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24 Sep 2024


NextImg:Harris, Trump Campaign As Vance, Walz Prep For Debate: Latest Updates
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Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are working to sway voters as polls show them in a very tight race with just over a month until Election Day.

Meanwhile, their running mates — Republican Sen. JD Vance (Ohio) and Democratic Gov. Tim Walz (Minn.) — are preparing to face off in their first debate. The event, which starts at 9 p.m. ET Oct. 1 on CBS News, may be the only time Vance and Walz meet ahead of November; no other vice presidential debates are currently planned.

Down-ballot races that could impact the results of the presidential contest are also heating up. Republicans pulled ad funding and other support for North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, the party’s candidate for governor, after a bombshell report detailing his racist posts on a porn site was published last week. Harris released an ad tying Trump to Robinson amid the scandal.

Read our previous coverage here, and see the latest updates below:

Harris’ Next Big Speech To Call For Domestic Manufacturing, Childcare: WaPo

A set of remarks Harris is scheduled to give in Pittsburgh on Wednesday will focus on the economy, The Washington Post reported, including a new push for domestic manufacturing as well as universal childcare and paid family leave.

Harris is reportedly expected to contrast her economic plans with those of Trump, whose idea to implement costly new tariffs has been panned by some influential members of his own party.

She has been mulling tax benefits to bolster fields such as biotechnology, shipbuilding, semiconductors, data storage and clean energy, according to the outlet.

Read more at The Washington Post.

Anna Moneymaker via Getty Images

'I'm Not A Fan': Mitch McConnell Rips Trump's Tariff Proposals

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on Tuesday criticized GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump's plans to impose high tariffs on imports if he is elected president in November.

“I'm not a fan of tariffs. They raise the prices for American consumers," McConnell told reporters at a weekly press conference on Capitol Hill. "I'm more of a free trade kind of Republican that remembers how many jobs were created by the export that we engage in."

Trump often goes on tirades about trade on the campaign trail and threatens to impose barriers whose cost most economists say would fall squarely on consumers in the form of higher prices. On Monday, the former president vowed to impose tariffs as president even if Congress opposes them.

"I don’t need them. I don’t need Congress, but they’ll approve it,” Trump said at a campaign stop in Smithton, Pennsylvania. “I’ll have the right to impose them myself if they don’t. I’d rather get their support. The ones that understand business all support it."

Nebraska Governor Gives Up On Last-Minute Electoral College Change

Nebraska’s Republican governor, Jim Pillen, admitted defeat Tuesday with a statement saying he would not be calling a special legislative session to change the way his state allocates electoral votes in order to help Trump.

“My team and I have worked relentlessly to secure a filibuster-proof 33-vote majority to get winner-take-all passed before the November election. Given everything at stake for Nebraska and our country, we have left every inch on the field to get this done,” Pillen said in the statement.

“Unfortunately, we could not persuade 33 state senators,” he went on, calling it a “profoundly disappointing” outcome.

“Based on the lack of 33 votes, I have no plans to call a special session on this issue prior to the 2024 election. I am grateful to the many Nebraskans who made their voices heard during this process,” Pillen said.

Nebraska is one of only two states that do not have a “winner-take-all” system, rather, the state’s five electoral votes are doled out to each candidate by popular vote tallies. Harris hopes to snag just one of Nebraska’s electoral votes, but in such an incredibly tight race, that one vote could swing the whole outcome.

Congressional Republicans conceded Monday that their last-ditch effort would not pan out the way they wanted.

Trump Makes 'No Beach-Napping' Pledge In Odd Shot At Biden

Trump has made a vow to the American public that no-one asked him to – he'll never sleep on the beach when the cameras are on him.

During an increasingly erratic speech in Georgia, the Republican candidate took aim at President Joe Biden, who had the temerity to take a nap while on vacation at Rehoboth beach in Delaware last month, well after he dropped out the race.

A two-minute clip of Biden asleep went viral after his downtime was broadcast on C-SPAN. Biden also biked and went on walks, for what it's worth.

Apparently, the thought of taking a pretty standard vacation gets Trump's heckles up.

"Here's a guy that can sleep on the beach," Trump said, astonished. "How can you sleep on the beach when you have cameras on? I will never sleep on the beach in front of live television. I promise."

Donald Trump Claims Kamala Harris Has ‘Bigger Cognitive Problems’ Than Joe Biden

At his Georgia event, Trump claimed Harris is in more mental decline than Biden.

“They laugh at us all over the world, they’re laughing at us. And you know what they’re really laughing at? Kamala, because they can’t believe that she’s gonna be president. They can’t believe. You talk about cognitive problems? She’s got bigger cognitive problems than he has, in my opinion,” he said, referring to Biden, who was dogged by concerns about his mental fitness for office throughout his campaign.

Jack Smith Wins Fight To Lay Out 'Monstrosity' Jan. 6 Brief That Trump Fears

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan, the jurist overseeing Trump’s Jan. 6 election subversion case, gave special counsel Jack Smith permission to file an oversize opening brief addressing matters of presidential immunity as the criminal case proceeds.
She also rejected Trump's assertion that a brief of roughly 180 pages would amount to election interference if released so close to Election Day.
"The court need not address the substance of those claims. Defendant does not explain how those putative violations cause him legal prejudice in this case, nor how this court is bound by or has jurisdiction to enforce Department of Justice policy," Chutkan wrote.

Chutkan will consider the special counsel’s brief as she prepares to rule on what parts of Trump’s revised four-count indictment will remain intact in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s immunity ruling, Trump v. United States, in July.
As HuffPost reported Monday, Trump's lawyers cited the department's "60-Day Rule" which is an unofficial policy but long-standing norm that that department will not take any extraordinary action with 60 days or less to go until the general election.
Prosecutors have already addressed this point in Florida when it was raised in Trump's since-dismissed classified documents case by U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon. Smith maintains the action isn't new or extraordinary given that the original indictment was filed over a year ago.
Trump’s “concern with the political consequences of these proceedings” lacks bearing on the pretrial schedule, Chutkan wrote, adding “what needs to happen before or shouldn’t happen before the election is not relevant here.”
Smith must file the brief by Thursday. Trump and his lawyers will have until Oct. 17 to respond.

JD Vance Taps Project 2025 Contributor To Help With His VP Debate Prep

Trump keeps denying he has connections to Project 2025, the far-right conservative policy playbook for a second Trump administration written by dozens of his former employees.

But it doesn’t help his case that Vance has tapped a Project 2025 contributor to help him prepare for his Oct. 1 vice presidential debate.

Vance will reportedly participate in a mock debate later this week, with House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) playing the role of Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz and Monica Crowley playing the role of a moderator. Crowley, who previously served as Trump’s assistant secretary for public affairs at the Treasury Department, is a contributor to Project 2025.

In fact, Crowley gets a special shout-out in The Heritage Foundation’s 920-page policy roadmap, which bills itself as “the conservative movement’s unified effort to be ready for the next conservative Administration to govern at 12:00 noon, January 20, 2025.”

“All contributors to this chapter are listed at the front of this volume, but Monica Crowley, Tom Dans, John Berlau, Austin Bramwell, Preston Brashers, Alexandra Harrison Gaiser, Nathan Hitchen, Adam Korzeniewski, and Jonathan Moy deserve special mention,” reads an author’s note at the bottom of page 710, which marks the end of a chapter on the Treasury Department.

Among other things, this chapter proposes the Treasury Department “withdraw from both the World Bank and the IMF,” but also “force reforms and new policies” at both institutions. This chapter also calls on a second Trump administration to withdraw from the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Paris Agreement, and instead “use Treasury’s tools and authority” to promote investment in domestic energy, including oil and gas.

Win McNamee via Getty Images

Donald Trump Says Debate Was Rigged, Also Calls It One Of His ‘Best Debates’

Trump is still simultaneously complaining and boasting about the debate between him and Harris from two weeks ago.

"She did very well? She couldn’t put two sentences together!” he said at a rally in Georgia on Tuesday of the Democratic nominee, adding: “ABC ought to be ashamed. It was three-on-one” – referring to him against Harris and the network’s two debate moderators. It was a “horrible situation,” he continued.

But right after calling the debate rigged, he declared that it was also “one of my best debates.”

Political commentators largely ruled Harris as the winner of the debate, calling Trump’s racist tangents about immigrants eating people’s pets and other blowups a bad look for him.

via Associated Press

Trump On Tariffs: 'One Of The Most Beautiful Words I've Ever Heard'

Trump has defended his flagship economic plan to raise tariffs on foreign imports – and offered a bizarre paean to the concept.

The former president has repeatedly said he would impose a 10% tax on imports from most countries, and warned of a higher levy on goods from China.

But economists have said the move would mean household bills spiral as the added costs are passed on to consumers, with the Harris campaign claiming it would mean American families being hit by almost $4,000 a year.

In a speech in Savannah, Georgia, Trump argued the tariffs plan would bring in hundreds of millions of dollars for the U.S. economy and not cause inflation, as many critics have argued.

“For years they knocked the word 'tariff,'” he said. “The word, properly used, is a beautiful word. One of the most beautiful words I've ever heard. It is music to my ears.”

Andrew Harnik via Getty Images

Joe Manchin Says He Won’t Endorse Kamala Harris Over Filibuster

West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, who became an Independent this year after decades as a Democrat, told CNN he won’t endorse Harris because of her commitment to gut the filibuster.

“Shame on her," said Manchin, a staunch supporter of the filibuster. "She knows the filibuster is the Holy Grail of democracy. It's the only thing that keeps us talking and working together. If she gets rid of that, then this would be the House on steroids."

Harris has vowed to reform the filibuster to allow Congress the possibility of codifying Roe v. Wade. While her comments Tuesday were her first on the matter as the Democratic nominee, it's not a new position for her.

"That ain't going to happen," Manchin, who’s retiring this year, told CNN at the Capitol. "I think that basically can destroy our country and my country is more important to me than any one person or any one person's ideology.”

Kamala Harris Calls To Eliminate The Filibuster To Codify Federal Abortion Rights

Harris said she would support abolishing the Senate filibuster to pass legislation to restore federal abortion protections.

Harris has made similar statements in the past. But her comments on Wisconsin Public Radio on Tuesday morning mark the first time as the Democratic presidential candidate that she has supported ending the 60-vote threshold necessary to advance legislation in the Senate.

Read more:

CNN Poll Finds No Clear Leader In Presidential Race

A new CNN poll conducted by SSRS found that the race between Harris and Trump is deadlocked, with her claiming 48% support and him 47%.

Though the race is tight, the poll shows an improvement for Harris compared to CNN’s last national poll in July. “The poll suggests that overall, Harris has begun to build a more positive public image, outpacing Trump across several measures of how the public views her personally,” the network summarized.

The poll found that likely voters have more trust in Trump than Harris on the economy, immigration and foreign policy, while they have more faith in Harris than Trump when it comes to abortion and reproductive rights, uniting the country and protecting democracy.

Joe Biden Tells UNGA ‘Some Things Are More Important Than Staying In Power’

Speaking to world leaders gathered in New York for the United Nations General Assembly, Biden spoke about his decision to withdraw his candidacy over the summer.

"Being president has been the honor of my life,” he said. “There’s so much more I want to get done.”

But Biden suggested he chose to shelve his own ambition in the interest of the country.

“As much as I love the job, I love my country more. I decided after 50 years of public service it’s time for a new generation of leadership to take my nation forward. My fellow leaders, let us never forget some things are more important than staying in power,” he added.

“It’s your people who matter the most.”

"Being president has been the honour of my life," President Joe Biden stated in his final speech to the UN. He expressed that while there is "so much more I wanted to get done," he believes it is time for a "new generation of leadership."https://t.co/PAiZ4D1jU3

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— Sky News (@SkyNews) September 24, 2024

Read Our Previous Coverage

For HuffPost's previous 2024 coverage, go here.