Progressives warn Harris must change her closing message as the election
looms
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[October 25, 2024]
By STEVE PEOPLES
NEW YORK (AP) — Progressive Democrats warn Kamala Harris risks losing
the support of a small but significant portion of her political base
unless she changes her campaign's closing message — and its messengers —
immediately.
Specifically, several progressive leaders believe that the Democratic
nominee has been too focused on winning over moderate Republicans in
recent days at the expense of her own party's passionate liberals. And
they say that Harris' closing message, which is increasingly centered on
Republican Donald Trump and the threat he poses to U.S. democracy,
ignores the economic struggles of the nation's working class.
Some far-left leaders are also irked that Harris has shared the stage in
recent days with former House Republican leader Liz Cheney and
billionaire businessman Mark Cuban while progressive icons like Vermont
Sen. Bernie Sanders and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have been
relegated to low-profile roles.
“The truth of the matter is that there are a hell of a lot more
working-class people who could vote for Kamala Harris than there are
conservative Republicans,” Sanders told The Associated Press in an
interview Thursday.
Sanders noted that he's been doing whatever he's asked to help Harris
win. He has participated in two dozen Harris campaign related-events
this month alone, although they're largely in rural areas. None have
been with Harris.
“She has to start talking more to the needs of working-class people,”
Sanders said. “I wish this had taken place two months ago. It is what it
is.”
The Harris campaign believes there are still undecided moderates
Less than two weeks before Election Day, Harris is trying to assemble a
sprawling coalition featuring voting groups with conflicting priorities.
She’s relying on the traditional Democratic base — African Americans,
Latinos and young people who overwhelmingly lean left. Harris’ team is
aware that some liberals are frustrated by her approach, especially on
her support for Israel’s war against Hamas. But the campaign sees a
major opportunity to expand her coalition by winning over disaffected
Republicans, especially college-educated voters in the nation’s suburbs,
who are uneasy about Trump.
From the Harris campaign’s perspective, the focus on moderate
Republicans at this moment is simply a matter of math.
The Democrat’s campaign assesses that 10% of swing-state voters are
still undecided or persuadable, according to an aide who spoke on the
condition of anonymity to discuss internal strategy. Of that 10%, some
7% are considered “Cheney Republicans” who are receptive to messages
attacking Trump, the aide said.
At the same time, the Harris campaign believes her chief political
liability is the perception that she’s too far left. Trump’s allies are
pounding the airwaves accusing the former California senator of being a
“radical-left liberal.” Therefore, she has been reluctant to appear with
progressive icons like Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist.
Harris instead made three swing-state appearances this week with Cheney,
a stalwart conservative who was a Trump ally before turning sharply
against him after the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection.
Harris is scheduled to deliver a major address next week, a formal
closing argument of sorts, focused on the danger Trump poses to U.S.
democracy. She will deliver the speech on Tuesday at the Ellipse in
Washington, the same location where Trump hosted the rally that preceded
the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.
Progressives want Harris to talk more about the economy
Frustrated progressives do not discount the need to warn voters of
Trump's authoritarian leanings, but some wish her closing message was
more focused on addressing voters' overwhelming pessimism about the
state of the economy and the direction of the country.
Adam Green, co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee,
praised Harris' advertising team for “smartly” investing hundreds of
millions of dollars behind ads focusing on grocery prices, taxing
billionaires and Social Security — “things that both win swing voters
and pump up the base.”
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Attendees display signs for Democratic presidential nominee Vice
President Kamala Harris during a campaign rally Thursday, Oct. 24,
2024, in Clarkston, Ga. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)
But, Green said, “there’s been an odd disconnect between the
campaign’s economic populist ad strategy and the event strategy that
focuses almost exclusively on Liz Cheney kumbaya optics that depress
the base right as voting begins and don’t provably win more swing
voters than bread-and-butter issues.”
Other are frustrated that the Harris campaign hasn't featured
progressive leaders like Sanders or Ocasio-Cortez in higher-profile
spots.
Joseph Geevarghese, executive director of the progressive group Our
Revolution, suggested that as many as 10% of progressives may not
vote for Harris because of their frustrations. Some may not cast a
ballot at all, he said, while some may even support Trump. The
former president has called Cheney, a backer of the U.S. invasion of
Iraq, a “stupid war hawk” as he tries to win over Arab Americans in
Michigan angry about the more than 42,000 Palestinians killed in
Israel's Gaza offensive.
“We just want to raise a red flag. Don't take the progressive
movement for granted,” Geevarghese said. “There’s got to be an
economic argument at the end of the day. That’s the No. 1 thing that
matters to voters.”
Indeed, about 4 in 10 likely voters in a recent CNN poll said the
economy was their most important issue when deciding how to vote,
and about 2 in 10 said protecting democracy was. About 1 in 10 named
either immigration or abortion and reproductive rights.
To be sure, Harris is not ignoring the economy or other progressive
priorities.
She has outlined plans to crack down on price gouging by
corporations to help reduce the cost of groceries in addition to
reducing the cost of prescription drugs, cutting taxes on the middle
class while raising taxes on billionaires, offering a $25,000 tax
credit for first-time homebuyers to help lower housing costs, and
expanding Medicare to cover vision and hearing coverage, among other
things.
Ocasio-Cortez made three stops in swing-state Pennsylvania last week
on Harris' behalf. United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain, a key
Harris ally, has also been a steady presence on the campaign trail.
Former President Barack Obama, still beloved by many progressive
voters, has been active in the campaign's closing days. He headlined
an event with Harris for the first time on Thursday night in
Georgia.
Meanwhile, Trump is continuing to lean in on the issues that his
campaign sees as his strongest: the economy and inflation,
immigration, crime and foreign policy.
The Republican nominee is set to outline his formal closing message
Sunday at Madison Square Garden in New York City that's expected to
focus on average Americans' displeasure with the direction of the
country. He begins virtually every rally with a variation of: Are
you better off now than you were four years ago?
“Kamala Harris broke the economy. She broke the border. President
Trump very clearly is going to fix the economy and fix the border,”
said Trump campaign senior adviser Jason Miller, who argued Harris,
with her focus on Trump, wasn't talking about how she will make life
better for the vast majority of Americans.
Harris acknowledged during a CNN town hall this week that some
progressives may be unhappy with her leadership, particularly on
Israel.
“But I also do know that for many people who care about this issue,
they also care about bringing down the price of groceries," she
said. "They also care about our democracy and not having a president
of the United States who admires dictators and is a fascist.”
___
Associated Press writers Will Weissert and Zeke Miller in Washington
and Jill Colvin in Tempe, Arizona, contributed to this report.
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