OMAHA, Nebraska — Terri Sanders stood among the dozens of voters who turned out Tuesday afternoon to pick up campaign signs at a Democratic event in north Omaha. "I haven't seen outreach like this in a long time," the 67-year-old CEO of an African-American newspaper said of Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris ' organizing campaign in Nebraska's 2nd Congressional District, which includes Omaha. "Not since Obama.
" The honking car horns and pulsing music were a small measure of the energy Harris and Democrats are putting toward winning a single Electoral College vote, thanks to a quirky formula that allocates Nebraska's five electoral votes based on the votes in individual congressional districts in an otherwise reliably Republican state. In a national race that by all current measures seems exceedingly close, one small electoral vote could provide the margin of victory. So Democrats have planted a large flag.
Harris and Democratic groups have spent more than $5 million in the district since she entered the race on July 23, and have more than $6 million in ad time reserved through Election Day, Nov. 5, according to the media-tracking firm AdImpact. Former President Donald Trump's campaign, on the other hand, had spent only about $95,000 on advertising in the state and had reserved roughly $6,800 through Nov.
5. Trump and Republican allies had sought another route to victory, namely to persuade the Republican-dominated Legislature to rewrite the state's rules and make.