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Trump, Harris in dead heat

Trump, Harris in dead heat

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An unprecedented and unpredictable race for the White House between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris comes to an end Tuesday as Arizona voters choose between two strikingly different visions for the nation.

At the center of the action is Arizona, a battleground state with 11 electoral votes that will play an important role in deciding which candidate wins the White House.

Polls in Arizona are open Tuesday from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. Many Arizonans have already voted using mail-in ballots and drop boxes.

Locally, the Arizona Democratic Party is hosting an election night event in Phoenix. The state GOP decided against hosting a party this year.

Election 2024: See Arizona election results | Live coverage on election day

The dramatic battle for the presidency was marked by chaos and a series of unexpected events.

Only a few times in history has a former president lost and tried again for the White House, or a president resigned in the middle of a re-election campaign. Additionally, presidential candidates running on felony convictions are a rarity in U.S. history.

According to the latest public pool data, the race is a dead heat in Arizona. Trump is narrowly ahead of Harris, but the numbers are so close that each candidate has a real chance of winning the Grand Canyon State.

Voter frustration over the economy and immigration is exacerbating Trump's slight lead among Arizona voters. The former president has struck a confident tone at recent rallies in Arizona and even mused on stage in Prescott Valley that he should be in the all-important swing state of Pennsylvania instead.

“We are going to win Arizona,” Trump said at an October rally in Tempe, indicating he was pleased with the early voting numbers. “We will defeat Kamala Harris.”

However, Harris isn't far behind. She is strongest on issues of democracy and reproductive rights, and her campaign is relying on a massive ground operation to push her to the top in a state where Democrats have made big gains during the Trump era.

“It will be a very close race until the end. And we are the underdog,” Harris told a rally crowd in Phoenix last month.

The battle for the White House appeared to be shaping up to be a rematch between Trump and President Joe Biden in 2020, but that changed dramatically in late June when Biden's disastrous debate performance against Trump sent Democrats into a panic. The president was ousted by his own party within weeks. He dropped his re-election bid in July, long after the primary was over.

That same month, Trump was nearly killed on live television when a gunman opened fire during the former president's campaign rally in Pennsylvania. A bullet hit his ear, leaving Trump bloody but otherwise unharmed as Secret Service agents rushed him from the stage. He would be the target of another failed assassination attempt in September.

Harris took Biden's place just weeks before the Democratic National Convention, leaving senior members of her party on the fence about their own presidential ambitions and the possibility of an open convention. In her new role as candidate, Harris only had three months to mount a presidential campaign. She took over Biden's campaign activities across the country, including in Arizona, where the groundwork for the general election had been laid since February.

This story will be updated as election results are announced.

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