Kamala Harris talks tough on border security to take on Donald Trump
Send a link to a friend
[August 07, 2024]
By Ted Hesson, Kristina Cooke and Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON - Vice President Kamala Harris is toughening her position on
illegal immigration, taking on hardliner Donald Trump on his signature
issue in a series of campaign events and digital ads in coming weeks,
according to campaign staff.
The campaign plans to promote Harris' support for a bipartisan border
security bill - defeated in the Senate in February after Trump came out
against it - that would have increased funding for border agents and
detention facilities, an official said.
Harris' more combative approach on immigration is expected to be on
display as she campaigns around the country with her running mate Tim
Walz, the governor of Minnesota, who was chosen in part for his appeal
to voters in America's heartland.
Harris will also highlight Trump's most divisive actions, such as his
2018 policy that separated thousands of migrant families at the
U.S.-Mexico border and an executive order in 2017 that sought to ban
travel from certain Muslim-majority countries. A version of the ban was
upheld by the Supreme Court a year later.
A campaign official said Harris had a chance to reintroduce herself to
voters after becoming the Democratic presidential candidate following
U.S. President Joe Biden's exit from the race last month.
"It's all part of a larger effort by Harris to be direct and to go
directly at Trump," said Matt Barreto, a pollster who has worked with
the Harris and Biden campaigns. "Democrats always do well when they lean
in on the immigration issue and don't run away from it."
The enforcement-first position is a departure from Biden's 2020
campaign, when he pledged a more humane approach to immigration than
Trump. Biden gradually hardened his approach as illegal crossings
increased.
The Trump campaign has sought to blame Harris for illegal immigration,
dubbing her a failed "border czar," though her portfolio was focused on
the drivers of migration from Central America.
"If dangerously liberal Kamala is president, our border will remain wide
open to terrorists and criminals from around the world who will face no
consequence for committing heinous migrant crimes," Trump campaign
spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said in a statement, when asked about
Harris' record.
HARRIS TOUTS PROSECUTION RECORD
Harris began setting out her new, more combative strategy in a speech in
Atlanta last week, criticizing Trump for helping to sink the border
security bill.
She also touted her record on border-related prosecutions as California
attorney general. "I went after transnational gangs, drug cartels, and
human traffickers that came into our country illegally," she said. "I
prosecuted them in case after case, and I won."
Harris has made the border security bill a centerpiece of her platform,
and a digital campaign ad has cast the election as a choice between "the
one who will fix our broken immigration system. And the one who's trying
to stop her."
[to top of second column]
|
Democratic presidential candidate and U.S. Vice President Kamala
Harris speaks at a presidential election campaign event in Atlanta,
Georgia, U.S. July 30, 2024. REUTERS/Dustin Chambers/File Photo
Jeffrey Jarman, a Wichita State University professor who focuses on
political communication, said Harris' push-back was a way to avoid
ceding the issue of border security to Republicans.
"Failure to talk about the issue allows Republicans to completely
dominate the discussion and frame her in the most unflattering way,"
he said.
But he acknowledged that going on the offensive is unlikely to win
over Republican voters and that Harris risked getting sidetracked on
issues that are not as important to her supporters.
"Candidates who spend too much time talking about the issues of
their opponent will always face a more difficult time winning the
election," he said.
Numerous polls suggest voters have grown more concerned with high
levels of illegal immigration under Biden. In a Reuters/Ipsos poll
in May, some 45% of registered voters said immigration has made life
harder for native-born Americans.
Illegal crossings have plummeted since Biden issued new restrictions
on asylum at the border in June.
A memo published on Friday by the advocacy group Immigration Hub
argued that Harris could energize voters if she pairs her
enforcement record with protections for immigrants already in the
U.S. illegally, citing polling for seven battleground states.
Harris played a key role in the Biden administration's announcement
in June that it would provide a path to citizenship to spouses of
immigrants in the U.S. illegally, as Reuters previously reported.
Trump has promised to launch mass deportations if reelected.
Ken Budge, the Democratic mayor of the 5,000-person border city of
Bisbee, Arizona, said high illegal crossings in recent years have at
times made it challenging to provide basic necessities to migrants
as they passed through.
He said the Harris campaign wanted to solve the border problem.
"They don't want to just kick the can down the road."
Tom Suozzi, a New York Democrat who won a special election to
Congress in February by taking a tough stand on the border, said a
member of Harris' team texted him a link to her social media ad on
immigration last week, saying they thought he would like it.
"A lot of my consultants and a lot of political people were saying,
'What are you talking about immigration for? It's a Republican
issue,'" Suozzi said in an interview.
"I said, 'No, it's an American issue. It's what people are talking
about.'"
(Reporting by Ted Hesson, Kristina Cooke and Trevor Hunnicutt;
Editing by Suzanne Goldenberg)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|