NEW YORK — Donald Trump is finally getting his Madison Square Garden moment.
With just over a week to go before Election Day, the former president will take the stage Sunday at one of the country’s most well-known venues, hosting a hometown rally to deliver his campaign’s closing message against Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris.
Outside the arena, the sidewalks were overflowing with Trump supporters in red “Make America Great Again” hats. There was a heavy security presence. Streets were blocked off and access to Penn Station was restricted.
In the gathering crowd was Philip D’Agostino, a longtime Trump backer from Queens, the borough where Trump grew up. The 64-year-old said it was appropriate for Trump to be speaking at a place bills itself as “the world’s most famous arena.”
“It just goes to show ya that he has a bigger following of any man that has ever lived,” D’Agostino said.
The rally is one of a series of detours Trump has made from battleground states, including a recent rally in Coachella, California – best known for the famous music festival named after the town – and one in May on the Jersey Shore. This summer he campaigned in the South Bronx.
While some Democrats and TV pundits have questioned Trump’s decision to hold what they dismiss as vanity events, the rally guarantees Trump what he most craves: the spotlight, wall-to-wall coverage and a national audience.
To reach them, Trump has spent hours appearing on popular podcasts. And his campaign has worked to create viral moments like his visit last weekend to a McDonald’s restaurant, where he made fries and served supporters through the drive-thru window. Video of the stop posted by his campaign has been viewed more than 40 million times on TikTok alone.
“He’s not just going to be speaking to the attendees inside Madison Square Garden. There will be people tuning in from battleground states all across the country,” said former U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin, a New York Republican and ally of the former president, who said Trump has been talking about holding an event at the venue since the start of his campaign.
Harris has also traveled to non-battleground states for major events intended to drive a national message. She appeared in Houston Friday with music superstar Beyoncé to speak about reproductive rights, and will deliver her own closing argument Tuesday from the Ellipse in Washington, where Trump spoke ahead of the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol riot.
Trump will be joined at the rally by supporters including Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, who has spent tens of millions of dollars to boost his campaign.
Trump often compares himself to the country’s greatest entertainers. The former reality TV star has long talked about wanting to hold a rally at the venue in interviews and private conversations.
“Madison Square Garden is the center of the universe,” said Trump campaign senior adviser Jason Miller, noting the venue’s storied history hosting events including the 1971 “Fight of the Century.”
House control could run through New York’s suburbs Beyond the national spotlight and the appeal of appearing on one of the world’s most famous stages, Republicans in the state say the rally will also help down-ballot candidates.
New York is home to a handful of competitive congressional races that could determine which party controls the House next year.
Zeldin ran unsuccessfully for governor in 2022, but did better than expected, driving turnout in competitive districts that helped House Republicans win a tiny majority. That underscored, he said, the importance of the top of the ticket doing as well as possible. He said the Garden event is sure to be featured on newscasts in areas with high-stakes races like suburban Long Island, where Trump held a packed, raucous rally last month.
Trump will also use the stop as a major fundraising opportunity as he continues to seriously lag Harris in the money race.
A native returns to the city that made him and convicted him New York has not voted for a Republican for president in 40 years. But that hasn’t stopped Trump from continuing to insist he believes he can win.
“We think there’s a chance,” he said on “The Brian Kilmeade Show” earlier this week, pointing to frustrations over an influx of migrants to the city and concerns over crime.
Trump routinely uses his hometown as a foil before audiences in other states, painting a dark vision of the city that bears little resemblance to reality. He’s cast it as crime-ridden and overrun by violent, immigrant gangs who have taken over Fifth and Madison avenues and occupied Times Square.
Trump has a complicated history with the place where he built his business empire and that made him a tabloid and reality TV star. Its residents indicted him last year on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records. He was found guilty in that case, and also found liable in civil court for business fraud and sexual abuse.
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Alexis Skyy Switches Up Her Stance On Donald Trump
Roommates, if y’all remember, Alexis previously said she was all in for Donnie during her interview with KISS 104.1. But on Saturday, October 19, she updated her IG followers, saying her interview happened before Trump announced his plans to close the Department of Education if he wins the election.
“The interview I did regarding voting was done prior to Trump’s statement on the Department of Education. Initially, I wanted to vote for Trump for my own personal reasons. After familiarizing myself with both candidates, I will no longer be voting for him,” Alexis wrote on her IG Story.
Social Media Reacts
Whew, chile! The Roomies, didn’t hold back in The Shade Room comment section, calling out Alexis for not doing her homework. Some even said folks should just keep their voting choices to themselves from now on.
Instagram user @kshiday wrote, “The first mistake was ignorantly about to cast your vote without educating yourself in the first place!”
Instagram user @watchherthrone wrote, “So she didn’t think to familiarize herself with the candidates before speaking?”
While Instagram user @bashirahkmua wrote, “She’s the reason they don’t need to cancel the Dept of Education 😂”
Then Instagram user @shamar.l wrote, “Remember when we didn’t publicly say who we were voting for?”
Another Instagram user @kelcaesar wrote, “Y’all bullied that girl into making a sound decision. Good for y’all!”
Lastly, Instagram user @love.le.le wrote, “Girl bye! you said what you said, and you wasn’t expecting all the backlash!!”
Here’s What Alexis Previously Said About Trump
Recently, TSR shared a video clip of Alexis’ interview with KISS 104.1. While chatting at the station, the reality star said she planned to vote for Donald Trump on November 5th. She acknowledged that “people have their opinions of him,” and she knows that Trump has the tendency to be “a little extra.” But she believes that Donnie makes things happen and thinks he brought “more money” into the economy while in office.
“I’m voting for Trump! I’m gonna get right to the point. I’m voting for Trump! I just feel like when Trump was around, things were [different], Sky said during the radio interview.
Trump Shares New Plan For Department Of Education
On Friday, October 18, Donald Trump sat down with Fox News’ ‘Fox and Friends’ for an interview. ABC 7 News reports that during the chat, the politician criticized how education is handled in our country. He also stated his intention to dismantle the Department of Education and cut funding for public schools that teach certain subjects.
“We’re going to take the Department of Education and close it. I’m going to close it,” Trump said.
On Friday, July 12, President Biden held a rally in a Detroit high school gymnasium.
The politician promptly addressed his recent name mix-ups at the NATO Summit earlier this week. Biden didn’t hesitate to criticize Donald Trump and call him out for making similar mistakes.
“People would rather talk about how I mix up names. I guess they don’t remember that Trump called Nikki Haley, Nancy Pelosi. No more! Donald, no more free passes,” Biden said during the rally.
He even went as far as labeling Trump as a “convicted criminal” and discussed the businessman’s guilty verdict in the hush money trial.
“Today we’re going to shine the spotlight on Donald Trump. We’re gonna do what the press so far hasn’t, but I think they’re gonna soon. Folks Donald Trump is a convicted criminal. He was convicted by a jury of his peers of 34 felonies for paying hush money,” Biden continued.
According to The Detroit News, when President Biden mentioned Trump, the crowd erupted in chants of “Lock him up!”
The outlet also reported that Biden remained firm in his decision to continue in the election and expressed confidence in his ability to succeed against Trump.
“I am running. And we’re going to win,” Biden affirmed.
Social Media Reacts To President
The Roomies quickly responded to Biden’s remarks at his Detroit rally. Even Fat Joe joined The Shade Room comment section to give the president props writing, “That’s the Joe i know🔥”
Instagram user @aguilo.ju wrote, “They increased his dosage today.”
Instagram user @_suckafreesi wrote, “My mans took his meds and had a nap and woke up swinging 😭”
While Instagram user @nadiamonyea wrote, “I was scared a little bit when he started coughing but he pulled it together real quick. Yeah Joe 😅🦾🦾🎉”
Then Instagram user @_honey.bai wrote, “That was damn near a tongue twister and he said it without stuttering. Let me find out they flipped his switch at the debate.”
Instagram user @iron_barbii wrote, “Retrumplicans will take anything and twist it when it fits their agenda. He’s speaking just fine to me…..”
Lastly, Instagram user @nonsky wrote, “Where was this energy at the debate? lol”
Biden Goes Viral For Mistakes At Summit
Despite his recent mistakes and ongoing speculation about the future of his campaign, Biden appeared to be in good spirits during the rally.
Earlier this week, President Biden went viral and raised concerns after accidentally confusing Vice President Kamala Harris with Donald Trump at the NATO Summit.
“Look, I wouldn’t have picked Vice President Trump to be Vice President if I think she’s not qualified to be president,” Biden stated while onstage.
As if that wasn’t enough, he then went on to introduce Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as Russian President Vladimir Putin.
“And now I want to hand it over to the president of Ukraine, who has as much courage as he has determination. Ladies and gentlemen, President Putin. “He’s going to beat President Putin. President Zelensky. I’m so focused on beating Putin. We got to worry about it. Anyway, Mr. President.”
RALEIGH, N.C. — The state is getting visits this weekend from major political players in the presidential race days before Super Tuesday.
Former President Donald Trump will be in Greensboro later today for a “Get Out the Vote” rally. He is speaking at the Greensboro Coliseum Complex at 2 p.m.
Republican candidate Nikki Haley will also be in Raleigh later today for a rally. She is speaking at Union Station at 12:30 p.m.
The former South Carolina governor is trailing behind Trump in the polls. But, she is vowing to stay in the race through Super Tuesday next week when North Carolina will host its primary election. .
Vice President Kamala Harris also made a trip to North Carolina.
On Friday, she was joined by North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper at 12:40 p.m. on Durham’s historic Black Wall Street.
Vice President Kamala Harris visited Durham on Friday to talk about the White House plan to invest millions in the economy.
This is her second trip to the state this year. In January, Harris visited a middle school in Charlotte and announced an additional $285 million in federal funding from the Safer Communities Act.
Saturday is the last day for early voting ahead of Tuesday’s election.
President Joe Biden won the South Carolina primary election on Saturday, defeating Democratic opponents Representative Dean Phillips and author Marianne Williamson, according to Associated Press (AP) projections.
The outlet called South Carolina’s Democratic primary for Biden about 25 minutes after the polls across the state closed at 7 p.m. Biden, who is seeking a second term, is being challenged by Phillips, who represents Minnesota’s 3rd Congressional District and Williamson, a progressive author and spiritual leader.
The president garnered more than 96 percent of the vote, with Williamson in second at 1.6 percent and Phillips receiving 1.2 percent, according to results from AP at the time of publication.
The president reacted to his projected victory shortly after 7:30 p.m. in a post on X, formerly Twitter.
“In 2020, it was the voters of South Carolina who proved the pundits wrong, breathed new life into our campaign, and set us on the path to winning the Presidency,” Biden said in the post. “Now in 2024, the people of South Carolina have spoken again and I have no doubt that you have set us on the path to winning the Presidency again—and making Donald Trump a loser—again.”
Newsweek reached out via email on Saturday to representatives for Biden, Phillips and Williamson for comment.
President Joe Biden speaks at the “Biden for President 2024” campaign headquarters on Saturday in Wilmington, Delaware. President Joe Biden speaks at the “Biden for President 2024” campaign headquarters on Saturday in Wilmington, Delaware. ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP/Getty
Biden also urged people to vote in November, saying the stakes in this election “could not be higher.”
“There are extreme and dangerous voices at work in the country—led by Donald Trump—who are determined to divide our nation and take us backward, the president said. “We cannot let that happen.”
Phillips, who is not on the Nevada Democratic primary ballot, congratulated Biden on his South Carolina victory but showed no indication of dropping out of the race.
“Cracking four digits never felt so good! Congratulations, Mr. President, on a good old-fashioned whooping,” the congressman wrote in a post on X. “See you in Michigan.”
Last month, Biden defeated Phillips and Williamson with his write-in campaign in New Hampshire, which his supporters in the state launched for him after he declined to appear on its ballot over a dispute about the New England state’s placement in the primary schedule. Despite having to rely on a write-in campaign, the president won the January 23 election by double digits, amassing more than 63 percent of the votes while Phillips came in second with 19.6 percent, according to results shared by the AP. Williamson received about 4 percent of the vote in New Hampshire’s Democratic primary, the outlet reported.
The victories in New Hampshire and South Carolina were much needed for Biden, whose popularity among voters has been a major talking point in the 2024 campaign. The president’s approval rating percentage has steadily been in the low 40s for most of his term. It was at its highest when Biden first took office in January 2021 at 53.1 percent and at its lowest in July 2022 at 38.2 percent, according to poll aggregator FiveThirtyEight.
Several polls have also shown that a majority of Democrats would prefer an alternative candidate. Despite this, Phillips has struggled to make headway since he announced his primary challenge in October 2023. While the congressman launched his campaign by saying that he respected Biden and aligned with the president’s agenda, he raised concerns the incumbent would lose against former President Donald Trump in November.
Former President Donald Trump has won the Iowa caucuses, CNN, the Associated Press, and Fox News have projected.
The Associated Press reported that Trump has “far more than half” of the votes counted as of 8:31 p.m. EST. Results from eight Iowa counties are in.
Trump defeated Republican challengers former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy in the Iowa caucuses held Monday, per CNN projections.
The news comes as Iowans braved sub-freezing temperatures to vote in the caucuses.
Former president Donald Trump visits a caucus site at the Horizon Event Center on January 15, 2024, in Clive, Iowa. CNN is projecting that Trump to win the state’s GOP caucus, the first Republican primary contest in the 2024 Republican presidential nominating process. Kevin Dietsch/Getty
Newsweek reached out via email on Monday night to Trump’s representatives for comment.
This story is breaking, and updates will follow.
Uncommon Knowledge
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Running for president a third time was “absolutely not” something Jill Stein started the year intending to do, she tells Newsweek. But after a “long-standing argument” with Ajamu Baraka, her running mate in 2016, “he won that battle” and in early November she announced her latest bid for the White House.
Despite a perhaps begrudging reentry into the national political debate, the Green Party stalwart says the campaign is already turning out to be “a blast,” and hopes to take the fight to the two mainstream parties in an election that could yet yield a few upsets.
In a wide-ranging interview about her candidacy and the fledgling campaign, Stein says Democratic incumbent and likely nominee Joe Biden is “already losing,” something that she is “already being blamed” for; discusses Cornel West‘s abrupt departure from the Green Party race and the “scramble” to fill the space he left; and how her upbringing shaped her views on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
A physician by training who studied at Harvard, Stein, 73, explains that she first broke into environmental politics because of concerns over the impact of poor air quality on her then-young children’s health.
Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein on December 5, 2016, in New York City. Running for president for a third time, she tells Newsweek that the Democratic Party is “in losing mode right now.” Drew Angerer/Getty Images
“One of my kids had asthma, and so I was just very mindful of sources of air pollution that are driving this epidemic of asthma,” she says from her personal study, adding that she “then became very involved as a medical doctor in advocating for cleaning up our sources of air pollution and water pollution, and mercury in the fish supply.”
Demonstrating this by pulling some of the papers on child health she helped translate from her bookcase—which also prominently displays a tome by Ralph Nader, the party’s pick in 1996 and 2000—she adds: “I felt like it was so unjust that I, as a doctor, could read this literature and understand the warning signs, but that they weren’t out there.”
Disenchanted with “a game of influence peddling” among advocates and lawmakers, she got involved in pushing for changes to election law in Massachusetts before being recruited to run as a Green-Rainbow candidate for the state’s gubernatorial race in 2002.
“I entered that race out of absolute desperation, as a mother and an advocate,” Stein recalls. “But I left the race with a whole lot of inspiration, because I discovered that if you’re running as a people-powered candidate, not a corporate-powered candidate…you have really interesting conversations with people and it’s a much more open.”
Democrats ‘Are in Losing Mode Right Now’
When Stein last ran for president, in 2016, she received 1 percent of the popular vote—the party’s best result since Nader—she was blamed for Hillary Clinton‘s loss and Donald Trump‘s ascension to 45th president, though Green Party activists note they have little effect on the Electoral College.
“We’re already being blamed,” she replies wryly to a question about whether she thinks she could be blamed again if Biden loses. “Biden is already losing; he’s on his way to losing right now. And the problem with the Democrats is that they’re fooling themselves about what’s driving their loss.”
Stein argues that what will spell election misery for the Democrats is a disconnect with voters that means many are either looking elsewhere or will not come out to cast their ballot on Election Day, noting that while she earned more than 1.4 million votes in 2016, Clinton lost 5 percent to 8 percent of Democratic voters to Trump while there were nearly 100 million who didn’t vote at all.
“They are in losing mode right now because they have betrayed their base—that is the problem,” she says. “The number of votes that Greens get is really totally on the margins. The big losses are people who won’t vote at all, or people who have voted Democrat who’ve crossed over.
“They’ve got to blame it on someone else, so that’s why they try and blame us. As far as I’m concerned, these are old white guys whining.”
Newsweek reached out to the Biden campaign via email on Friday for comment.
Stein says that part of her reasoning for running again is the disaffection people are feeling toward mainstream candidates. A Pew Research Center poll of 8,480 adults, conducted July 10-16 found that only 35 percent of Americans were satisfied with the candidates who had stepped forward, while nearly half wished there were more than two major political parties. Biden’s and Trump’s disapproval ratings currently stand above 50 percent.
President Joe Biden arrives in the Indian Treaty Room of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on December 13, 2023, in Washington, D.C. Recent polling suggests a majority of Americans are unhappy with mainstream presidential candidates, with alternative candidates spying an opportunity. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
In this apparent electoral malaise, she and others have spied a chance for a breakthrough.
“Two candidates are being rammed down people’s throats right now, who are extraordinarily unpopular, and most people who are voting for them are actually voting against the other candidate that they despise even more,” Stein says.
“So we’re really in a perfect storm for deep political change,” she adds. “The need for change—deep change—has never been more urgent, and the possibility of that change has never loomed so large.”
West ‘Not Accustomed to Being on a Team’
Before Stein entered the race, Cornel West, an academic and civil rights activist, was lined up to be a charismatic standard-bearer for the party in 2024, with Stein as his interim campaign manager, but despite a warm reaction from party members, in October he suddenly declared he was running as an independent.
That left the Green Party without a presumptive nominee and in turmoil as it looked for another recognizable face to fill the gap.
Stein says the party had “no strong candidate before Dr. West,” which was “why we were very excited and delighted when he switched” from the People’s Party. She applauds him for being “a very courageous voice—and it was wonderful to see him in action, just telling it like it is.”
But running for office is a “pressure cooker,” relying on unfamiliar people, she adds, which proved “very challenging,” so “it was no surprise it didn’t work, but we were not planning to fill that gap.”
When asked about what led to West’s departure, Stein says he is “not accustomed to being on a team,” but is rather “a very proud, independent voice, and it’s hard to be an independent voice when you’re working with a political party.
“If you don’t have a working relationship with the party and the activists, then it feels like their expectations and their demands—you don’t know what to do with them,” she adds. “And I think that was very hard for Dr. West. He just didn’t know how to deal with a whole set of expectations and feedback you get as a candidate.”
Philosopher, civil rights activist and independent presidential candidate Cornel West participates in a pro-Palestinian march through downtown Los Angeles on October 28, 2023. Following his departure from the Green Party, Jill Stein said he was “a very important voice, but he will be a voice that is not actually contesting for power.” DAVID SWANSON/AFP via Getty Images
Given her experience, she suggests “you have to learn your way into that kind of relationship—especially in a presidential campaign when it’s 24/7—and I think that was hard, that was very hard.
“It was really an experiment, I think on all of our sides, to see if this would work. “[It] didn’t work out, that really wasn’t a great surprise, but we didn’t find out about that until late in the game.”
When West decided to go his own way, Stein says that top Green Party activists did not want to lose the momentum his fleeting candidacy had brought, nor did they want to lose their hard-won ballot access.
“It felt like, if we didn’t fill that gap, there would be very little chance of having a pro-worker, anti-war, climate action campaign on the ballot,” she says.
Newsweek reached out to the West campaign via email on Friday for comment.
‘It’s Going to Be a Three-Way Race’
But with West as an independent and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. now running on his own terms as well, Stein isn’t the only left-wing challenger the Democrats face—making for a packed field that could diminish each other’s vote share. Yet Stein remains unperturbed.
She says that while “we have essentially an identical agenda” to West, he is “very unlikely” to get ballot access across the board—which the Green Party currently has in all 50 states, but which requires a lot of effort and money to acquire if not a Democrat or Republican—”so he will be a very important voice, but he will be a voice that is not actually contesting for power.”
On Friday, West’s campaign announced it had obtained ballot access in Alaska on the Aurora Party line. He said it was a “profound honor to be the first independent candidate on Alaska’s ballot for 2024.”
Stein also expresses uncertainty that RFK Jr. will be able to get on all the ballots “because it will require him [raising] a ton of money, and I’m not sure even he can raise it.” He has continued to receive donations, though, bringing in $8.7 million in the last quarter.
“It’s going to be a three-way race,” she predicts, “and I think we’re going to be in that race.”
But a sense of dispassion with the mainstream parties, a burgeoning field of alternative candidates and her decades of campaigning seems to inform Stein’s view that “there is a political rebellion that is in full swing right now.”
“This is basically a fight to achieve a democracy that will represent our interests,” she says. “People are done with this abusive system.”
‘A Textbook Case of Genocide’ in Gaza
Stein was born five years after the end of World War II and grew up as part of a Jewish family in Chicago, though she stresses she is no longer practicing.
As a political activist, she has also been outspoken about the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas—which is estimated to have resulted in the death of 1,200 Israelis and 18,700 Palestinians as of Friday, according to the Associated Press—describing Israel’s intervention in Gaza following the October 7 militant attack as “genocide” and calling for the Israeli government to be investigated for potential war crimes.
Israel and the U.S. government have ardently refuted the claims of genocide, with White House national security spokesperson John Kirby calling it an “irresponsible” depiction.
She says that her activism on the issue is an “expression of my Jewish identity” derived from her upbringing, which “really integrated into my bones” the desire to fight social injustice.
Being raised “not long after the Holocaust…there was enormous attention paid to the Holocaust, and the lessons of the Holocaust, which is that ‘this shall never happen again,’” Stein adds.
“There was also a sense of social responsibility as part of being raised Jewish, and those things, to me, made it absolutely intolerable to witness what is clearly a textbook case of genocide taking place right now in Gaza and not do everything in my power to stop this genocide.”
Stein is among the chorus of people calling for a permanent ceasefire, which Israel has continued to resist after a temporary one broke down, while others argue that such a move would give the well-entrenched militants time to regroup.
Great Time to Revisit the Economy
Among the slate of policies Stein has put forward is the right to a living wage—a minimum salary set according to the cost of basic living standards—being enshrined into law. It is usually considered to be more than the minimum wage, which federally stands at $7.25 an hour, though it is higher in some states.
But economists often argue that any hike in the minimum wage fuels inflation, worsening the cost of living for those it is intended to help: If an employer has to pay workers more, it will likely pass this cost onto the consumer. So how would Stein raise wages, keep inflation down, all while facilitating a transition to a green economy?
“This issue has been debated a lot, and there are, shall I say, the economists to my mind who are compelling; they make very good arguments and there is a very good track record for the improved productivity with better wages,” she says. “Work gets done because workers are not having to figure out how to keep a roof over their head, or get their family set.
“Provided an economy is increasingly productive, we don’t get inflation. You get inflation if you’re pouring money in, but you don’t have a more productive economy. So I think those kinds of issues can be answered.”
She says that rising wages in recent years were “nothing compared to inflation, and the inflation was not coming from workers’ wages.”
Singling out the Federal Reserve, Stein says: “The whole economy is being extremely mismanaged on behalf of, basically, Wall Street, which is making [off] like bandits while everyday people are taking it on the chin. I think it’s a great time to be revisiting many things about our economy.”
Newsweek reached out to the Fed via email on Friday for comment.
Uncommon Knowledge
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
A third of young voters aged 18 to 34 say they are undecided about who they will vote for in the 2024 presidential election, a recent poll showed, signaling an opportunity for candidates to attract this key voting bloc in the upcoming presidential polls.
The survey by the non-partisan Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE) at Tufts University found that about a third of Americans aged 18 to 34 are undecided about who they’ll vote for in the 2024 presidential election. Thirty-seven percent want to vote for a Democrat, while 25 percent will side with a Republican. Seven percent would vote for a third-party or independent candidate.
The 2024 election is set to begin in earnest in a little over six weeks, where the Iowa caucuses are slated to kick-off on January 15 where Republican presidential candidates will compete for a chance to replace Democratic President Joe Biden at the White House.
The youth vote promises to be a critical bloc in determining the next election, according to the CIRCLE study, which found that in the next election cycle, there will be 40 million potential new Gen Z voters, a fifth of the overall electorate.
“Together with the youngest millennials, young people ages 18 to 34 are poised to be a potential force in the next presidential election,” they said.
The Pre-2024 Election Youth Survey was developed by CIRCLE and conducted by polling firm Ipsos between October 25 and November 2, 2023, with a sample size of 2,017 self-reported U.S. citizens aged 18 to 34, CIRCLE said.
Newsweek contacted the CIRCLE for comment via email on Monday afternoon.
A sign stating “VOTE” is affixed to the wall beside children’s art work of hand drawings at the Shawmont School polling location on November 8, 2022 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The youth vote could be critical in deciding who the next president is at the next election. (Photo by Mark Makela/Getty Images)
Meanwhile, the poll also found that among young voters that are highly motivated to vote, 51 percent prefer a Democrat in 2024, 30 percent a Republican and 16 percent are still undecided.
“The high share of undecided voters (31 percent) among all youth in our survey is notable, though not totally unexpected far out from the election,” CIRCLE said in its report. “When looking at youth attitudes regardless of likelihood to vote, there appear to be undecided youth across the political spectrum: 35 percent of youth who are undecided about 2024 candidates voted for President Biden in 2020, while 15 percent voted for former President Trump.”
Youth voters told CIRCLE that in 2024, the economy will be top of mind in deciding how they vote. Young people said that inflation and the cost of living was their number-one concern, with 52 percent of those surveyed including it as one of their top-three issue in terms of priorities, followed by jobs that pay a living wage at 28 percent, gun violence prevention at 26 percent and climate change also garnering the support of 26 percent.
Uncommon Knowledge
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Donald Trump says his former Vice President Mike Pence should endorse him after Pence announced he was dropping out of the 2024 Republican presidential primary race on Saturday.
Pence was among the packed crowd of candidates seeking the 2024 Republican nomination for president, all of whom have struggled against the overwhelming polling strength of former president Trump and his re-election bid. Pence, in particular, struggled greatly and garnered only single-digit support from likely Republican voters. His troubles were attributed by some to his unpopularity with independents and moderate Republicansfor his association with the Trump administration, and among MAGA Republicans over his refusal to go along with Trump’s attempts to overturn the 2020 election.
“It’s become clear to me it’s not my time,” Pence said during his speech at the Republican Jewish Coalition Conference. “I have decided to suspend my campaign for president effective today.”
“We always knew this would be an uphill battle, but I have no regrets,” the former vice president added.
Republican presidential candidate former U.S. Vice President Mike Pence arrives at the Republican Jewish Coalition’s Annual Leadership Summit at The Venetian Resort Las Vegas on October 28, 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Pence announced that he was suspending his campaign for president at the event. Former President Donald Trump said Pence should endorse him. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
Pence’s withdrawal from the 2024 race on Saturday prompted cheers on social media from supporters of Trump.
While speaking in Las Vegas, Nevada on Saturday night, Trump also reacted to Pence’s decision to drop out of the race saying, “Everybody that leaves seems to be endorsing me. You know people are leaving now, and they’re all endorsing me. I don’t know about Mike Pence; he should endorse me. He should endorse me, you know why? Because I had a great successful presidency, and he was the vice president. He should endorse me.”
Continuing, Trump added, “I chose him, made him vice president, but people, people in politics can be very disloyal.”
Taking to X, formally Twitter on Saturday, after his announcement Pence said in part, “After traveling the country the past six months, it has become clear…this is not my time. As we leave this campaign, we do so with grateful hearts. I will always be grateful for the opportunities my family and I have been given to serve this country.”
Newsweek has reached out to Pence’s press team via email for additional comment.
Meanwhile, Trump has been a repeated critic of Pence, previously saying that the former vice president has gone to the “Dark Side” for his comments related to the 2020 election.
Pence also previously posted to X, formally Twitter, that Trump “demanded” that he choose between him and the constitution. Pence concluded that he will always put the constitution over the former president.
Uncommon Knowledge
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.