Speaking to supporters Tuesday in Detroit, Sen. JD Vance mocked Vice President Kamala Harris's answer when asked this morning on "The View" how she would be different from President Biden SEN. JD VANCE: She walks into 'The View,
The latest news and live updates on the 2024 election. Follow the Trump-Vance and Harris-Walz campaigns as Kamala Harris does several high-profile interviews in New York and Trump joins a health care town hall.
The VP visited Stern's SiriusXM show and 'The View' on Tuesday, and will later be interviewed by Stephen Colbert.
Harris spoke with radio host Howard Stern on Tuesday as part of her major media blitz this week. Stern asked her about reporting from Bob Woodward’s forthcoming book, where he reportedly writes that Trump sent Putin COVID-19 test machines for his personal use after the virus took hold in 2020.
Vice President Kamala Harris said Tuesday that she wouldn’t have done anything differently than Joe Biden has done as president over the last four years, promptly drawing attacks from Republicans eager to cast her as a clone of Biden,
Vice President Kamala Harris on Tuesday proposed broadening Medicare benefits to cover home health care for the first time, as she seeks to appeal to Americans caring for both children and aging parents.
The comment drew swift criticism from Republicans who have been eager to highlight Harris’s central role in the administration of an unpopular president.
Vice President Kamala Harris, in a Tuesday appearance on ABC's “The View," was unable to name a decision she would have made differently than President Joe Biden. Her answer encapsulated Harris' challenge in portraying herself as a candidate who can deliver the change voters want after serving four years as a loyal member of the current administration.
Harris led by 2 points in Michigan (48 percent to 46), and a point in Nevada (48 percent to 47), Pennsylvania (48 percent to 47), and Wisconsin (47 percent to 46). In Georgia the candidates are tied at 47 percent. Trump leads by one point in Arizona (48 percent to 47 percent) and 2 points in North Carolina (47 percent to 45 percent).
The group said Tuesday on social media platform X that lawyers for Rev. Franklin Graham, a longtime supporter of Trump, sent cease-and-desist letters to Evangelicals for Harris over its ads supporting Vice President Harris. About 8 in 10 white evangelical voters voted for Trump in 2020, according to AP VoteCast.
The presidential race has tightened in the wake of the debate performance by Ohio Sen. JD Vance, a new national poll shows.