James Carville believes that Kamala Harris will be the next president
The 2020 Latin American Presidential Campaign: Why she is so sorry about her husband, Barack Obama, and the other candidates are so sorry for us… and how we have been influenced by her
The candidates were in Miami on Tuesday and Harris was to appear on an interview with a Spanish TV station on Wednesday.
After falsely claiming that Harris was not going to campaign the day before, Trump held his fourth rally in two days in a state that is crucial to his White House hopes.
Harris spent Tuesday in Washington, D.C., sitting down with NBC News for an interview as well, while former President Barack Obama rallied in Wisconsin with Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz and in Michigan with native son Eminem.
Twenty million people have already cast their ballot in the 2024 presidential election, according to the University of Florida’s Election Lab, including more than 1 in 4 active Georgia voters.
The campaign for Harris is trying to push back against the critics of the interviews she has done and the number of them.
“This is a serious matter. Two weeks out, the people of America will be presented with a very important decision about the future of our country.
Asked if she would pardon Trump if she won the White House and he was convicted in the federal election interference case against him, Harris refused to engage.
Harris declined to say whether she would make religious exemptions in order to get the support of some Republican senators to pass legislation denigrating abortion access.
Harris planned to use the interview to announce a series of policies geared toward Latino men. Those measures include a plan to double the number of registered apprenticeships and remove college degree requirements for up to 500,000 federal jobs.
The Harris campaign stated that the vice president would provide 1 million forgivable loans to Latino entrepreneurs and set a goal to double the number of first-time Latino homebuyers.
During his four years in office, Trump argued that the economy was better for Latinos, but he often focused on other topics. He lobbed personal attacks against Harris, calling her “lazy,” “slow” and “low IQ.”
“Donald Trump wants us to think that this country is hopelessly divided between us and them,” he said. “And ‘us’ for him is the ‘real Americans’ who support him, and everybody else who doesn’t, that’s ‘them’ — that’s the enemy.”
While Latino voters have historically supported Democrats in greater numbers, Republicans hope Trump’s central focus on immigration issues and border security will help peel away support from a crucial bloc of voters.
At his rally in North Carolina, Trump continued to call migrants who enter the country legally part of an “invasion” and promised to push for mass deportations.
He spoke for nearly two hours and mixed in his usual prepared remarks from the teleprompter with lengthy asides, including boasts about his crowd size and a melancholic reflection that his time on the campaign trail is coming to an end, both for this election and potentially for good.
“It’s sad, because we’re sort of wrapping it up, you know that, right?,” he said. “We’ve been doing this for a long time. We had two unbelievable elections and we are now where we want to be.
Source: Latino voters in focus as Trump and Harris sketch out the campaign’s final 2 weeks
The Cancellation of the Front Row Jacks and Joes: Why Trump is Getting Closer to his Behest when he Wins
Trump, who would be the oldest person to become president if he wins, has also seen an increase in verbal gaffes and distracting non sequiturs in his speeches recently. He talked about his McDonald’s stop and mistakenly called a group of fans known as the “Front Row Joes” the “Front Row Jacks and Joes.”
With fourteen days until voting closes, the time, place and focus of each event added to the calendar gives insight into the closing messages and priorities from the campaigns.
The rally will be held in suburban Buford County, Ga. In Chester Township, Pa., Harris tapes a town hall with CNN.
The Harris campaign said the vice president would visit Houston, Texas on Friday to talk about how the state’s abortion restrictions hurt women and to blame Trump. The event is also aimed at boosting support for Rep. Colin Allred, D-Texas, who is challenging Republican Ted Cruz for his Senate seat.
Later this week, Trump will also hold multiple rallies in Pennsylvania and Michigan, along with events in Nevada and Arizona, before holding an event in New York.
With two more Tuesdays left in the election, both former President Donald Trump and Vice President Harris are hitting the swing states to campaign.
There is an anxious sound on the winds of American life. More than in any other election in my lifetime, I’ve been consistently asked by people of all stripes and creeds: “Can Kamala Harris win this thing? Are we ok? This sentiment is heard over and over from sweaty Democratic operatives who all too often love to run to the press with their woes.
There simply do not seem to be enough voters — even in the battleground states — who turn out at Mr. Trump’s behest anymore when he’s simply preaching to his base. He has not learned from his electoral losses nor done the necessary work to assemble a broad electoral coalition in 2024. Let’s not forget that seven weeks after Nikki Haley dropped out of the Republican primary, she received 158,000 votes in Pennsylvania — and some disaffected Haley voters are currently looking to move to Ms. Harris. Although Ms. Haley has endorsed Mr. Trump, losing even a fraction of those voters leaves Mr. Trump running the final leg of this race with a fundamental fracture of the femur. Voters think Mr. Trump is too old to be president, but instead of easing their concerns, he’s spending the final days of the campaign jiving to the Village People and canceling interviews.
The biggest reason Mr. Trump will lose is that the whole Republican Party has been on a losing streak since Mr. Trump took it over. See 2018: the largest House landslide for Democrats in a midterm election since Watergate. See 2020: Joe Biden made a decisive decision against him from the White House. The Republicans are off the pace of Dobbs in the next election, an embarrassment. And the Democrats have been performing well in special elections since Trump appointees on the Supreme Court helped take away a basic right of American women. Guess what? The issue of abortion is back on the ballot.
I am pulling my stool up to the political poker table to throw my chips all in: America, it will all be fine. The next president of the United States will be Ms. Harris. Of this, I am certain. Here are three reasons.