morning. Now to some political news on this Tuesday morning. The first presidential debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump is one week from today. If it in fact happens. That's right. Both campaigns are kicking into high gear now in the final stretch of this election season. So let's bring in Doug Luzader from Washington. Good morning. Good morning. And you look at the seven or so states that are likely to determine the outcome of this election. The race is extremely tight. So a lot could hinge on this debate. If it happens next week, can we please give it up again for our president, Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris enlisted her boss to help her campaign yesterday in Pennsylvania, a state where President Joe Biden has strong ties and along with attacks on former President Donald Trump, there was a sense of urgency. So we're 64 days out from this election. Ballots in Pennsylvania will start dropping in 14 days. 14 days. She's a radical left Marxist, and that's what she is a Trump has kept up his drumbeat of attacks on Harris, and the two are set to face off a week from today on a Philadelphia debate stage, despite continuing efforts by the Harris campaign to change the rules from the last debate, where only the candidates speaking had a live microphone, she's now trying to change the rules of the debate. We've agreed to the rules of the debate. We are looking forward to being there on September 10th. The microphones will be off, people will be standing at a lectern and there will be no notes. The Harris campaign says the Trump campaign is afraid of having both microphones on either way. In the remaining weeks ahead, both campaigns will be on a tear through swing states. If you look at some of the key polls, the state polls, I think there are a number of states, most notably Georgia, Arizona and North Carolina, that some Republicans thought were kind of in the bag for Trump. And now they're in play. Not saying he's going to lose them, but they're in play. And these are both well-funded campaigns. And this means they're going to have to spend that money over the course of the not just the remaining election, but in through those seven or so swing states. And this is going to get expensive just imagining, you know, being like living there and, and all the political ads that people are seeing just nonstop. The robocalls, the commercials. Yeah. If you're in a state like Wisconsin, you are just inundated with these ads, right now. I bet you the election night cannot