Berliner Boersenzeitung - Harris and Trump push for Latino vote with just 14 days to go

EUR -
AED 3.966247
AFN 70.72766
ALL 98.64453
AMD 418.130655
ANG 1.94639
AOA 984.82727
ARS 1062.331863
AUD 1.616307
AWG 1.943739
AZN 1.895664
BAM 1.950579
BBD 2.180564
BDT 129.054586
BGN 1.955661
BHD 0.407119
BIF 3126.179569
BMD 1.079855
BND 1.420897
BOB 7.46306
BRL 6.14556
BSD 1.080009
BTN 90.799974
BWP 14.418409
BYN 3.53434
BYR 21165.15356
BZD 2.176884
CAD 1.492197
CDF 3077.586266
CHF 0.934506
CLF 0.037141
CLP 1024.835727
CNY 7.691797
CNH 7.687805
COP 4604.317179
CRC 556.500223
CUC 1.079855
CUP 28.616151
CVE 110.631406
CZK 25.223138
DJF 191.911847
DKK 7.458341
DOP 65.33326
DZD 143.947967
EGP 52.597138
ERN 16.197822
ETB 128.745698
FJD 2.413151
FKP 0.826271
GBP 0.831758
GEL 2.958699
GGP 0.826271
GHS 17.43991
GIP 0.826271
GMD 75.58973
GNF 9319.146351
GTQ 8.351647
GYD 225.946302
HKD 8.392469
HNL 27.061598
HRK 7.439152
HTG 142.179457
HUF 400.237238
IDR 16813.986735
ILS 4.06939
IMP 0.826271
INR 90.918427
IQD 1414.344703
IRR 45453.788628
ISK 149.311565
JEP 0.826271
JMD 171.400454
JOD 0.765618
JPY 163.128283
KES 139.301109
KGS 92.323399
KHR 4389.609056
KMF 492.252069
KPW 971.869053
KRW 1489.951377
KWD 0.330943
KYD 0.899991
KZT 523.967603
LAK 23673.115449
LBP 96754.987442
LKR 316.702348
LRD 207.62909
LSL 18.940362
LTL 3.18853
LVL 0.653193
LYD 5.199521
MAD 10.6857
MDL 19.385116
MGA 4963.013177
MKD 61.527836
MMK 3507.326182
MNT 3669.34655
MOP 8.647994
MRU 42.940448
MUR 49.749027
MVR 16.575612
MWK 1874.085176
MXN 21.559408
MYR 4.673588
MZN 69.024273
NAD 18.940558
NGN 1779.600499
NIO 39.700869
NOK 11.791905
NPR 145.280158
NZD 1.786069
OMR 0.41569
PAB 1.080014
PEN 4.069428
PGK 4.316208
PHP 62.416692
PKR 299.902708
PLN 4.32432
PYG 8545.08954
QAR 3.931321
RON 4.973704
RSD 117.055153
RUB 103.413575
RWF 1457.803944
SAR 4.055293
SBD 8.947215
SCR 14.461698
SDG 649.53415
SEK 11.393223
SGD 1.420984
SHP 0.826271
SLE 24.524637
SLL 22644.011218
SOS 616.596981
SRD 35.663825
STD 22350.813592
SVC 9.449708
SYP 2713.167804
SZL 18.940478
THB 36.153444
TJS 11.469355
TMT 3.79029
TND 3.3489
TOP 2.529127
TRY 36.990101
TTD 7.337226
TWD 34.62608
TZS 2942.604354
UAH 44.634137
UGX 3958.405346
USD 1.079855
UYU 44.889853
UZS 13854.536301
VEF 3911830.646382
VES 42.410517
VND 27433.710519
VUV 128.20256
WST 3.024872
XAF 654.20602
XAG 0.032013
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.918361
XDR 0.810231
XOF 653.311786
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.40148
ZAR 18.938418
ZMK 9719.989556
ZMW 28.700317
ZWL 347.712796
  • RBGPF

    1.5000

    62

    +2.42%

  • BCC

    -4.2500

    133.65

    -3.18%

  • NGG

    -0.7400

    66.29

    -1.12%

  • SCS

    -0.0800

    12.81

    -0.62%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    24.93

    +0.24%

  • CMSC

    0.0850

    24.735

    +0.34%

  • BCE

    -0.0700

    33.32

    -0.21%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0400

    7.36

    -0.54%

  • RIO

    0.5300

    65.48

    +0.81%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.07

    -0.61%

  • GSK

    -0.1600

    38

    -0.42%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    77.32

    -0.16%

  • RELX

    -0.6100

    47.02

    -1.3%

  • VOD

    -0.0800

    9.55

    -0.84%

  • BTI

    0.6400

    34.89

    +1.83%

  • BP

    0.1100

    31.58

    +0.35%

Harris and Trump push for Latino vote with just 14 days to go

Harris and Trump push for Latino vote with just 14 days to go

US election rivals Donald Trump and Kamala Harris made their pitches to Latino voters Tuesday as their neck-and-neck White House race entered its final two-week stretch.

Text size:

Democratic candidate Harris was set to tape an interview with Spanish-language TV network Telemundo while Republican nominee Trump held a roundtable event with Latino leaders in Florida, where he called the border the "biggest issue" facing the nation.

Both campaigns are pumping hundreds of millions of dollars into a last push for undecided voters who could tilt the balance in their favor, with polls showing the candidates in a dead heat ahead of Election Day.

About 18 million Americans have already voted by mail or in person -- representing more than 10 percent of the total in 2020.

Whatever the result, Americans will make history on November 5: they will either elect the first woman president in the world's leading superpower -- or they will put the first convicted felon into the White House.

At Trump's event, one speaker falsely claimed Vice President Harris and outgoing President Joe Biden were "human traffickers" while pushing baseless claims that Trump won the 2020 election.

The former president still refuses to accept his defeat at the polls four years ago and is expected to reject the result in November if he loses again -- potentially pitching the United States into chaos.

Some polls appear to be giving the Republican, who at 78 is the oldest nominee from a major party in US history, a slight edge recently -- but all within the margin of error.

- Early voters -

Trump, speaking to Latino leaders, falsely claimed the Biden administration was flying in "hundreds of thousands of illegal migrants."

Harris, who will give an interview to NBC on Tuesday evening, has been honing in on abortion.

Her campaign announced she would on Friday travel to Texas -- "ground zero of Trump's extreme abortion bans" since a 2022 Supreme Court decision ended the national right to the procedure.

In Madison, Wisconsin, a long line for early voting snaked through a library branch, and resident Dawn Lauderdale said she would have to come back another day to cast her ballot.

"There is no reason any politician, male or female, should be in that room," the Harris supporter said, referring to abortion procedures.

Harris, 60, is also deploying two of her party's most popular emissaries onto the campaign trail: Barack and Michelle Obama.

The former president, speaking at a rally in Madison, rolled back the years with fiery attacks on Trump.

"Don't boo, vote!" he implored people after each jibe.

Upping the star factor, rapper Eminem will introduce Obama at a major Harris campaign event in Detroit on Tuesday, according to US media.

After his Florida appearance, Trump was set to fly to North Carolina, for an event that is supposed to be devoted to the economy.

He rarely sticks to the topic at his rallies, however -- instead, recent weeks have featured rambling monologues and threats about weaponizing the military against Democrats, whom he calls "the enemy from within."

One televised town hall veered into an impromptu music session as Trump abandoned discussion of the election to play his favorite hits while swaying on stage.

The Harris campaign has begun to hammer at his mental and physical fitness to occupy the Oval Office.

But a tide of MAGA-capped supporters continue to flock to his events, convinced that he is the victim of political persecution, or that Democrats are instigating threats against him.

Democrats are also seeking to woo moderate Republicans turned off by Trump's ominous rhetoric and scandals.

Harris has sought to frame herself as a "joyful warrior" seeking to turn the page on Trump's years of outrage and move into a new generation of American political leadership.

(F.Schuster--BBZ)