madison, Wis., on Oct. 22, 2024.
Kamil Krzaczynski/AFP via Getty Images

Walz's message seemed more urgent than usual, with just 12 days until the election.

At first, Walz said he didn't want to put "fear" in the students. But he later asserted, while highlighting Trump's "enemy from within" remarks, that the former president would come for any of his political enemies.

"I'm on the top of his list, but don't kid yourself, you're somewhere on that list, too, if you disagree with these people," Walz said.

-ABC News' Isabella Murray