ALLENTOWN, Pa. — Vice President and Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris will rally supporters in Allentown on Monday, the final day of her campaign.
Harris' team confirmed she'll be in the area in the early afternoon, with details to-be-announced on the time and location.
It will be the first of at least three stops for Harris on Monday, with events in Pittsburgh in the evening and Philadelphia in the late evening.
A Democratic lawmaker and a campaign surrogate both shared the news on social media early Friday, advertising Harris' visit to the area as a "get out the vote rally."
"Alright! Vice President Harris is bringing her campaign to the most important city of the most important swing district in the most important State on the most important campaigning day of the election!" Rep. Mike Schlossberg said on Facebook.
Aidan Levinson, who served as one of the three whips in Pennsylvania's delegation to the Democratic National Convention, shared the same news of Harris' visit.
The stop will come as Harris makes Pennsylvania the final destination before Election Day.
According to reports, she’ll end with a rally in front of the Art Museum in Philadelphia.
Both presidential candidates and their proxies have been sweeping Pennsylvania for months, with the Lehigh Valley as a big draw in the swing state.
Former president Donald Trump rallied supporters at the PPL Center in Allentown on Tuesday, which marked his second visit to the area this year. He'll also be back in Pennsylvania on Monday, holding a rally at the Santander Arena in Reading.
This will be Harris’ first and only stop in the Valley, though Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, her running mate and the Democratic nominee for vice president, has made two trips into the area.
He sat down with voters at El Tipico Restaurant in Allentown on Oct. 25. He also visited Freedom High School in Bethlehem in September.
Polling shows Trump and Harris essentially tied in Pennsylvania. The winner will earn its 19 electoral votes, which could determine the outcome of the race and who takes the oath of office next year.