COLUMBUS, Ohio — Vice President Mike Pence will be making a visit to Cincinnati Wednesday—his third visit to the Buckeye State in less than two months. 

He'll rally at the Lunken Airport starting at 4 p.m. All attendees must sign a waiver saying the administration is not to blame if they contract COVID-19.

Donald Trump Jr. also plans to make a stop in Steubenville, Ohio Thursday. The "Make America Great Again" rally will be at Bully Tools starting at 7:30 p.m.—an hour and a half before the final presidential debate. This will be Trump Jr.'s second stop in Ohio. Last month, he rallied in Lima at the University of Northwestern Ohio event center.

The Trump-Pence campaign is trying to cover as much ground in Ohio as possible. Last Monday, Pence visited Savko & Sons in Columbus, where he covered a variety of topics but mostly focused on the nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to the U.S. Supreme Court. 

“These attacks on religious faith must stop and they must stop right now," Pence said in reference to those who have been condemning Barrett's Catholic background.

Pence also spoke to Ohio's economy, saying that the administration helped revive American jobs. His statements follow a claim President Donald Trump made during the first presidential debate in Cleveland, saying 2019 was Ohio's best year for jobs. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Ohio had it's worst year of unemployment since the Great Recession. 

Pence also made a stop in Zanesville last month and boasted once again about creating jobs in the state and how the president helped bring back Big Ten football. Ivanka Trump was also in Cincinnati Friday for a private event.

While the Trump-Pence campaign has been making its presence known in Ohio, so has the Biden-Harris campaign. 

Following the heated presidential debate in Cleveland earlier this month, former Vice President Joe Biden did a bus tour through Ohio and into Pennsylvania. He also visited Toledo and Cincinnati last Monday. Sen. Kamala Harris originally planned to visit Cleveland last Friday, but after two people in the campaign tested positive for COVID-19, all trips are on hold until Thursday.

But the visits from both presidential tickets don't stop there. 

Second Lady Karen Pence will visit Tipp City, which is outside of Dayton, to rally for the campaign. Harris says she plans to still visit Cleveland before Election Day, but no details have been released. 

The race in Ohio remains tight. Trump has just a 0.1-point lead over Biden in the Buckeye State, according to a polling average by FiveThirtyEight. Nationally, Biden is leading Trump by three points.