Vice President Kamala Harris on Wednesday hammered former President Donald Trump as thin-skinned and a threat to U.S. democracy in a combative interview with Fox News. The interview marked an opportunity for Harris to appear on a network that frequently criticizes her and praises her opponent,
Vice President Kamala Harris has brought her campaign to a place many Democrats have long considered enemy territory — Fox News Channel.
Kamala Harris’s interview with Fox News on Wednesday night was never expected to be a friendly affair. The network has been consistently hostile to the vice-president since she entered the race in July, and this awkward 30 minutes was no different.
Vice President Kamala Harris on Wednesday hammered former President Donald Trump as thin-skinned and a threat to U.S. democracy in a combative interview with Fox News. The interview marked an opportunity for Harris to appear on a network that frequently criticizes her and praises her opponent,
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.
Vice President Kamala Harris’s interview with Fox’s Bret Baier marked her first foray onto the network, which is popular with conservative viewers, as she looked to broaden her outreach to GOP-leaning voters with less than three weeks until Election Day.
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.
Kamala Harris sat down for her first formal interview with Fox News on Wednesday, at times sparring with anchor Bret Baier over the border and her opponent, Donald Trump.
The vice president will take questions from Bret Baier in a session to be broadcast at 6 p.m. She joins a long line of Democratic candidates and elected officials who have ventured into hostile television territory.
Vice President Kamala Harris told Fox News’ Brett Baier on Wednesday her presidency “will not be a continuation of Joe Biden's presidency” if she wins next month, defending her record as vice president in a contentious interview with the longtime Fox host—her first-ever appearance on the network as the race remains razor-thin.