Harris whacks Trump over reports he canceled interviews due to ‘exhaustion’
Kamala Harris seized on reports that Donald Trump had backed out of interviews because he was “exhausted”, saying that they were proof he is not up to the job of being president.
“He has no plan for how he would address the needs of the American people, and he is, as we have seen, only focused on himself, and now he is ducking debates and canceling interviews,” Harris told the crowd in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
“And check this out. His own campaign team recently said it is because of exhaustion. Well, if you are exhausted on the campaign trail, it raises real questions about whether you are fit for the toughest job in the world.”
Key events
A key message of Kamala Harris to voters in Michigan today was encouraging them to cast ballots when early voting begins next Saturday.
“Election Day is in 18 short days, okay? And here in Michigan, early voting starts on Saturday, October 26, which is one week from tomorrow,” the vice-president said as she concluded her speech.
“Now is the time to make your plan to vote. Make a plan.”
Unions have long played an outsized role in Michigan, particularly when it comes to its automotive industry.
Kamala Harris has focused much of her speech on how she would be more friendly to organized labor than Donald Trump.
“Make no mistake, Donald Trump is no friend of labor,” the vice-president said. She continued:
He encouraged automakers to move their plants out of Michigan so he could pay they could pay their workers less. Understand what that was about, so they could pay their workers less. And when the [United Auto Workers (UAW)] went on strike to demand the higher wages they deserved, Donald Trump went to a non-union shop and attacked the UAW, and he said, he said, striking and collective bargaining don’t make ‘a damn bit of sense’.
“Strong unions mean higher wages, better healthcare and greater dignity for union members and for everyone, whether or not you are part of a union: get that straight,” she said.
Harris whacks Trump over reports he canceled interviews due to ‘exhaustion’
Kamala Harris seized on reports that Donald Trump had backed out of interviews because he was “exhausted”, saying that they were proof he is not up to the job of being president.
“He has no plan for how he would address the needs of the American people, and he is, as we have seen, only focused on himself, and now he is ducking debates and canceling interviews,” Harris told the crowd in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
“And check this out. His own campaign team recently said it is because of exhaustion. Well, if you are exhausted on the campaign trail, it raises real questions about whether you are fit for the toughest job in the world.”
Kamala Harris is on stage now, with familiar walk-out song Freedom by Beyoncé playing.
The vice-president was introduced by carpenters union official Brian Hein, who decried Donald Trump as someone “who has never done a hard day’s work in his life”.
Harris to campaign in hotly contested Michigan
Kamala Harris is soon to begin speaking in Grand Rapids, Michigan, as she looks for an edge among voters in a swing state that Donald Trump is looking to reclaim.
The western Michigan city lies in historically Republican territory where Democrats have only recently begun showing strength. From a stage set up in a park, the vice-president was introduced by Michigan’s Democratic governor Gretchen Whitmer, who said:
Donald Trump has shown us that he is incapable of handling a crisis. He is a petty man who tells dangerous lies and is always looking for someone else to blame. We don’t need that. We need leaders who are going to put politics aside and work together to solve problems. As our next commander-in-chief, Kamala Harris will ask, what do you need? How can I help you? Are you okay? That’s what a leader does.
White House employee said Trump watched January 6 attack while drinking Diet Coke
An unnamed White House employee told an investigator for the January 6 committee that Donald Trump watched the attack on the Capitol unfold from a White House dining room while drinking a Diet Coke.
The detail was included in hundreds of pages of mostly redacted documents in the federal case against Trump for trying to overturn the 2020 election, which a federal judge allowed to be released today.
“They’re rioting down at the Capitol”, the employee recalls telling Trump in an interview with an unnamed investigator.
“Oh, really?” Trump replied.
The employee recalls going with Trump to the dining room where he often spent time, and where a television was set up:
And then we walked back to the back. I’m taking off his outer coat that he’s wearing right now, and I get the TV, like, ready for him, and I hand him over the remote, and he starts watching it. And I stepped out to get him a Diet Coke, come back in and that’s pretty much it for me as he’s watching and, like, seeing it for himself.
A federal judge blocked an effort by authorities in Florida to keep off the air a television advertisement in support of the state’s abortion access ballot initiative, the Guardian’s Carter Sherman reports:
Florida’s health department can’t block a TV advertisement in support of a ballot measure that would protect abortion rights, a federal judge ruled on Thursday, after the department sent letters to local TV stations commanding them to stop airing the ad or risk criminal consequences.
“The government cannot excuse its indirect censorship of political speech simply by declaring the disfavored speech is ‘false’,” US district judge Mark E Walker wrote in his ruling. “To keep it simple for the State of Florida: it’s the First Amendment, stupid.”
Florida is one of 10 states set to vote on abortion-related ballot measures in November. If enacted, Florida’s measure would enshrine abortion rights into the state constitution and roll back the state’s six-week ban on the procedure, which took effect in May.
Earlier this month, Florida’s health department sent cease-and-desist letters to TV stations running an ad by Floridians Protecting Freedom, the campaign behind the measure. In the ad, a woman named Caroline speaks about being diagnosed with cancer while pregnant.
“The doctors knew if I did not end my pregnancy, I would lose my baby, I would lose my life and my daughter would lose her mom,” Caroline says in the ad. “Florida has now banned abortion even in cases like mine.”
Vice-president Kamala Harris will be hosting a campaign rally in Atlanta, Georgia on Saturday, where she will be joined by singer Usher, her campaign said.
This comes as the Democratic National Committee announced today that it is launching a Taylor Swift-themed “I Will Vote” campaign to increase engagement among young voters in battleground states.
The campaign will kick off in Miami, the DNC said, with billboards around the city, a mobile billboard on a boat near Taylor Swift’s concert venue in Miami where the singer is playing this weekend, and exclusive Snapchat filters.
Rosemary Boeglin, DNC Communications Director, said in a statement that Democrats “are reaching out to young voters where they are, from concert venues to social media platforms, to make sure they have the resources they need to cast their ballot.”
Former president Donald Trump will be visiting Asheville, North Carolina on Monday to see the devastation of Hurricane Helene first-hand and deliver remarks, his campaign announced on Friday.
Hurricane Helene made landfall in Florida three weeks ago, before moving across parts of the south-east, quickly becoming the deadliest hurricane to hit the US mainland since Katrina in 2005.
Parts of western North Carolina, including Asheville, were among the hardest-hit areas.
On Thursday, the first day of early in-person voting for the 2024 election in the battleground state of North Carolina, more than 350,000 voters North Carolinians cast their ballots, setting a new state record, officials announced.
Election officials in the state said on Friday that a record 353,166 voters turned out statewide on Thursday, surpassing the previous record for the first day of early voting of 348,559 voters set in 2020.
“Yesterday’s turnout is a clear sign that voters are energized about this election, that they trust the elections process, and that a hurricane will not stop North Carolinians from exercising their right to vote,” said Karen Brinson Bell, executive director of the State Board of Elections.
This comes as earlier this week, Georgia voters shattered Georgia’s early voting record, casting 328,000 ballots on the first day of early voting, which is more than double the previous record of 136,000, set in 2020.
You can read more about that here.
Fox News has reportedly denied that any of its employees or freelancers assisted in writing the jokes that former president Donald Trump told at last night’s Al Smith dinner.
This comes as the former president appeared on Fox News this morning and said that some of his jokes were written by “a couple people from Fox”.
The day so far
A federal judge allowed release of hundreds of documents used in special counsel Jack Smith’s election subversion case against Donald Trump, but the majority of them are redacted. What we can see mostly concerns the legal strategy Trump and his allies concocted to block Joe Biden from taking the White House, which may be presented to jurors whenever the case goes to trial. Meanwhile, reports have emerged that Trump has canceled interviews because he is “exhausted” – something his campaign denies – and is also considering holding a town hall with one-time rival Nikki Haley in a bid to woo female voters.
Here’s what else has happened today so far:
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Trump said that some of the jokes he told at last night’s Al Smith dinner were written by employees of conservative network Fox – a breach of ethics, if confirmed.
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Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the president of Germany, warned in unusually direct terms of the threat Trump could pose if returned to the White House, during a visit by Joe Biden to the country.
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Kamala Harris’s campaign has enlisted singer-songwriter Marc Anthony for a campaign ad aimed at Latino voters in which he condemns Trump’s comments about Puerto Rico.
Interestingly included among the documents are copies of the envelopes used to mail electoral vote tallies from states Donald Trump targeted to overturn the election result.
CBS News took a screenshot: