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Happy Thursday! Election Day is 12 days away. Let’s take a look at the action on the campus of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where musician Yung Gravy led a group of students to vote early. (We’ve come a long way since that first Rock the Vote PSA with Madonna.)
LAS VEGAS—There is a jauntiness to J.D. Vance as he campaigns these days. You might even call it a sense of joy. After all, in less than two weeks he could be the vice president-elect of the United States. Vance beams as he walks out to cheers from the crowds, which are smaller but no less fervent than those for his running mate, Donald Trump. He cracks jokes about Vice President Kamala Harris and Gov. Tim Walz. Vance is having fun; just ask him.
“We’re having fun at this event, and we’re having fun on the Trump campaign,” Vance said Wednesday morning in a ballroom at the Treasure Island Hotel (owned by close Trump friend Phil Ruffin) on the Las Vegas Strip. A day earlier in Arizona, at a rally in the Phoenix suburbs, Vance said the same thing. “This is a lot of fun, and I like being here,” he told the crowd at the Tyr Tactical, a tactical gear manufacturer in Peoria.
It’s not an act. Vance looks loose and confident, and it reflects how good Republicans feel about the state of the presidential race. “I don’t think it’s that close. That’s my personal opinion,” Jason Beck, the Republican mayor of Peoria and the founder and CEO of Tyr Tactical, told Dispatch Politics. Brad Larsen, a voter from Fountain Hills, Arizona, was a little more realistic. “I think Arizona’s gonna go for Trump. I think it’s gonna be very, very close,” Larsen said. “Very close.”
“We’re going to take this state back,” Stavros Anthony, Nevada’s Republican lieutenant governor, said before Vance took the stage Wednesday. “And I will tell you, I feel very confident because of what’s happening today and what’s going to happen in the next two weeks.”
And why shouldn’t they?
In these two battleground states of the Southwest, Trump is narrowly leading Harris in the poll averages: by 1.8 points in Arizona and by 0.9 points in Nevada. Initial returns of early-vote ballots, which registered Democrats have dominated in recent years, now show a Republican edge in both states. If Trump can take back Arizona and Georgia—two of the longtime red states Joe Biden won in 2020—and pick off Nevada, which Democrats have kept in their column since 2008, he’ll need just one of the “blue wall” battlegrounds of Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin. A run on all of them would have Republicans looking at an Electoral College landslide they haven’t seen since 1988.*
The possibility is thrilling for the GOP.
“It’s going to be very fun to beat Kamala Harris on November 5,” Vance said in Peoria.
The truth is more complicated: The election remains close. The margin of error in the polls suggests the race is as tight as ever in the battleground states. Operatives from both parties say the Democratic ground game—the coordinated effort to make sure their voters get to the polls—appears much more robust than the Republican effort. And while the boost in Republican early voting numbers out West is a better situation for the GOP than it was four years ago, when Trump regularly trashed the practice, these initial numbers are hardly conclusive of what the final vote tally will look like.
Yet it’s hard to ignore how self-assured Republicans sound, given the way the Harris campaign appears to have stalled out in recent weeks. Her campaign has been described as “jittery” and “concerned” about her position in the battleground states. Her recent interviews, especially her sit-down with Fox News anchor Bret Baier last week, have given her opponents plenty of fodder to argue Harris is not up to the job. In his rallies in Arizona and Nevada, Vance had plenty of cracks about the vice president’s shaky media strategy.
“One of the things they make [here] is body armor and other protective equipment,” Vance said at Tyr Tactical in Peoria. “And I think maybe I’ll have to take some to Kamala Harris for every time she does a softball interview.”
And in Vegas, he had the room laughing loud and hard at this one: “You know, I told the president yesterday, ‘President Trump,’ I said, ‘Sir, my goal is, every time I do a major national media interview, is to pick us up 50,000 votes. But I think Kamala Harris, she gets us 100,000 votes.’”
On top of the comedy routine, Vance works hard to make the case that it’s the Republicans, not the Democrats, who wear the mantles of happy warriors. In Vegas, he referenced a recent video where he claims Harris was “scolding” Trump for being funny. (It wasn’t immediately clear what video Vance was referring to, and the campaign did not respond when asked.)
“She was like, ‘How can you, how can you dare have a sense of humor about American politics?’” Vance said. “It’s one of the things I love about my running mate, is he does have a sense of humor.”
Then Vance added what might as well be the guiding principle of the final stretch of the race: “You can fix the country but have a good time while you’re going around and campaigning across the United States,” he said as the audience applauded. “Right?”
“I’m still a Traditional Republican. … There are some on my side now who don’t sound that way. I’m going to be arguing more with them probably than the Democrats.”
—Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell commenting on potential outcomes of the 2024 elections, October 23, 2024
*Correction, October 24, 2024: The main item of the newsletter incorrectly referenced the 1992 election instead of the 1988 election.