


War is not the only reason some Muslims are ditching Democrats
In Michigan, where Kamala Harris leads by less than a percentage point, it could be the difference
AS PRESS conferences go, the one held at the Arab American Chamber of Commerce building in Dearborn, a suburb of Detroit, on October 27th, was uncomfortable. On one side of a boardroom table, opposite a crowd of cameras and microphones, sat around a dozen men and women who are influential in Arab-American circles. Taking turns to speak, each of them explained how they were directly affected by war in the Middle East; how they felt disappointed and betrayed by President Joe Biden; and how despite it all, they would still be voting for Kamala Harris.
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Donald Trump returns to New York for a bombastic closing pitch
And finds adulation in his hometown

Donald Trump could entrench a MAGA Supreme Court for a generation
Meet the leading contenders to replace Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito

The data hinted at racism among white doctors. Then scholars looked again
Science that fits the zeitgeist sometimes does not fit the data
Susie Wiles, the unassuming operative powering Donald Trump’s campaign
A low-key manager, she could land a high-flying job
Checks and Balance: The 50-year plan
Also: How to read America’s early-voting numbers
Kamala Harris’s closing argument
Her vision of the future is also a nostalgic one. Do enough Americans still believe in it?