PHOENIX – The 2024 election is three days away.
Both parties are rallying for Arizona voters and both vice presidential candidates were in the Grand Canyon State today.
The message on both sides of the ticket is simple: Go to the polls!
GOP Vice Presidential candidate JD Vance spoke in Scottsdale today at Dillon Precision, a gun manufacturing company.
Meanwhile, Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Walz spent the day on the mountain canvassing voters in Flagstaff.
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In their latest push, both parties expect voter turnout to be reached.
The majority of registered voters in Arizona are not affiliated with either the Democratic or Republican parties, and they will likely determine the outcome.
With 4.3 million registered voters in Arizona, only 300,000 party members separate the 1.5 million registered Republicans and 1.2 million registered Democrats.
However, the difference is negligible if voters cross party lines during the general election.
Trump campaign feels confident, Harris campaign works in rural areas
Today, the Trump campaign says they feel confident they are leading in Arizona.
“It is my solemn promise that when Donald J. Trump becomes president of the United States, we will go to war against the Mexican drug cartels to get this poison out of our country and bring sanity back to the people of Arizona,” Vance said. “Donald Trump will usher in a golden age of peace and prosperity by fighting for some common sense economic principles that make the American Dream a reality for all of you and all of our fellow citizens that we love.” We will make the American dream accessible again.”
Walz heads into rural parts of the state and stops in Tuscon later tonight.
“A president for all Americans, a president with vision. A president who promised you on day one that he would go to the White House with a to-do list for your life, not a list of enemies that gets added to every day,” Waltz said. “She said it: At the top of the list is lower costs for you and your families across the country. Keep it in your pocket.”
Election Update:
More than 1.2 million Arizonans have already cast our state’s 11 electoral votes.
Arizona was a red state in 2016 and a blue state in 2020.
In three days, Arizona is up for grabs.