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close polls between Trump and Harris, who struggles to convince the black and Latino electorate

Three weeks before the November 5 vote, the polls are still as close as ever, but several surveys reveal Kamala Harris’ difficulties in attracting votes among black and Latin American voters. A New York Times/Siena College poll published on Sunday gave him less than 60% of voting intentions in the Hispanic community – a rapidly growing population in the United States – which would represent the lowest level for a Democratic candidate in 20 years.

She is credited with only 19 points ahead of her Republican opponent within this strategic electorate in several pivotal states, notably in the South-West, such as Arizona or Nevada, or seven less than Joe Biden in 2020 and 20 fewer than Hillary Clinton in 2016.

Obama and Clinton in battle

Two former presidents, Democrats Barack Obama (2009-2017) and Bill Clinton (1993-2001), also threw their strength into Kamala Harris’ campaign: the first by urging his African-American “brothers” on Thursday, and the men generally to vote for the woman who could be the first American president. The second was Sunday in a church in Georgia with the black electorate, to whom he is known to be very close.

On Sunday, the 59-year-old vice-president chose North Carolina, in a region with a large black American population in this state last won in 2008 by a Democrat and which has just been devastated by Hurricane Helene. At a meeting in Greenville, she attacked her rival, accusing him of a lack of transparency about her state of health and of refusing to have a second debate with her. “Is his (campaign team) worried that people will see that he is too weak and unstable to lead America? “, she asked herself.

For Kamala Harris, “Donald Trump is more interested in scaring people, in provoking fear, in fueling problems rather than helping to solve them, which is what real leaders do.”

Anti-migrant rhetoric

Previously, in a church of African-American faithful, she had saluted “the heroes and angels” revealed by the disaster caused by Hurricane Helen, while castigating “those who divert people’s tragedies and sorrow into resentment and hatred” by “spreading disinformation”. She was referring to Donald Trump’s allegations that the Democratic government had abandoned the populations of the majority Republican areas of North Carolina.

In response, outgoing President Joe Biden, 81, announced Sunday from Florida, also hit by another hurricane, Milton, total aid of $600 million.

His predecessor in the White House, Donald Trump, 78, was in Arizona, a state bordering Mexico: he once again used anti-migrant rhetoric, accusing the Biden/Harris government of having “imported an army of illegal migrants” came “from dungeons all over the world”. In an hour-and-a-half-long speech, he promised that if elected, he would hire 10,000 more border guards and increase their salaries by 10 percent.

Harris and Trump in Pennsylvania this Monday

And taking his incendiary rhetoric up a notch, the populist tribune asserted on Fox News that “the National Guard”, or even “military”, should be called in against the “enemy within” in the United States. , against “very bad people […] crazy people, far-left weirdos.”

In this ultra-tense climate, authorities announced on Sunday the arrest and release on bail on Saturday of a man for illegal possession of several weapons, while he was near a Trump rally in California. The former president, who was targeted by two assassination attempts, “was not in danger,” according to the FBI federal police.

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