‘Say it to my face,’ Harris dares Trump as White House battle deepens
US Vice President and 2024 Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign rally in Atlanta, Georgia, on July 30, 2024. (AFP)
‘Extreme abortion bans’
With just 98 days before the election, Harris is under pressure to announce her vice presidential pick. Asked Tuesday whether she had chosen one, Harris told reporters: “Not yet.” The search must be nearing a conclusion, however, as her team announced Tuesday that Harris and her new running mate would campaign next week in battlegrounds Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, North Carolina, Georgia, Arizona and Nevada. With the White House race turned on its head, 59-year-old Harris on Tuesday unveiled her first television ad since replacing Biden, while the Trump camp released a dueling spot attacking her on the crucial election issue of immigration. Harris swatted away the attack, saying in her speech that while the Biden administration worked with conservatives to craft critical border legislation, Trump “tanked” it for political gain. “Donald Trump does not care about border security,” she said. “He only cares about himself.” Harris said if elected she would focus on key economic goals such as expanding affordable health care and tackling rising consumer costs. She also attacked Trump, 78, over his “extreme abortion bans,” referring to restrictive new laws enacted in several states in the two years since the US Supreme Court — featuring three justices nominated by Trump — stripped constitutional protections for abortion.Georgia in play
As for Georgia’s potential competitiveness, Harris insisted “the path to the White House runs right through this state.” In a sign the southern state will be bitterly contested, Trump and his running mate J.D. Vance announced they would hold their own rally Saturday in Atlanta. “Kamala Harris and her complicit cronies have made the great people of Georgia pay a hefty price for their woke policies,” the Trump campaign said Tuesday. Harris took over a bleak electoral map from the faltering Biden, with Democrats’ hopes entirely based on the three Rust Belt post-industrial states of Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. But they are now looking again at other “sunbelt” states such as Georgia, Arizona and Nevada, all of which Democrats narrowly won in 2020. Vance addressed a rally Tuesday in Henderson, Nevada, where he attacked Harris as “dangerously liberal,” while Trump campaigns in Pennsylvania on Wednesday. Adding some Atlanta glitz for younger voters was Megan Thee Stallion, the hip-hop star who performed before Harris took the stage.
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