October 20, 2024
US presidential rivals, Republican ex-president Donald Trump and Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris invited big names to their campaign rallies this Saturday, as elections are just round the corner.
The two candidates emphasised on early voting in the toss-up states as the presidential race accelerates at breakneck speed.
Harris was joined by pop stars Lizzo in Detroit and Usher at the campaign rallies in Atlanta, where the Democratic candidate referred to her Republican rival as exhausted and unhinged.
Trump, who is running for a second go in the White House, countered those accusations with a marathon speech in Pennsylvania, as billionaire Elon Musk campaigned for him elsewhere in the state.
Both candidates are fighting on every front to seal up voters' support in a race that polls suggest is effectively tied with fewer than three weeks to Election Day.
Harris told voters in Detroit that her opponent's platform is "self-consuming" while repeating vows to invest in the working and middle classes.
"We stand for the idea that the true measure of the strength of a leader is not based on who you beat down, it's on who you lift up," said Harris.
Later in Atlanta she accused the 78-year-old Trump of "ducking debates and cancelling interviews because of exhaustion."
"When he does answer a question or speak at a rally, have you noticed he tends to go off script and ramble, and generally, for the life of him, cannot finish a thought?" she said.
"He's called it the weave. But we here we will call it nonsense."
Trump began his more than 90-minute rally with a lengthy monologue on the golfer Arnold Palmer, for whom the regional airport in Latrobe, where the Republican appeared, is named.
He then launched into his routine, meandering speech that includes attacking migrants, personally denigrating Harris and repeating false claims about the 2020 election.
But his was a show of onstage endurance, which also included a number of guests and screenings of his filmed campaign ads.
Shortly after recalling his own expensive education at the private Ivy League University of Pennsylvania, Trump vied to appeal to working class voters by bringing a parade of steel workers in hard hats onstage.
He also underscored the importance of the eastern US state's electoral college delegates to the overall election: "If we win Pennsylvania, we win the whole damn thing."
Earlier in the day the pop star Lizzo noted that "whether you're a Democrat or Republican or neither, you deserve a president who listens when you speak."
"You deserve a president who respects when you protest. You deserve a president who understands that their job is to be a public servant," she said before emphasising that Harris offers just that.
Lizzo, who sported a suffragette-white pantsuit as she addressed the crowd in Motor City, also drew cheers when urging listeners that America was more than ready for its first woman president, dropping a reference to her own hit song: "It's about damn time!"
One of Atlanta's major stars, Usher, told voters there that "I'[m counting on you" to get Harris's "campaign across the finish line" in Georgia.
Both candidates are spending their final campaign days in pivotal battleground states where early voting is already underway.
Musk, who endorsed Trump in July, is one of the Biden administration's fiercest critics and has emerged as a loud voice in US politics since taking over Twitter, now known as X.
The Tesla and SpaceX CEO has taken an increasingly visible role in Trump's campaign and has donated almost $75 million to his political organisation America PAC.
Speaking in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, he announced he would start randomly distribute cash awards, $1 million each day until the November 5 vote, to a registered voter in the state who signed his organisation's petition.