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Where is Kamala Harris on Monday? A look at her agenda

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With just eight days to go until the general election, Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris and her Republican opponent, former President Donald Trump, return to the battlegrounds for their final full week of campaigning before November 5. Polls show the rival candidates neck-and-neck. -and-neck in the Rust Belt trio from Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin and the Sun Belt quartet from Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and North Carolina. With just over a week until Election Day, more than 38 million votes have already been cast.

On Monday, Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, will be in Ann Arbor for a joint rally and concert series that will include an appearance by singer-songwriter Maggie Rogers, according to the Detroit Free Press, part of the USA TODAY Network. Before the meeting, the vice president will be in Saginaw and Macomb, Michigan.

Walz will also travel to Manitowoc and Waukesha, Wisconsin, on Monday, according to the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, also part of the USA TODAY Network. Republican vice presidential candidate Sen. J.D. Vance is expected to be in Wausau on the same day.

On Tuesday, a week before the general election, Harris will give a speech at the Ellipse in Washington, D.C., with the aim of swaying voters at the last minute. The campaign expects nearly 20,000 people, based on the permit application filed with the National Park Service. Walz will visit Georgia on Tuesday for early voting events in Savannah and Columbus, according to campaign officials.

Harris plans to visit every swing state in the coming days, including another trek to Wisconsin on Wednesday for a rally and concert with folk-rock band Mumford & Sons in Madison.

And on Thursday, two Mexican groups that have denounced Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric will support Harris ahead of the election, as first reported by Rolling Stone.

Los Tigres Del Norte will perform at a campaign event in Phoenix, Arizona, where the vice president is expected to speak, according to the Arizona Republic, part of the USA TODAY Network. She then heads to Las Vegas to work with Maná to reach undecided Latino voters in both battleground states.

Contributors: Francesca Chamber, Todd Spangler, Drake Bentley, Raphael Romero Ruiz, USA TODAY Network; Reuters and Rollingstone

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