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List of former Trump administration officials who endorsed Kamala Harris; List of Republicans who opposed the Donald Trump 2024 presidential campaign; List of Joe Biden 2024 presidential campaign primary endorsements; List of Kamala Harris 2024 presidential campaign endorsements; Endorsements in the 2024 Republican Party presidential primaries
Melania Trump, first lady of the United States (2017–2021) (Trump's wife) [179] Emmett Tyrrell, editor-in-chief for The American Spectator [1] Batya Ungar-Sargon, journalist and author, deputy opinion editor for Newsweek and former opinion editor for The Forward [180] Lucé Vela, first lady of Puerto Rico (2009–2013) [181]
This article or section may need to be cleaned up or summarized because it has been split from/to List of Donald Trump 2024 presidential campaign endorsements. List of notable state, municipal, sub-state, and local officials that have endorsed Donald Trump for the 2024 U.S. presidential election .
Tennessee is a deeply red state politically, and Trump carried the Volunteer State in 2016 and 2020 with just over 60% of the vote. Four years later, polls show Tennessee voters continue to be ...
Former President Donald Trump nabbed 11 electoral college votes by winning Tennessee over Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris.
While Kennedy dropped out of the race in August and endorsed Trump, he remains on the ballot in Tennessee. Accordingly, 7% of likely Republican voters who voted for Trump in 2020 said they’d ...
TN-01: Diana Harshbarger: August 4, 2022 Incumbent Elected: TN-03: Chuck Fleischmann: August 4, 2022 Incumbent Elected: TN-05: Morgan Ortagus: August 4, 2022 Open seat Removed from ballot before primary TN-07: Mark Green: August 4, 2022 Incumbent Elected: WI-03: Derrick Van Orden: August 9, 2022 Open seat Elected: WY-AL: Harriet Hageman [96 ...
The Santa Barbara News-Press, which endorsed Trump in 2020, [484] ceased publication in 2023. [ 485 ] The Poynter Institute noted that moves by the owners of The Washington Post and Los Angeles Times (as well as the Minnesota Star Tribune ) to stop endorsing presidential candidates follow a trend seen at regional newspapers.