to come out and shift that narrative. as part of this week, erica, something that you have lived through is the topic of immigration. and when we look at the issue of birthright, we hear the word caravan so much, is this going to potentially suppress latino hispanic voting come tuesday or even in early voting? i hope not. i think for me this is, you know, we expected this. trump and the gop as a whole has been doing this. they ve been doing this historically for many elections, you know. they come close into an election, they think they might lose and here s immigration, want to talk about undocumented immigrants. we need to make sure we re not getting distracted and that we re talking to the latino community about issues that they care about. there s so much. right now we need to talk to them about health care, education and immigration in a way that it s going to be
affiliation [ down. abby, that might be a head nod toward republicans doing better or senator cruz doing better. possibly. we are still this is very, very scrambled. i know anecdotally, there are some republican women who i interviewed outside of the polls who secretly snuck off and voted for mr. o roarke and didn t tell their husbands. is it the evangelical vote, abby, who are women? i did not ask their religious affiliation. anecdotally, i m not relying on voting who did vote for mr. o rourke. you can pull out and see there may be evidence that some evangelicals are moving toward mr. o rourke on issues like immigration. it s very volatile, very unstable. we don t know how it s going to come down. there are many voters there
there in the senate. which county are you going to be watching? it s been i will be watching tarrant county as well because representative o rourke has said many times, hey, this all goes through tarrant county. and i would be watching colin and denton county. there are likely to be a lot of new voters there, a lot of new homes, a lot of new builds. i m interested to see if people coming in from out of state are voting and what difference they re making. what an election you both get to watch for us. it s good to have two on-the-ground experts to give us the insight into what s happening there. appreciate the time julie fine and abby livingston. thank you. democrats are running on health care, it s the biggest issue of the election. their sudden attempt to sway voters. vo: you re feeling the squeeze.
getting out the vote? reporter: early vote ended on friday here in georgia. it was very, very popular. it was very well attended. people are telling us about lines two, three hours long in certain places. so that s over on it was over as of friday. tomorrow church, that s going to be the main topic of conversation. did you vote? are you going to go out to vote on tuesday? so we ll be here tomorrow looking for that. . beth fouhy there for us in atlanta, georgia. and president trump is rallying for his candidate and we ll go back to that later. we look at the early voting numbers just in to us here at
television, so it s a harmonic convergence where we are going to have record high turnout. and bill part of that, it looks to be as the two of you know here, a little bit confusing at times because typically early voting numbers favors democrats but in for instance, the state of texas, at least early numbers show it s more republicans showing up. well, first i think these numbers are an indication we could have a hundred million people vote in a midterm but when you get that many, what it means is everybody s voting. it also means that the republican coalition that put donald trump in place is recoelessing after brett kavanaugh. we still see that, and we re tracking the early vote, and the net margin, republican and democrat votes cast is similar to where we were in 2014 and 16. and of course in 14, terrific in the house. year of the woman, celinda are you seeing numbers that back