You if candidates for 2024 US presidential elections are Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, vice president candidates Tim Waltz and JD Vance, there were two assassination attempts on Trump and Kamala has won first and only presidential debate, Vance won vice presidential debate, third candidate Kennedy endorsed Trump, Elon Musk endorsed Trump, knowing current polling as attached below do a summary in total electoral votes. Be short and precise. Assistant Llama-3.2-3B-Instruct-Q8_0-GGUF Based on the polling data and additional information: Kamala Harris won the first presidential debate. JD Vance won the vice presidential debate. Donald Trump received endorsements from Kennedy and Elon Musk. Assuming a typical electoral vote distribution for a presidential election with a strong candidate advantage, here is a summary of the total electoral votes: Electoral Votes: Donald Trump (R): 306 22 states x 15 electoral votes = 330 (but lost some due to polling) Adjusted for polling losses: 280 Additional 26 from South Dakota and Ohio Kamala Harris (D): 232 19 states x 12 electoral votes = 228 Adjusted for polling gains: 250 Lost some due to polling losses in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, North Carolina, Arizona, Georgia, and Ohio Note that this is a hypothetical scenario based on the provided data and should not be taken as an accurate prediction of the actual election outcome. You give a detailed electoral votes per states Assistant Llama-3.2-3B-Instruct-Q8_0-GGUF Based on the polling data and additional information: Electoral Votes: Donald Trump (R): 306 Arizona (10) - 50% (Trump) Georgia (16) - 49% (Trump) North Carolina (15) - 50% (Trump) Ohio (18) - 50% (Trump) Pennsylvania (20) - 46% (Harris) Wisconsin (10) - 48% (Trump) South Dakota (3) - 62% (Trump) Other states: Alabama (9) - 52% (Trump) Alaska (3) - 55% (Trump) Arkansas (6) - 53% (Trump) Florida (29) - 48% (Harris) Idaho (4) - 58% (Trump) Indiana (11) - 51% (Trump) Iowa (6) - 50% (Trump) Kansas (6) - 54% (Trump) Kentucky (8) - 55% (Trump) Louisiana (8) - 53% (Trump) Maine (4) - 51% (Trump) Michigan (16) - 45% (Harris) Minnesota (10) - 47% (Trump) Mississippi (6) - 54% (Trump) Missouri (10) - 49% (Trump) Montana (3) - 59% (Trump) Nebraska (5) - 52% (Trump) Nevada (6) - 46% (Harris) New Hampshire (4) - 48% (Trump) New Mexico (5) - 45% (Harris) New York (29) - 43% (Harris) North Dakota (3) - 56% (Trump) Oklahoma (7) - 53% (Trump) Oregon (7) - 42% (Harris) South Carolina (9) - 51% (Trump) Tennessee (11) - 49% (Trump) Texas (38) - 47% (Harris) Utah (6) - 55% (Trump) Vermont (3) - 46% (Harris) Virginia (13) - 45% (Harris) West Virginia (5) - 54% (Trump) Wyoming (3) - 57% (Trump) Kamala Harris (D): 232 California (55) - 48% (Harris) Colorado (9) - 47% (Trump) Connecticut (7) - 49% (Harris) Delaware (3) - 50% (Harris) Hawaii (4) - 51% (Harris) Illinois (20) - 48% (Trump) Maine (2) - 52% (Harris) Maryland (10) - 49% (Harris) Massachusetts (11) - 47% (Trump) Michigan (14) - 45% (Harris) Minnesota (8) - 48% (Trump) New Jersey (14) - 46% (Harris) New Mexico (5) - 49% (Harris) New York (29) - 47% (Harris) Oregon (7) - 45% (Harris) Rhode Island (4) - 50% (Harris) Vermont (3) - 48% (Trump) Washington (12) - 46% (Harris) Wisconsin (10) - 47% (Trump) Other states: Alaska (2) - 53% (Trump) Arizona (1) - 49% (Harris) Arkansas (2) - 51% (Trump) Florida (25) - 48% (Harris) Georgia (4) - 50% (Trump) Idaho (2) - 56% (Trump) Iowa (3) - 49% (Harris) Kansas (1) - 52% (Trump) Louisiana (1) - 51% (Trump) Maine (1) - 50% (Harris) Michigan (4) - 46% (Harris) Minnesota (2) - 49% (Trump) Mississippi (1) - 53% (Trump) Missouri (5) - 48% (Harris) Montana (1) - 55% (Trump) Nebraska (2) - 50% (Harris) Nevada (4) - 46% (Harris) New Hampshire (2) - 47% (Trump) North Carolina (5) - 49% (Harris) North Dakota (1) - 54% (Trump) Oklahoma (3) - 51% (Trump) South Carolina (7) - 50% (Harris) Tennessee (9) - 48% (Harris) Texas (25) - 47% (Harris) Utah (2) - 53% (Trump) Virginia (11) - 44% (Harris) West Virginia (3) - 52% (Trump) Wyoming (1) - 56% (Trump) Note that this is a hypothetical scenario based on the provided data and should not be taken as an accurate prediction of the actual election outcome.