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The election campaign has entered its decisive week with the start of debates and early voting

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Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris. /GETTY IMAGES

Both candidates are still campaigning, especially in key states for this election.

WASHINGTON – After a week of work, the US is entering the final phase of the election campaign, which will end with the election on November 5, with the first votes starting to be counted for the current month.

Vice President and majority hopeful for the White House, Kamala Harris, is ahead of her conservative rival, former President Donald Trump, in a public standard of surveys, although in seven key swing states for those races, the lead is too narrow for there to be a reasonable result.

According to a collection of surveys done by the FiveThirtyEight site, Harris is ahead of Trump by 3.2 points in voting expectations across the country. In Pennsylvania, where the gap has been reduced to 1.2 points, the initial democratic will begin on September 16.

Seven days earlier, on the tenth, the two candidates will face each other in discretionary discussions. This will be the first election for Harris and the second for Trump, after they clinched a June 27 runoff with the previous equitable candidate, President Joe Biden, who declined to run for re-election on July 21 due to his poor performance in that election.

In late September, four other states (Illinois, Minnesota, South Dakota and Virginia) will undoubtedly have joined the early voting fray, setting the pace for a crucial political race in which Trump and Harris formalized their candidacies in public appearances of their parties in Milwaukee in July and Chicago in August.

According to Charles Kretchmer Luttwak, public representative for the Majority Rule campaign, in a statement on Tuesday, the election in November in these races depends on a simple question: “Which candidate captures the attention of the American public?”

Harris, as they see it, “knows that costs for Americans are still too high and has a plan to reduce them and strengthen the working class,” while Trump “either doesn’t understand it or doesn’t care, in view of the fact that his ‘finance system’ is to give tax cuts to extremely wealthy people and big companies.”

Thus, the rival party claims that “there is no ‘contrast’ between Kamala’s terrible financial approach and Biden’s” and continues an extraordinary mission of requesting money via email.

“We have to fight like crazy during these next 63 days. The fate of this extraordinary country is being fought for right now, and your generous commitment of just $5 or more could make the difference between victory and defeat,” Trump said in one of those messages on Tuesday.

The economy, immigration and fetus removal are the focus of both missions.

This Tuesday, Harris will begin a statewide tour with reproductive freedom as the main theme: She will start in Palm Beach, move to Jacksonville, Florida, and then visit at least 50 key states throughout the fall, according to the development schedule.

Trump, for his part, has no events scheduled until next Saturday, when he will hold a convention in Mosinee, Wisconsin. On Thursday, his official adviser, Ohio Congressman J.D. Vance, will deliver a speech in Phoenix, Arizona.

“Trump is the only candidate who will put America first, protect our communities, and put resources in America to protect our manufacturing and organization workers,” Michael Whatley, leader of the Conservative Public Board, said in a statement Tuesday.

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