Michigan will remain competitive until Election Day, Rep. Debbie Dingell predicts —"The Takeout"
CBSN
Rep. Debbie Dingell believes her state will remain competitive until the last vote is counted on Election Day.
"I don't think we know who's going to win Michigan yet," the Michigan Democrat told chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett on "The Takeout" podcast.
Dingell said in 2016, she had a sense that Donald Trump would win her state, but that's not the case this year.
For nearly two decades, there's been an effort to change the way the U.S. has always elected its presidents by creating a workaround to the Electoral College, the indirect popular election process that's been used in every American presidential election in history. A collection of states is now a little closer than it was four years ago to choosing a president by popular vote, after Maine signed legislation in April to join the effort.
President Biden's administration is planning to soon issue a regulation to cement the sweeping asylum restrictions it enacted at the southern border over the summer, two U.S. officials told CBS News, describing changes that would make it far less likely for the strict rules to be lifted in the near future.
Toward the end of June 2018, condemned inmates at Holman Correctional Facility in southern Alabama received slips of paper that gave them the choice to decide how they would prefer to die. There were two options: lethal injection, the default method, which Alabama had been accused of botching in the prison's execution chamber; and nitrogen hypoxia, an experimental alternative that the state, facing political pressure to carry out death sentences despite a tally of mistakes, had recently authorized.