Democratic presidential candidates spent Sunday courting voters in states with influential early roles in the 2020 primary, their busy pace of holiday weekend campaigning demonstrating that the contest to challenge President Donald Trump is fully underway.

The weeklong congressional recess for Presidents Day gives senators already running for president some extra time to promote their agendas, and all were taking advantage by visiting at least one of four pivotal early-voting states: Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada.

Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey set the briskest pace Sunday, meeting supporters in Rochester and Manchester, New Hampshire. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York also was campaigning in the Granite State, and Sen. Kamala Harris of California was due there on Monday.

In the Midwest, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar visited Iowa. Farther west, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren campaigned in Nevada, the first Western state to vote in the 2020 presidential primary.

Highlights from the trail:

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CORY BOOKER

The New Jersey Democrat told reporters he is reserving judgment after new reports about the alleged attack on “Empire” actor Jussie Smollett. When Smollett initially reported that he was attacked by two men who yelled homophobic and racial slurs, Booker called the incident a “modern-day lynching.”

In Chicago over the weekend, police said their investigation had “shifted” after detectives questioned two brothers about the attack and released them without charges. Smollett’s lawyers said late Saturday that the actor felt “victimized” by reports that he played a role in the assault and would continue to cooperate with police.

Booker told reporters in Rochester, New Hampshire, that he was waiting “until all the information actually comes out from on-the-record sources.” He urged a broader fight against hate crimes and called for a unified pushback against “attacks on people because they’re different.”

Asked by a voter at an event in Manchester about so-called Medicare for All, Booker said passing such a bill in the Senate would require the difficult task of rounding up 60 votes to prevent a filibuster. Otherwise, he said, “we’ve got to be ready to take the pathways” that get as far as possible toward universal health insurance coverage.

Liberal activists have called on Democrats to consider eliminating the Senate procedural tool to make ambitious legislation easier for a future Democratic president to pass. Booker, however, has spoken in favor of preserving the filibuster.

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ELIZABETH WARREN

In her visit to Nevada as a presidential candidate, the Massachusetts senator described a squeeze on working families and a political system that she says fails to protect homeowners, including the residents of Las Vegas who were pummeled by the mortgage crisis a decade ago.

Warren spoke about her work as a consumer activist and her role overseeing the bailout of banks and insurers a decade ago, a job that brought her to Las Vegas to hear from residents struggling to keep their homes.

“You better believe one reason that I am in this fight is we can never let this happen again. Never,” she told about 500 people at a botanical garden and event center northeast of the Las Vegas Strip.

Nevada’s early presidential caucus is the first in the West and is seen as a key test of a candidate’s ability to appeal to a state with powerful labor groups and diverse demographics, including a population that’s about 29 percent Latino.

In her speech, Warren condemned predatory mortgages targeted to minorities and said income inequality disproportionately affects communities of color. She also said unions need strengthening and that the country needs comprehensive immigration reform.

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WILLIAM WELD

The first Republican to move toward a primary challenge against President Donald Trump said he plans to campaign on what he calls Trump’s reckless spending and lack of preparation in helping workers shift to jobs in a more automated economy.

Former Massachusetts Gov. William Weld, who announced on Friday that he was forming an exploratory committee for president, told ABC’s “This Week” that Trump is racking up $1 trillion a year in debt that will crush taxpayers.

Weld said the government should be preparing workers to shift to jobs in “artificial intelligence and robotics and drones and machine learning and autonomous vehicles.”

But Weld added that policymakers aren’t paying attention to that because “they’re so busy with divisiveness and trying to make everyone feel awful.”

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