Harris reaches for a big moment in her closing argument for 'turning the
page' on Trump
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[October 29, 2024]
By ZEKE MILLER
WASHINGTON (AP) — Vice President Kamala Harris will pledge to Americans
that she'll work to improve their lives while Republican Donald Trump is
only in it for himself as she delivers her campaign's closing argument
Tuesday from the same site where the former president fomented the
Capitol insurrection in 2021.
One week out from Election Day, Harris’ address from the grassy Ellipse
near the White House is designed to encourage Americans to visualize
their alternate futures if she or Trump takes over the Oval Office in
less than three months.
She hoped to sharpen that contrast by delivering her capstone speech
from the place where Trump on Jan. 6, 2021, spewed falsehoods about the
2020 presidential election that inspired a crowd to march to the Capitol
and try unsuccessfully to halt the certification of Democrat Joe Biden's
victory and the sealing of his own defeat.
With time running out and the race razor-tight, Harris and Trump both
have been looking for big moments to try to shift the momentum one way
or the other. But after her speech in the nation's capital, Harris will
be back to furiously scouring for votes one rally and one event after
another in the battleground states.
On Tuesday, aides said, Harris aims to look beyond the startling imagery
of her location on the Ellipse to make a broader case for voters to
reject Trump and consider what she offers.
“There’s a big difference between he and I,” Harris told reporters
Monday in previewing her speech. “If he were elected, on day one he’s
going to sit in the Oval Office working on his enemies list. On day one,
if I am elected, which I fully expect to be, I will be working on behalf
of the American people on my to-do list.”
Campaign aides stressed that she will not be delivering a treatise on
democracy — a staple of President Biden’s own attempts to draw a
contrast with Trump.
But her campaign is hoping the setting will help catch the attention of
battleground state voters who remain on the fence about whom to vote for
— or whether to vote at all.
It comes days after Harris traveled to Texas, a reliably Republican
state, to appear with megastar Beyoncé and emphasize the consequences
for women after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. That,
too, was a speech meant to register with voters far away in the
battleground states.
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Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris speaks
at a campaign event in Burns Park Monday, Oct. 28, 2024, in Ann
Arbor, Mich. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)
The vice president’s latest address has been in the works for weeks.
But aides hoped her message would land with more impact after
Trump’s rally Sunday at Madison Square Garden in New York, where
speakers hurled cruel and racist insults. Harris said the event
“highlighted the point that I’ve been making throughout this
campaign.”
“He is focused and actually fixated on his grievances, on himself
and on dividing our country,” she said.
Harris was expected to use her speech to lay out a pragmatic and
forward-looking plan for the country, including reminding voters
about her economic proposals and pledging to staunchly work for
access to reproductive care, including abortion.
Also central to her message: positioning herself as a “new
generation” of leader after Trump and even her current boss, Biden.
As for Trump, she said Monday, “People are literally ready to turn
the page. They’re tired of it.”
Harris' aides, many of whom also advised Biden’s campaign before he
dropped out, still believe that centering the race on who Trump is
and how she's different will be their strongest message for voters.
Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, a Democrat, said it was important
for battleground voters to be reminded of the consequences of their
choice this fall and for Harris “to really drive home the stakes of
this election and the clear contrast in the race.”
He said Harris had the stronger argument on economic policies,
reproductive freedom and the matter of chaos vs. order, adding that
she "has a vision that’s going to bring more order and more
hopefulness and more joy.”
Trump was set to use planned remarks to reporters at his Mar-a-Lago
club in Florida on Tuesday morning to attempt to preemptively rebut
Harris’ speech, according to a person familiar with the matter.
___
Associated Press writer Michelle L. Price in Atlanta contributed to
this report.
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