SCRANTON, Pa. >> Former President Donald Trump offered his prayers to those in the path of Hurricane Milton as it began to lash Florida while continuing to insult his rival, Vice President Kamala Harris, and other women — saying he had no interest in stopping even if it turned off female voters.

“I don’t want to be nice,” Trump said at his first of two rallies of the day in the pivotal battleground state of Pennsylvania. “You know, somebody said, ‘You should be nicer. Women won’t like it.’ I said, ‘I don’t care.”

Trump kept up his campaign schedule even as the storm threatened to overshadow the presidential race with fears that it would cause catastrophic damage in Tampa and other parts of Florida’s Gulf Coast. Harris flew to Nevada for a Western campaign swing, but first attended a briefing on the storm and the federal response with President Joe Biden at the White House.

Speaking in Scranton, Pennsylvania, Trump lobbed personal insults at Harris — calling her “grossly incompetent” and “totally ill-equipped to do the job of being President of the United States” — and went after one of the hosts of ABC’s “The View,” which Harris appeared on Tuesday.

He called Sunny Hostin, who is Black and Latina, “dumber than Kamala.”

“That is one dumb woman. Sorry. I’m sorry, women, she’s a dummy,” he said of Hostin, who had asked Harris if there was anything she would have done differently than Biden over the last four years. Harris replied that “not a thing comes to mind” — a line the Trump campaign has seized on as it tries to paint her as nothing more than a continuation of Biden’s unpopular presidency.

He later appeared in Reading where he called her answer “disqualifying” and listed a series of tragedies that happened on Biden’s watch.

He also went after the Biden administration for its response to Hurricane Helene.

“This administration has not done a proper job at all. Terrible, terrible,” he told the crowd. “We just pray for everybody,” he went on. “We hope that God will keep them safe.”

At both stops, he urged the crowd to vote early, and said that if he wins the state, “we win the whole thing.”

“When the polls open tomorrow, don’t wait. Go immediately. Go as soon as you can,” he said. Pennsylvanians can fill out mail ballots at their county elections offices but the state does not have the type of early voting that exists in other places.

Hurricane Milton has already disrupted the campaign, just two weeks after Hurricane Helene devastated large swaths of the Southeast. Trump, who moved to Florida after he left the White House, postponed a virtual event Tuesday night focused on health care and postponed a Univision town hall that was supposed to happen in Miami.

Harris has her own Univision town hall planned for Thursday in Las Vegas before returning to Arizona, making her second visit to both states in less than two weeks.

Trump, at his rally in Scranton — Biden’s birthplace — said he was praying for those in the hurricane’s path and wanted to “send our love to everyone in Florida. They’re going through a big one tonight.”

“We’re praying for them and asking God to keep them all safe, all those people. I’ve never seen a hurricane like that,” he went on. “So often you know, they talk about it and they talk talk talk because they want you to watch. This is the real deal.”

Campaigning in Arizona, where early voting kicked off Wednesday, Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz called on the country to come together to support those who will be impacted.