David Plouffe, a senior adviser to Vice President Harris’s marketing campaign, advised Monday that the Democratic nominee may win all seven swing states.
“And, , only a couple hours in the past, reviewing all of the early vote information, what we’re projecting for Election Day, how we expect undecideds are breaking, we have now a reputable pathway to all seven states tomorrow evening to enter Kamala Harris’s column,” Plouffe told CNN’s Erin Burnett on “Out Entrance.”
“However we imagine they’re all gonna be shut,” he mentioned.
Burnett then requested Plouffe, “However you suppose you can win all seven?”
“Yes,” he responded.
Harris and former President Trump have their eyes on seven battleground states that might resolve the election: Arizona, Georgia, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Michigan and Nevada.
On Election Day, The Hill/Resolution Desk HQ’s (DDHQ) nationwide polling common exhibits Trump and Vice President Harris tied with 48.4 % assist.
In Michigan, Harris has a slight edge over her GOP rival — 48.7 % to 48.3 %, the DDHQ common exhibits. Trump, nonetheless, is up 2.6 factors in Arizona, 1.7 factors in Georgia and Nevada, 1.5 factors in North Carolina, slightly below 1 level in Pennsylvania and slightly below a half level in Wisconsin.
Burnett famous latest feedback from Nevada politics professional Jon Ralston, who predicted that Harris would clinch the Silver State. She then requested Plouffe “you’re saying you think you could win all seven, but do you share that optimism about Nevada specifically?”
“We’ve liked what we’ve seen. I mean, listen, what I think is largely than — overstated in some of the analysis or coverage or cheerleading is, ‘Hey, there’s a lot more Republicans voting early than there were in ‘20.’ Yeah, of course. Trump told them not to vote in ‘20 early, in a feat of, like, epic political malpractice,” he replied.
The Hill has reached out to the Trump marketing campaign for remark.