Mega-rich partisans Mark Cuban and Elon Musk are getting off the sidelines in the final weeks before Election Day.

Cuban on Thursday is set to campaign alongside Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris in Wisconsin, the first of three swing states the billionaire businessman will visit in support of the vice president’s White House bid.

The same day, Musk will embark on a multi-day speaking tour through Pennsylvania with America PAC, the super political action committee he is using to spend tens of millions of dollars in support of Republican nominee Donald Trump.

The on-the-ground efforts show how both men have taken on increasingly active roles advocating for their preferred presidential contender.

Cuban, the former “Shark Tank” star and former majority owner of the Dallas Mavericks, will join Harris at events in Milwaukee and La Crosse on Thursday, a campaign official told NBC News.

He will then head to Phoenix, Arizona, on Saturday to host a talk about Harris’ economic agenda. On Sunday, Cuban will campaign with second gentleman Douglas Emhoff in Grand Rapids, Michigan, the official said.

Tesla and SpaceX CEO Musk, meanwhile, will host a town hall in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, on Thursday afternoon to promote absentee voting and early voting in the Commonwealth, NBC reported.

Musk announced his get-out-the-vote plans shortly after Federal Election Commission filings revealed he gave nearly $75 million to America PAC between July and early September alone.

Musk recently joined Trump onstage at a campaign event near Butler, Pennsylvania, the same site of a July 13 rally where an alleged assassin nearly killed Trump and fatally shot another attendee.

Cuban’s swing through the major battlegrounds, first reported by Yahoo Finance, follows his frequent praise of Harris on CNBC and in other media interviews.

Cuban has long been an outspoken critic of Trump. In a Harris campaign press call last month, Cuban slammed as “lunacy” Trump’s promise to impose sweeping across-the-board tariffs and even higher import taxes on China.

And so to say that we’re going to tariff 10% or 20% or 60% for China or any other company, countries, that’s just inflationary, and that’s just the tax on the American people, that’s a sales tax through and through,” Cuban said on that Sept. 24 call.

This is developing news. Please check back for updates.

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