Mr. Trump’s television and radio count is bolstered by more than two dozen appearances on Fox News, Fox Business and Fox News Radio. But even if you exclude those, he still sat for more television and radio interviews than Ms. Harris.
Trump received 75.9 million votes as of Nov. 14. That's more than the total for Harris and all third-party candidates combined.
Nearly one-quarter of Harris voters, 24%, said Biden is more to blame for the election outcome, according to an Economist/YouGov poll. A far smaller share, 6%, pin more of the blame on Harris. Meanwhile, the majority of Harris voters, 53%, blame neither, saying “it was just a bad year for Democrats.”
Vice President Kamala Harris' presidential campaign burned through more than $1 billion in only three months and is reportedly $20 million in debt as the team faces criticism for its spending habits.
Could the VP make a run for California governor in 2026? While Harris hasn't announced what's next for her, a new poll released Wednesday shows she would have the support of some voters.
A group of Gen Z voters largely agreed that mainstream media outlets have become "so corrupted" in their bias against President-elect Donald Trump that it affected the election. The New York Times asked a focus group of 13 undecided voters on Wednesday ...
“Biden/Harris don’t bear primary blame for the inflation,” said Jeffrey Frankel, a Harvard University economist. “Primary blame, rather, goes to supply constraints as the economy came out of Covid and the acceleration of commodity prices that came with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.”
Despite the historic potential of Harris' campaign, the idea of electing the first female president didn’t strongly motivate voters.
On Sept. 27, 1961, former Vice President Richard Nixon announced his candidacy for the 1962 California gubernatorial election. Eleven months earlier, while still vice president, he had narrowly lost his presidential bid to a young Massachusetts senator named John F. Kennedy.