A group of Michigan community leaders sounded the alarm during an interview with CBS News on Vice President Kamala Harris' support among Black men in the state.
Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are appealing to middle-class workers in very different ways.
Vice President Kamala Harris has taken the lead from former President Donald Trump among a key voting group in Michigan, a new poll shows.
Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign, anticipating losses among some corners of the party’s coalition in Michigan, is zeroing in on a strategy that they think will help overcome those losses by locking in reliably Democratic voters and growing their numbers among others.
As of Oct. 15, around 31% of voters who requested an absentee ballots have returned it so far, according to the Michigan Secretary of State's Office.
Recent internal polling has shown former Rep. Mike Rogers down 46% to 38% in Michigan after the Republican led Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D-MI) by a point in August.
Mary Waters, the at-large councilwoman for Detroit, warned that Harris was at risk of running an “elitist” campaign that overlooks Democrats who, though they are not currently part of Harris’s political network, can and want to be useful in electing her in November.
In December, Black men in Pontiac, Mich., told The Post they were unenthused about Biden. Now, some feel the same about Harris.
A new poll found that the former president's support among union voters in the state has increased by 11 points since April.
Democratic Rep. Elissa Slotkin and GOP former Rep. Mike Rogers are battling for a key seat in one of the most important presidential swing states.