WASHINGTON — It's been a busy Sunday for the two main contenders in the US presidential race with less than 24 hours to go until polling day on Tuesday. Both Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump held campaign events in key swing states, battleground areas widely expected to decide the outcome of the election. Harris campaigned in Michigan with Trump blitzing through Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Georgia.

Harris vowed to "turn the page on a decade of politics driven by fear and division" during a rally in East Lansing. "We are done with that and we are exhausted with it," she told the crowd of supporters. "Well, you all know what we say: we are not going back.

We are not going back. We are not going back because ours is a fight for the future." Harris described the upcoming election as "one of the most consequential elections of our lifetime," and expressed confidence that she would win the race for the White House.

She also repeated her pledge to protect women's reproductive rights, saying that when the day comes that Congress passes a bill to restore such freedoms nationwide she would "proudly sign it into law." But during a campaign stop in Detroit, Harris refused to say how she voted on measures that would reverse criminal justice reforms approved in recent years in her home state of California. "I am not going to talk about the vote on that," she said, adding that she didn't want to "create an endorsement one way or another around it".

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