The latest news and live updates on the 2024 election as Harris and Vance campaign in Pennsylvania and Trump holds a town hall with Univision in Miami.
Vice President and Kamala Harris sat for an interview with Fox News anchor Bret Baier on Wednesday night. Here’s the reaction: Former Republican Congressman and Jan. 6 Committee member Adam Kinzinger: “She went into the lion’s den and took them on and stood tall.
Vice President Kamala Harris engaged in a combative first interview with Fox News on Wednesday, sparring on immigration policy and shifting policy positions while asserting that if elected, she would not represent a continuation of Joe Biden's presidency.
Donald Trump and Kamala Harris both point to different crime data sources, but experts say Harris' claim is closer to reality.
And like every new president that comes to office, I will bring my life experiences and professional experiences,” she said. “I represent a new generation of leadership.”
Harris's interview is the latest indication that Democrats during this campaign are increasingly willing to engage with a network well-stocked with supporters of opponent Donald Trump.
The vice president is distancing herself from the image her opponents have painted of a “San Francisco liberal."
But now Vice President Kamala Harris is sitting down for an interview with Fox News Channel’s chief political anchor, Bret Baier. The full exchange should air not long after this newsletter lands in your inbox. Let’s talk about why.
Vice President Kamala Harris asserted that it is “clear” that former President Donald Trump is “increasingly unstable and unhinged” during a campaign stop in Pennsylvania where she is courting Republican voters ahead of the November election.
Vice President Kamala Harris is tangling with Fox News’ Bret Baier over immigration policy at the start of her first interview with the network during the 2024 campaign. Baier pressed Harris over the Biden administration’s release of undocumented immigrants and its handling of the U.
The Harris campaign is targeting the 157,000 Republicans who voted for Nikki Haley in the GOP primary, 12,000 of whom live in Bucks County.