Politics & Government
Watch Live Stream: Donald Trump Rallies In Concord, Selma, North Carolina
The GOP nominee will finish a jam-packed day in the Tar Heel State.
Donald Trump will wrap up what will be a jam-packed day for the GOP nominee with two rallies in North Carolina, one of the most coveted swing states for Tuesday's election day.
After appearances in Jacksonville, Florida, and Berwyn, Pennsylvania, Trump is scheduled to appear in Concord and Selma at 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. ET, respectively.
"Scheduled" being the operative word there. Looking at Trump's itinerary today on his official website, we're finding it hard to believe he can have his Jacksonville rally at noon and then make it to Pennsylvania by 2 and back down to North Carolina by 4. Seriously, is this physically possible?
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We hope Trump brought his time-turner with him on the campaign trail today.
Update: It appears the Pennsylvania event will feature Melania Trump and Karen Pence — not Donald Trump and Mike Pence as the campaign website advertises.
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Anyway, if you want to watch live streams of Trump's two North Carolina rallies (we can't promise you they'll be on time), here's where you can watch Trump in Concord:
And here's where you can watch Trump in Selma:
North Carolina and its 15 electoral votes have become an intense focus for both campaigns during this home stretch.
It's not hard to see why. The Tar Heel State is considered a "toss up" in nearly every electoral projection map, and the candidates are virtually tied in Real Clear Politics' average of major state polls.
Campaigning for Hillary Clinton on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on Wednesday, President Obama told the crowd, "The fate of the republic rests on your shoulders."
"I want to speak not just to Democrats. I want to speak to Republicans here in North Carolina as well. I am obviously a partisan Democrat. I understand that," Obama said. "But we're not Democrats or Republicans first, we're Americans first, and there's a standard of behavior that we ought to expect of our leaders."
Image via Gage Skidmore, Flickr, used under Creative Commons
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