Harris hits GOP on chips; Trump leans into racial divides
Published in Political News
Kamala Harris lambasted House Speaker Mike Johnson’s call to roll back a $280 billion package to boost research and domestic manufacturing for semiconductors, heightening a clash between the vice president and her opponent Donald Trump as they seek to woo blue-collar voters in the campaign’s final days.
The flap over funding for chips manufacturing, which President Joe Biden signed into law in 2022, unfolded Friday when Johnson said he’d support a repeal of the bill, while campaigning with a vulnerable House Republican whose upstate New York district is poised to receive as much as $100 billion in investment from Micron Technology Inc.
Johnson quickly issued a statement, saying he misheard a question and instead supports efforts to “streamline and improve” the bill. Trump has also panned the chips deal, saying he could entice investment with the threat of tariffs.
“Let’s be clear about why he walked it back: Because it’s not popular, and their agenda is not popular,” Harris told reporters Saturday. “It is my plan and intention to continue to invest in American manufacturing, the work being done by American workers upholding and lifting up good union jobs.”
It’s the second time this week that Johnson has found himself in the middle of a policy controversy. The House speaker said there would be “no Obamacare” if Trump won the White House, prompting the Trump campaign to issue a statement that repealing the Affordable Care Act isn’t part of the former president’s policy position.
Harris and Trump crisscrossed the U.S. Southeast Saturday for a final weekend of frenetic campaigning before Election Day. Harris has been quick to pounce on Republican gaffes to try to sway undecided moderate voters, while Trump leaned into divisive rhetoric about migrants, women and people of color as he made his final argument to the electorate.
The campaigns’ strategies involve targeting different groups of potential supporters: Harris is looking to motivate women and disaffected Republicans, while Trump is seeking to persuade low-propensity voters, including young men, to cast ballots this year. Polls show the race is tight, with many results within the margin of error.
Despite the different target audiences, the electoral map means that the candidates can end up nearly bumping into each other as they focus on the seven battleground states. Harris’ mode of transport — Air Force Two — and Trump’s plane — which the campaign calls Trump Force One — both began Saturday a few hundred feet apart from each other at the Milwaukee airport.
Here’s the latest from the campaign trail:
Race, gender
Trump pitted Black voters against migrants on Saturday, repeatedly making false claims that immigrants are stealing jobs from Black workers — an assertion economists have refuted.
Trump made the baseless argument three times on Saturday, in an interview with Fox News and at a rallies in North Carolina and Virginia, saying that Black workers are being fired and their positions are being given to migrants, adding that it was also happening to a “lesser extent” to Latino workers.
The remarks — part of Trump’s closing argument to voters in a razor-thin race — included references to “Black jobs” and “Hispanic jobs,” phrases that critics have said are racist in implying that some work is reserved for a specific racial or ethnic group. Trump in Virginia also opined on the Latino community, calling them “entrepreneurial” and “hard working,” adding that “they can be brutal.”
Trump also defended his remarks that women should be protected “whether the women like it or not,” a line Harris and Democrats have said is insulting.
“Women have to be protected when they’re at home in suburbia,” Trump told the crowd in North Carolina.
Trump, who has been found liable for sexual abuse, says his own allies have called the remarks about protecting women “self-serving” and “inappropriate.” The former president said he dismissed their advice, derogatorily referring to his aides as “my geniuses backstage.”
On Fox News, he touted his record with women, saying he’s “given women chances, too,” including Kellyanne Conway, a senior official on his 2016 campaign, and Susie Wiles, his current co-campaign manager, noting that the latter has “good genetics.” Trump has increasingly commented on people’s genes in recent weeks, including a remark last month disparaging migrants for having “bad genes.”
FBI warning
The Federal Bureau of Investigation is warning that fake videos purporting to be from the agency are circulating on social media.
One video claims that the FBI apprehended groups committing ballot fraud, and another is related to second gentleman Doug Emhoff, the FBI said in a statement Saturday.
“These videos are not authentic, are not from the FBI, and the content they depict is false,” the agency said. “Election integrity is among our highest priorities, and the FBI is working closely with state and local law enforcement partners to respond to election threats.”
Southern blitz
Harris rallied crowds in Atlanta and Charlotte, North Carolina, hitting southern urban centers to urge supporters to help get out the vote in two battleground states. Asked in a CNN interview which part of the electorate she’s still trying to reach, Harris said, “Well, everyone” — though she specifically encouraged Gen Z and first-time voters at both rallies.
“So, we have three days to get this done — and no one can sit on the sidelines,” Harris said in Charlotte. “Let’s knock on doors, let’s text, let’s call. Reach out to your family, your friends, your classmates, your neighbors, your co-workers, your ‘play cousins.’”
While saying she’s committed to finding common solutions and uniting the country, she called Trump “increasingly unstable,” divisive and “obsessed with revenge.”
Harris’ Atlanta event featured remarks from film director Spike Lee and musical performances by 2 Chainz, Big Tigger and Pastor Troy. In Charlotte, she was joined by rocker Jon Bon Jovi and singer duo the War and Treaty, Brittney Spencer and Khalid.
Palestine protest
Harris interrupted a stump speech in North Carolina to renew her calls for an end to war in the Middle East, underscoring the persistent risk that the Biden administration’s funding of Israel’s military will alienate Arab American voters, notably in Michigan.
A small group of protesters holding a pro-Palestine sign screamed at Harris during her speech, prompting her to ask the crowd to show restraint and defend “the right of people to speak their minds.”
“But, right now, I am speaking,” she said. “We all want that war in the Middle East to end, we want the hostages home, and when I am president I will do everything in my power to make it so.”
Packers-Lions audience
Harris’ team is making an expensive play to push its closing argument: a two-minute ad, dubbed “Brighter Future,” that will air during Sunday afternoon National Football League games on CBS and Fox, including the game between the Green Bay Packers and Detroit Lions.
The last-minute appeal will be broadcast to millions of NFL viewers and reach a large audience of voters in swing states Wisconsin and Michigan.
The ad is a montage of the vice president interacting with Americans across the country, talking about her pledges to tackle price gouging and protect health-care access. It closes with Harris making a direct-to-camera appeal asking viewers to vote for her.
“We are going to do everything in our power to make sure that we’re reaching people in each of those places for mobilization, but also still for persuasion as we’ve seen these undecided voters, we believe, over the course of the last week have been breaking in our direction,” Harris campaign chair Jen O’Malley-Dillon said in a call with reporters on Saturday.
Scranton Joe
President Joe Biden visited his birth city of Scranton in battleground Pennsylvania, leaning on local ties to stump for Harris in arguably the election’s biggest prize.
Speaking at a union hall, he said Trump and his allies are “the kinds of guys you like to smack” and urged supporters to back Harris and stop Trump from implementing what Biden warned would be cuts to Social Security and Medicare.
“It’s not hyperbole to suggest this is the most important election any of us have ever voted in. More is at stake in the direction of this country,” Biden said.
He said while some people may have “difficulty” with the Harris-Walz ticket or its proposals, “I wouldn’t have picked her if I didn’t think she had the exact view I do about hard-working people. I’m serious. And so, look, folks, we need to elect Kamala as president.”
———
(With assistance from Billy House and Josh Wingrove.)
©2024 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Comments