Obama, Springsteen boost Harris as she warns of ‘brutally serious’
consequences if Trump wins
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[October 25, 2024]
By DAN MERICA and ZEKE MILLER
CLARKSTON, Ga. (AP) — Bruce Springsteen and Barack Obama lent their star
power to Kamala Harris’ quest for the presidency on Thursday, as the
vice president implored Georgia voters to consider the “brutally
serious” consequences if Donald Trump wins a second term in the White
House.
Harris asked voters to imagine who'll be sitting in the Oval Office just
three months from now and think about the new president's priorities.
“It’s either Donald Trump in there stewing over his enemies list, or me
working for you, checking off my to-do list,” she said. “You have the
power to make that decision.”
The presence of Springsteen, whose career spans five decades, and former
President Obama, still one of the biggest names in Democratic politics,
highlights how Harris is leaning on some of the most noteworthy names in
the party to help her deliver her closing message and lambast her
opponent.
Obama, who got a rousing reception from the rally crowd at a packed high
school football stadium outside Atlanta, told his audience, “I get why
people are looking to shake things up, but what I cannot understand is
why anybody would think that Donald Trump would shake things up in ways
that are good for you."
Harris echoed that message in her speech, warning that “the consequences
of him being president again are brutally serious.”
The lengthy rally ran well behind schedule and seemingly took a toll on
attendees. While the vast majority of seats remained full, hundreds of
people streamed out of the event early as Harris spoke after hours of
programming.
The other speakers wasted no time attacking Trump.
Obama argued his successor was always “trying to sell you stuff,” was
someone who only cares about "his ego, his money, his status,” and
regularly gives lengthy speeches that are “just word salad."
“We do not need four years of a wannabe king, a wannabe dictator,” Obama
said before offering Harris as someone “ready for the job.”
After arguing Trump is focused only on himself, Obama added, “If you
elect Kamala Harris ... she will be focused on you."
Springsteen, too, focused on Trump.
After a performance of “The Promised Land," a ballad off his 1978 album
“Darkness on the Edge of Town,” Springsteen told the Georgia audience he
was backing Harris because he wants “a president who reveres the
Constitution.”
“There is only one candidate in this election who holds those principles
dear, Kamala Harris. She’s running to be the 47th president of the
United States. Donald Trump is running to be an American tyrant,"
Springsteen added before playing "Land of Hope and Dreams” and “Dancing
in the Dark.”
The Trump campaign called Harris' use of Obama and Springsteen “a
desperate, last-ditch effort to salvage her spiraling campaign.”
“Relying on celebrities is nothing new for the party of Hollywood elites
— and as voters realize the depths of Kamala’s incompetence and
radicalism, she needs an added draw,” the campaign said in a statement.
Harris' rally in Clarkston — an eastern Atlanta suburb — reflected the
suburb’s reputation as the “most diverse square mile in America.” The
community has taken in waves of immigrants and refugees, and 40% of its
population was foreign-born in 2020.
The DJ working the crowd before the event started called out not only to
graduates of historically Black colleges and universities, but to West
Indians. Among those in the snaking line to enter were people of Asian
descent and women in hijabs.
Many attendees said they were trying to push their relatives and
neighbors to the polls to vote for Harris, either through formal
volunteer efforts or on their own. “I decided to go volunteer because I
couldn’t keep my mouth shut,” said Beverly Payne, who lives in Cumming,
a Republican suburban stronghold north of Atlanta.
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Bruce Springsteen performs at a campaign rally supporting Democratic
presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris, Thursday, Oct.
24, 2024, in Clarkston, Ga. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)
Payne said she is still working on persuading her mother but has already
swung one Georgia vote to Harris. “My 85-year-old father has gone
Democratic for the first time in his life,” she said.
Actor Samuel L. Jackson, director Spike Lee and actor and filmmaker
Tyler Perry also spoke at the start of the event.
“No matter what kind of shenanigans, skullduggery and subterfuge, the
okie-doke, we’re not going back,” Lee proclaimed.
Harris' run of events with celebrities will continue Friday when she
travels to Texas for a Houston rally with Beyoncé, according to three
people familiar with the matter. The singer is a Houston native, and her
2016 song “Freedom” has become Harris’ campaign anthem.
While the Friday rally is in a red state that even the most optimistic
Democrat knows the vice president is unlikely to turn blue in November,
the event Thursday in Georgia highlights that state's prominent place in
her possible path to defeating Trump.
Democrats, led by then-former Vice President Joe Biden and Harris, won
Georgia in 2020, becoming the first Democratic presidential campaign to
win the Southern state since Bill Clinton in 1992. Harris’ campaign is
hopeful she can keep the state blue in 2024.
Polls of likely voters in Georgia from NYT/Siena to Fox News to the
Atlanta Journal-Constitution show a tight race between Trump and Harris.
Thursday's event is the first in the campaign’s “When We Vote We Win”
concert series that aims to encourage Harris supporters to vote before
Election Day.
Harris is not the only member of the Democratic campaign to lean on star
power in the final days. Gov. Tim Walz, her running mate, had events in
North Carolina on Thursday alongside singer-songwriter James Taylor.
Democrats are known for leaning on high-profile surrogates in the final
days of presidential races.
Springsteen has long been a supporter of Democratic presidential
campaigns. The artist backed Obama in 2008 and 2012, even endorsing the
would-be president in the contentious 2008 Democratic primary. He backed
former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2016, performing at a
Philadelphia rally on the eve of Election Day, and endorsed Biden in
2020. The New Jersey artist endorsed Harris earlier this month, calling
Trump the "most dangerous candidate for president in my lifetime.”
Beyoncé, too, backed Clinton in 2016, performing at an event in
Cleveland alongside husband and rapper Jay Z just days before Election
Day that year. And Taylor has become a staple at Democratic events and
fundraisers.
But Clinton’s loss to Trump in 2016, despite the considerable star power
behind her, serves as a warning for Democrats that energy provided by
big-name artists like Springsteen and Beyoncé is often not enough to win
an election.
Harris campaign advisers, though, see events like those in Georgia and
Texas as major moments to mobilize voter enthusiasm and get out the vote
before Election Day.
According to the Associated Press count, 2,025,645 people in Georgia
have already voted early in-person, while an additional 134,336 mail-in
ballots have been submitted in the 2024 general election.
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Merica reported from Washington. Jeff Amy contributed to this report
from Clarkston.
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