Elon Musk confirmed he will be joining former President Donald Trump to watch the election results at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, Tuesday night.
“I actually just voted in South Texas because I’m registered to vote in Cameron County,” he said during a freeform election discussion on X Spaces.
“I just voted and [I’m] now headed to Florida,” he said.
As a protest against the Biden-Harris administration’s Israel-Palestine policy, Yaz Assaf cast a vote for Green Party candidate Jill Stein in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
“I’m a one-issue voter,” he told The Epoch Times. Assaf, a second-generation Palestinian American, said he has family who have died due to the conflict.
“I voted for my morals,” he said, describing both major parties as beholden to the Israeli lobby.
Shares of former President Donald Trump’s social media company took a wild ride on Election Day, surging by double digits in morning trading before taking a sharp dive in the early afternoon, with the whipsaw price moves triggering repeated trading halts as investors navigated a volatile session while awaiting the results of the tight presidential race.
The price of Trump Media and Technology Group stock, which trades under the ticker DJT, rose steadily in morning trading on Nov. 5, soaring as high as 18 percent—before rolling over shortly after 2 p.m. ET and falling sharply.
Google said on Tuesday it is working to fix an error causing the search engine to show a "where to vote" panel when people tried to search for Vice President Harris and Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio).
In a statement posted on X, the tech giant said that the panel was "triggering for some specific searches [because] Harris is also the name of a county" in Texas, and also happened for Vance because "it’s also the name of a county."
"Note very few people actually search for voting places this way," the company added.
CHARLOTTE, N.C.—In Charlotte’s historic arts district, Highland Mill Montessori School’s voting precinct is surrounded by homes with Vice President Kamala Harris banners hanging from porches.
Christian Daniel and Renee Provost are conservatives in a Democratic Party stronghold. The couple, who recently became engaged, spoke with The Epoch Times after casting their ballots.
“We’re in a left-leaning community, and we love it here, but I’m disgusted with the direction our country has gone in the last few years. I’m proud to be a young American who has conservative values,” said Provost, who is 30.
This year, a new group is joining California’s voter base as two school districts grant 16- and 17-year-olds the right to vote.
For the first time in California, teens this age in two Alameda County school districts—Berkeley and Oakland—have the right to vote in school board races this November.
“Young people are directly affected by the decisions made by their local school boards,” Oakland Unified School District Board of Education President Sam Davis said in a joint statement. “Lowering the voting age to 16 ensures that their perspectives are represented in the democratic process and will compel local politicians to address their concerns.”
RALEIGH, N.C.— During an emergency meeting on Tuesday afternoon, the North Carolina State Board of Elections voted to extend hours at two polling locations that had delays earlier in the day.
Voting will be extended by 30 minutes at Wilson County's Gardners Elementary School and the Pilot Mountain polling location in Burke County. These locations will now close at 8 p.m. The state’s remaining polls will close at 7:30 p.m. as originally scheduled, the State Elections Board reported.
State Board of Elections Executive Director Karen Brinson Bell said that polling location hours can be extended if there is a delay that extends more than 15 minutes.
CHARLOTTE, N.C.—On Tuesday afternoon, voters filed into the Mecklenburg County Board of Elections headquarters with their absentee ballots.
A mother arrived with her baby swaddled in warm clothes. A woman with a service dog handed over her absentee ballot. There were no lines, and people quickly walked in and out of the building.
Larry Snowden, president of Club 47 USA, says he considers himself to be “highly energetic” at age 78, the same age as former President Donald Trump.
“But the fact is … I don’t hold a candle to him when comparing our energy levels,” Snowden told The Epoch Times after the former president closed out his 2024 campaign with four rallies on Nov. 4, the day before Election Day.
RALEIGH, N.C.—North Carolina polling locations have not experienced any major incidents or long lines across the state, according to State Board of Elections Executive Director Karen Brinson Bell.
After receiving a record 4.2 million ballots during the early voting stage, North Carolina is expecting between 1 million and 1.5 million voters to cast their ballots on Election Day, Brinson Bell said in a Nov. 5 press conference.
Polls close at 7:30 p.m., after which officials across North Carolina’s 100 counties start tabulating early voting results, she said.
NEW YORK CITY—One of the heaviest turnouts in lower Manhattan voting precincts on Election Day was at Public School 3 at 490 Hudson Street.
As at other polling places in the city, support for Vice President Kamala Harris and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz ran high, but voters offered a range of reasons for their choice, as well as differing assessments of Harris’s ability to unite.
“I voted for Kamala Harris, and I will be blunt and admit that I would be scared, upset, and distraught if she did not win,” said Marina Foglitta-Tereo, who works as a UX researcher in the city.
New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu said he thinks there is a good chance that former President Donald Trump could win the Granite State, which went to Democrats the past two presidential elections.
“High voter turnout usually favors the challenger,” Sununu told CNN in an interview during the afternoon on Election Day, while polls were still open.
A polling location in Northville, Michigan, was closed on Election Day due to a gas leak, the city confirmed.
Officials announced at around noon that Northville City Precinct No. 1 was shuttered for voting because of a gas leak.
Consumers Energy visited the scene to examine the leak.
SANTA ROSA, Calif.–Approximately 40 people are waiting to vote in a line that is growing during the lunch hour as a steady stream of Californians arrive to cast their ballots.
The wait time is about 30 minutes, according to those who made it through the line.
A couple who cast their ballot said immigration and border security are the most important issues in this election.
U.S. Capitol Police in Washington announced on Tuesday the arrest of a man at the Capitol Visitor Center who was allegedly carrying implements that could start a fire.
“The man smelled like fuel, had a torch & a flare gun,” reads a police statement posted on social media platform X.
Capitol Police said the Capitol Visitor Center remains closed for tours while an investigation is underway.
Former President Donald Trump avoided telling reporters how he voted on Florida's abortion amendment.
"We did a great job, and then we brought it back to the states. As you know, I believe in exceptions as well," Trump said when first asked about the state's abortion rights ballot measure.
NARBERTH, Pa.—Local Republicans in Narberth, a small town in Montgomery County and a suburb of Philadelphia, told The Epoch Times how they are working to turn out Election Day voters using “strike lists” to contact voters who haven't yet been to the polls.
The lists contain information about Republican voters registered at a particular polling station. When a voter comes to vote, their name is checked off the list by a poll worker. Republicans can obtain information from election officials about whether a voter has voted, which enables them to contact people who haven't yet voted and urge them to turn out.
“I will just go look at the [election officials’] book and see, ‘Have they voted?’ If they haven’t voted then, from like 2:30 p.m. onwards, I’ll just call them,” said Regina, a local Republican volunteer, who was seated outside the town’s polling station at the Republican desk.
NEW YORK CITY—The Epoch Times interviewed voters at The Shed voting center in Manhattan on Election Day.
Shawn Wickens said he voted for Vice President Kamala Harris. He expects good things from her presidency, if she is elected.
MEQUON, Wis.—At the Frank L. Weyenberg Library in Mequon, Wisconsin, a father and son arrived to cast their ballots for former President Donald Trump.
“I know what Trump did in the past, and I can see what’s been going on with the Biden administration,” said John Leszczynski, 61.
MEQUON, Wis.—At polling places in Mequon—a city in Wisconsin's Ozaukee County that narrowly favored Trump in 2020—there was a steady trickle of Election Day voters in the late morning and early afternoon.
The chief inspectors there confirmed that absentee voting, whether by mail or in person, dominated the process this time.
Nancy Martin, chief inspector for the Mequon City Hall site serving wards 4 and 5, informed The Epoch Times that 1,735 absentee ballots had been received, nearly two-thirds of the registered voter pool.
A bomb threat that targeted a polling location in Georgia was traced back to Russia and wasn't credible, said Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger on Tuesday.
“We’ve heard some threats that were of Russian origin,” Raffensperger said at a news conference on Tuesday, adding that “in the interest of public safety, we always check that out, and we’ll just continue to be very responsible when we hear about stuff like that.”
Passwords for Colorado’s voting systems were online for four months, Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold said in a Nov. 4 statement.
Vice President Kamala Harris raised far more money than former President Donald Trump in the final days before the 2024 general election.
As required by the Federal Election Commission (FEC), the principal campaign committees backing both the Democratic and Republican presidential nominees disclosed each donation of more than $1,000 received between Oct. 17 and Nov. 4. The totals showed that Harris’s account pulled in nearly three times as much as Trump’s.
According to the sum of the 48-hour notice documents filed by the FEC, the principal campaign committee Harris for President raised about $29.2 million between Oct. 17 and Nov. 4. By comparison, the principal campaign committee Donald J. Trump for President 2024 Inc. raised about $10 million over the same period.
HOUSTON—It worked out well for Christy Munger, 52, who showed up in a white trash bag to vote on a rainy election day.
“This trash votes,” said Munger while holding her coffee and chatting at a Washington Heights voting location in Houston.
Former President Donald Trump cast his ballot on Tuesday at a polling site in Palm Beach, Florida, and encouraged supporters to stay in line to vote on Election Day.
Speaking beside his wife, former First Lady Melania Trump, he told reporters that “many more Republicans” appear to be voting than Democrats.
“I’m hearing that we’re doing very well everywhere,” he said, referring to Election Day voting.
CHESTER, Va.—Lou Tetreault, 72, a retired human resources professional, has been volunteering for elections at his precinct for 16 years.
On Tuesday, he checked in at the Harrowgate Elementary School at 4:45 a.m. to prepare for polls opening at 6 a.m. He will stay until the end of voting at 7 p.m., helping people vote at the curbside.
NEW YORK CITY—Voter turnout is strong in New York City’s legendary Greenwich Village neighborhood. People wearing Harris–Walz pins, buttons, and shirts milled around and lined up to vote.
Some did not want to speak on the record, but others were very vocal about their views on which candidates represent the best choice for New York City, the state, the nation, and the world.
BELGIUM, Wis.—The line to vote on Election Day at the village hall in the Village of Belgium, Wisconsin, stretched out the door earlier in the morning, according to the municipal clerk, Theresa Bartley.
“They wanted to be No. 1—so they were,” she said.
By roughly 9:45 a.m., 158 voters had cast ballots in the community, which is located in a more rural section of Ozaukee County, north of metropolitan Milwaukee. The voting site was near a museum dedicated to the local Luxembourgish community and a bust of Henri, the Grand Duke of Luxembourg.
One voter seen at the polls early Tuesday morning said her signs supporting Vice President Kamala Harris were stolen from in front of her home over the weekend in Ukiah, Mendocino County.
The incidents were caught on video and reported to police, local teacher Isa Posner told The Epoch Times.
She said the theft only strengthened her resolve to support Harris and called the presidential election the most consequential item on the ballot.
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.—Voter traffic was steady at mid-morning in Precinct 18 on the northwest side of Grand Rapids, where abortion and the economy were driving issues for several voters.
“Our business depends on Trump getting in office,” Nathan Koetz, 56, told The Epoch Times.
DOYLESTOWN, Pa.—For Election Day voters in Pennsylvania, representatives of a political party might be who they're met with before they walk in the polling station door.
Political parties in the state are allowed to set up tables outside polling places and speak to voters waiting in line to cast their ballots. Many representatives are handing out “sample ballot” papers that list the candidates from their party to help voters make their choices, as well as answer any remaining questions.
LAS VEGAS—Joe and Merrie Wolfe from “just around the corner” were first in line to cast their ballots at the Nellis Crossing Shopping Center voting site on the east side of Las Vegas when polls opened on Nov. 5 at 7 a.m. PST in Nevada.
“We’ve been here since 5 o’clock,” Joe said. “Lot of things to do, a busy day ahead, but this is important. I’ve been waiting to do this for a long time.”
Voting hours have been extended in Pennsylvania’s Cambria County after what officials described as a software problem disrupted the casting of ballots on Nov. 5.
“The Cambria County Board of Election learned early this morning that a software malfunction in the County’s Electronic Voting System has prevented voters from scanning their ballots,” county commissioners said in a statement to news outlets on Tuesday morning.
After the board filed to the Court of Common Pleas for an extension, the court extended the poll closing time from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m., local media reported.
ATLANTA—Mother-daughter team Betty Fondal, 80, and Tracy Coleman, 50, spoke to The Epoch Times just after casting their early morning vote in Atlanta.
Fondal was mum about her vote but said she was most concerned about property tax increases, especially as she prepares to acquire a new home.
Shares in Trump Media and Technology Group (TMTG), the parent company behind former President Donald Trump's social media platform Truth Social, surged 17 percent as voters prepared to cast their ballots on Election Day.
Trading under the stock ticker DJT, shares extended their rally by climbing to above $40.
Over the past month, the stock has rocketed 80 percent, adding to its year-to-date gain of 125 percent.
PITTSBURGH—The Pennsylvania Senate race between millionaire businessman Dave McCormick, the GOP nominee, and incumbent Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) has tightened, according to polls.
McCormick attributed his momentum to more people paying attention after Labor Day.
Early morning voters cast their ballots as soon as the polls opened at 7 a.m. in California.
One man said he's excited to get his vote in before he goes to work.
“I'm headed to my job now and wanted to make sure I voted before it's too late,” Jesus Ramirez, a resident of Mendocino County in the northern part of the state, told The Epoch Times.
LAS VEGAS—More than 1 million Nevadans—nearly 53 percent of the state’s registered voters—have already cast ballots in the 2024 election, with Republicans turning out in higher numbers than Democrats in a triple-tier battleground state where nonpartisan voters will decide the Nov. 5 election.
According to the Nevada secretary of state’s daily 9 a.m. update on Nov. 4, 1,072,640 registered Nevadans had voted either by mail or during the Oct. 19–Nov. 1 early voting period.
Registered Republicans had cast 405,602 of those votes, 43 percent of the tally, with 247,263 voting in-person early and 158,339 voting by mail, according to the state data. That is approximately two-thirds—67 percent—of the state’s 600,000 registered Republicans.
The teams are ready to deal with “issues seen in previous cycles,” such as extended polling location closures, ballot shortages, and improper extension of voting hours, according to Paxton’s office.
“Similarly, the OAG will prepare to take defensive action against activist groups who might attempt to influence the election through litigation,” Paxton’s office said in its statement. “The Election Day Rapid Response Legal Team will coordinate with the Texas Secretary of State to ensure that all issues are addressed immediately, and that Texas elections are fair and secure.”
The Epoch Times caught 10-year-old Miles Cage exiting the polls in Georgia Tuesday morning with his parents.
Although Mom and Dad were reluctant to speak about the election, Miles was eager to discuss the important issues.
Republican vice presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) cast his ballot at a polling site in Cincinnati on Tuesday.
As he cast his vote, Vance told reporters that he felt “good about this race” and noted that he also “felt good” about his winning senate bid race in the 2022 midterms.
A top election official in Georgia’s Secretary of State’s office said the voting results will be mostly complete by 8 p.m. ET during the Nov. 5 contest.
Georgia Deputy Elections Director Michael Barnes said in an on-camera interview on Monday that “come eight o’clock tomorrow night, we may have a very good picture of what the results might be.”
ATLANTA—Ludwidg “Lulu” Louizaire, Miss Georgia 2024, made an early appearance outside the Buckhead Library in Atlanta Tuesday morning.
She was tight-lipped with reporters about her vote, and she joked that as a former journalism major, she couldn’t be tricked into giving details.
TAMPA—Stellanie Yiannos, 25, cast her first vote in a presidential election as a Florida resident on the morning of Nov. 5 on her way to work.
She told The Epoch Times she moved from New Jersey two years ago, making her one of the more than 117,000 people to move from New Jersey from 2020 to 2024.
While the Sunshine State is projected to throw its 30 electoral votes behind former President Donald Trump this year, speculation has circulated around how the recent influx of residents from predominantly blue states, including New Jersey, could affect other areas of the state’s election results.
PALM BEACH—On Election Day, voters Ben and Susan hope to see the country come together after the "division" has been "ugly and upsetting."
Both said they support Vice President Kamala Harris but would have voted for "anyone but Trump."
Despite observing a divided nation, Ben and Susan have been open about their views, and "most people are respectful," they told The Epoch Times.
BUCKS COUNTY, Pa.—At the Trevose Fire Company near Bensalem, Pennsylvania, two queues trail around the building as voters line up to vote in the presidential election. Many of them arrived as soon as the polls opened at 7 a.m.
“[I waited] an hour and a half,” said George Greenhouse, a voter who arrived right as the polls opened.
NEW YORK CITY—At an elementary school in Hell’s Kitchen, Kariyma Reid voted for Proposition 1.
This ballot measure would expand an anti-discrimination provision in the state’s Constitution to include discrimination based on "sex, including sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, pregnancy, pregnancy outcomes, and reproductive health care and autonomy."
MINT HILL, N.C.—Outside the lavish Mint Hill Town Hall, volunteers from the Mecklenburg County Republican and Democratic parties manned tables and talked to voters.
On the GOP side, Debby Presson and her husband, John Presson, stood next to a life-size cardboard cutout of former President Donald Trump adorned with a Make America Great Again hat.
CRANBERRY TOWNSHIP, Pa.—At Cranberry Highlands Golf Course, Veronica Plantania took a swing and cast her ballot for former President Donald Trump.
She said she appreciated his policies on the economy and public safety when he was president and is “ready for him to do it again.”
HOUSTON—Even in a light rain, more than 25 voters were standing in line before polls opened at 7 a.m. at Trinity Lutheran Church in downtown Houston.
Tony Green, a black Houston resident, drove up in his van with several coworkers around 6:45 a.m.
Federal judges have rejected bids by Missouri and Texas officials to block U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) poll monitors.
U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk on Nov. 5 rejected a motion for a temporary restraining order that was lodged by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.
MILWAUKEE—Jerrold O’Sullivan was the first person in line to vote on Election Day at the Brookfield Conference Center in Brookfield, a suburb west of Milwaukee.
O’Sullivan had moved a flight around to be able to vote on Nov. 5.
“I couldn’t not vote. It’s so important to me,” the retired academic administrator told The Epoch Times.
CHARLOTTE, N.C.—Just before daybreak, cars started to arrive at the Olde Providence Elementary School voting precinct in Charlotte, a city typically won by Democrats in state and federal elections.
Sarah Pierrie, 37, was one of the first voters in line. She was prepared to cast her ballot for Vice President Kamala Harris.
“I have two young daughters, so preserving their rights to make decisions for themselves about their health and their body is important to me,” Pierre told The Epoch Times between sips of coffee on a rain-soaked morning.
ATLANTA—Elizabeth Gonzalez, a 61-year-old instructor, was first in line at the Buckhead Library polling location in Atlanta, Georgia. She arrived shortly after 5 a.m. because she said this election was especially important.
“I’ve just always been part of history because I've been to Afghanistan twice, that's part of history,” she said.
She was reluctant at first, but waited almost two hours to cast her vote early.
PITTSBURGH — Bill Wekselman is an older-looking man decked out in political campaign pins, including one for Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democrat presidential nominee.
Wekselman, a Democrat committeeman, described former President Donald Trump, the GOP presidential nominee, as “dangerous,” and pointed to Trump challenging the 2020 election results.
He told The Epoch Times that abortion and foreign policy are the issues he cares most about this election.
PITTSBURGH—Emilie Martza, a young voter, said she cast her ballot for Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democrat presidential nominee.
Talking to The Epoch Times outside Shaare Torah Congregation after voting on Nov. 5, she said the issues she cares most about are the Israel-Gaza conflict, abortion, gay marriage, and the economy.
Martza said she understands the importance of being a voter in a state that could decide the election.
RICHMOND, Va.—Two dozen voters lined up at the Shenandoah Community Association polling station in Richmond before the polls opened at 6 a.m.
The precinct—a swing zone in its own right—is located in a solid red Congressional District (VA-1) and voted for a Democratic candidate by a 5 percent margin in 2022. Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin won the precinct by 2.5 percent in 2021.
PITTSBURGH — Andrew Fitzpatrick, one of the first voters in line at Shaare Torah Congregation, told The Epoch Times on Nov. 5 that he might move to Europe if his candidate loses, though he said that would “probably not” happen.
Any move abroad would depend on if the winner grants funding for infrastructure such as green infrastructure in Pennsylvania, Fitzpatrick said.
The environment, “human rights, dignity, decency,” are issues he said he cares most about this election.
LAS VEGAS—More than 1 million Nevadans—nearly 53 percent of registered voters—have cast ballots in the 2024 election with Republicans turning out in higher numbers than Democrats in a battleground state where the Nov. 5 election will be decided by nonpartisans.
According to the Nevada Secretary of State’s daily 9 a.m. update on Nov. 4, 1,072,640 of 2.03 million registered Nevadans had voted by mail or during the Oct. 19-Nov. 1 early voting period.
Registered Republicans had cast 405,602, 43 percent, of those votes, with 247,263 voting early in-person and 158,339 by mail, according to state data. That’s two-thirds—67 percent of the state’s 600,000 registered Republicans.
There are 77 days between the Nov. 5 election and the Jan. 20, 2025, inauguration of the next president, during which the president-elect will ready his or her administration to take over from President Joe Biden.
While Americans’ attention has mostly been focused on the top-of-the-ticket presidential race, the contest between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris isn’t the only one that will determine the balance of power in 2025.
The two major parties are also competing for control of the House, seen as a toss-up, and the Senate, which Republicans are favored to win. More than 140 ballot measures will also be considered across the United States.
Presidential Race
Seven states are expected to determine the outcome of the presidential race: Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona, and Nevada. Three others—Minnesota, New Hampshire, and Nebraska’s 2nd congressional district, which awards one electoral vote, are rated toss-ups by RealClearPolitics.Results will start rolling in at 6 p.m. EST on Election Day.
Starting with Kentucky, which closes at 6 p.m. EST, and ending with Alaska and Hawaii, which close at midnight, results will come in every hour.
The largest set of states close their polls at 8 p.m. Every time listed in this article is Eastern Standard Time.
As polls close on Nov. 5, Americans will be eager to learn the result of the presidential election. Sometimes experts are able to accurately predict a winner on election night or early the next day, usually when the result is lopsided.
What Are the Battleground States?
Battleground states—also called swing states—are those that will likely determine which presidential candidate wins the White House, depending which way they swing.Technically, that’s true of all states. Yet some states have reliably favored one party or the other for decades, so there’s little doubt about who will win in 2024.
President Joe Biden has repeatedly said that the U.S. economy is “the envy of the world.” That message, however, doesn’t seem to be resonating with many voters who are heading to the polls to elect the next president on Nov. 5.
In battleground states, dozens of voters interviewed by The Epoch Times said that the economy is one of their top concerns and discussed how their lives have been affected by rising costs over the past four years.
Maria Orozco, a nurse from Fort Valley, Georgia, is a supporter of former President Donald Trump who says the economy is her single most important issue.
More than 82 million Americans have already voted in the 2024 general election, according to data collected by the UF Election Lab. Millions more will add their ballots to the mix as polls open across the country on Tuesday.
Here’s a rundown of everything voters should know:
- Every state and territory—except North Dakota—requires voter registration. Voters can verify their registration status here.
- Many states also require voters to present some form of identification to vote. A list of state requirements can be found here.
- Polls close at different times, depending on the state. The Epoch Times has compiled a schedule.
- Former President Donald Trump will vote in the morning at his local polling location in Palm Beach, Florida. His election watch party will be held at the Palm Beach Convention Center.
- Vice President Kamala Harris has already voted by mail. She will hold her watch party at Howard University, her alma mater, in Washington.
- A day before the election, RealClearPolling averages showed the race as a dead heat.
- The Epoch Times website will track election results in real time from 6 p.m. Eastern.
Early voting has exploded in popularity in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, but some voters still prefer to cast their ballots in person on Election Day.
When Is Election Day?
Election Day is Tuesday, Nov. 5.Am I Eligible to Vote?
Only U.S. citizens ages 18 or older are permitted to vote in federal elections.Additionally, all states and territories except North Dakota require voter registration.
Podcaster Joe Rogan has formally endorsed Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump on the eve of Election Day.
In a Nov. 4 statement posted on X, accompanying a video of his interview with Elon Musk, Rogan said during the podcast the billionaire had made the “most compelling case for Trump you'll hear, and I agree with him every step of the way.”
ATLANTA—Voters in Georgia have been inundated with appeals for their support—campaign rallies, texts, and calls encouraging them to donate to one candidate or the other, and perpetual advertisements—for months now.
Billboards, yard signs, and bumper stickers expressing support for one candidate or the other litter Buckhead, a neighborhood to the north of Atlanta’s city center.
Several Atlanta residents told The Epoch Times they’re sick of it, and look forward to the end of the election season.
The 2024 road to the White House has been riddled with more potholes, landmines, and detours than anyone could have imagined.
Amid a string of historic events, a few stand out as the most pivotal. The Republican nominee, former President Donald Trump, faced multiple criminal and civil court cases, and survived two assassination attempts. His opponent for the majority of the two-year campaign, President Joe Biden, exited the race after a difficult debate; then the Democratic Party chose Vice President Kamala Harris as a last-minute replacement to oppose Trump.
With the hours ticking down to the 2024 presidential election on Nov. 5, many voters on both sides of the political aisle worry about the outcome, they told Epoch Times reporters dispatched across the country.
It’s no wonder. It’s been a long—and unusually chaotic—election cycle.
After being beaten as the incumbent in 2020, former President Donald Trump announced his intention to run again in mid-November 2022, just shy of two years before Election Day 2024.
For more than a year, Epoch Times journalists have followed presidential campaigns and candidates across the country.
From the attempt on the life of former President Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, to violent protests outside the Democratic National Convention to “spin room” drama after Trump’s debate with President Joe Biden, we were there covering the news for you.