Harris vows Gaza peace, Trump tone darkens in final hours

Kamala Harris courted voters angered by the Gaza war while Donald Trump doubled down on violent rhetoric with a comment about journalists being shot as the tense U.S. election campaign entered its final hours.

The Democratic vice president and the Republican former president frantically blitzed several swing states as they tried to win over the last holdouts with less than 36 hours left until polls open on Election Day on Tuesday.

Trump predicted a "landslide," while Harris told a raucous rally in must-win Michigan that "we have momentum—it's on our side."

The 2024 race is going down to the wire, with more key states effectively tied at this point than in any comparable election. Over 77.6 million people have cast early votes, around half of the total ballots cast in 2020.

With the clock ticking, Harris, 60, spent the day in Michigan, where she risks losing the critical support of a 200,000-strong Arab-American community that has denounced U.S. handling of the Israel-Hamas war.

"As president, I will do everything in my power to end the war in Gaza," Harris said at the start of her speech at Michigan State University, noting that there were leaders of the community present.

'Demonic' 

But the rest of the speech was upbeat, with Harris spending more time urging people to get out and vote than attacking Trump.

"We got two days to get this done," she said.

Earlier, Harris quoted scripture in a majority-Black church in Detroit, Michigan, urging Americans to look beyond Trump.

"Let us turn the page and write the next chapter of our history," she said.

Trump zigzagged through Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Georgia on Sunday—the three biggest swing-state prizes in the...

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