Harris condemns Trump's rhetoric, says voters should make sure he 'can't
have that microphone again'
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[September 18, 2024]
By MATT BROWN and DARLENE SUPERVILLE
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Vice President Kamala Harris on Tuesday decried
Republican Donald Trump for inflammatory rhetoric about migrants in
Springfield, Ohio, and on other topics, saying voters should make sure
he “can’t have that microphone again.”
Sitting down for a rare extended campaign interview Tuesday with a trio
of journalists from the National Association of Black Journalists,
Harris said her heart breaks after threats of violence have disrupted
the city following comments amplified by Trump and his running mate
alleging, without evidence, that immigrants are kidnapping and consuming
people’s pets.
Two days after Secret Service agents foiled an apparent assassination
attempt on Trump, who blamed Democratic rhetoric for the latest threat
to his life, Harris said that “there are far too many people in our
country right now who are not feeling safe.” She referenced the threats
to immigrants, but also the conservative Project 2025 blueprint for the
next Republican administration and a GOP-led effort to restrict abortion
access.
“Not everybody has Secret Service," she said. “Members of the LGBTQ
community don’t feel safe right now, immigrants or people with an
immigrant background don’t feel safe right now. Women don’t feel safe
right now."
Harris said she personally has confidence in the Secret Service and
feels safe under their protection. She spoke briefly with Trump on
Tuesday to express her gratitude that he was safe, but in the interview
said his rhetoric should be disqualifying.
“When you have that kind of microphone in front of you, you really ought
to understand at a deep level that your words have meaning," Harris
said, without mentioning Trump by name. “Let’s turn the page and chart a
new way forward and say you can’t have that microphone again."
Harris said the Republican attacks on the city and migrants there were
“lies that are grounded in tropes that are age old.”
The sedate interview in Philadelphia stood in contrast to former
President Donald Trump ’s appearance before the same organization just a
month ago, which turned contentious over matters of race and other
issues.
The Trump interview opened a chapter in the campaign in which the
Republican candidate repeatedly questioned Harris’ racial identity,
baselessly claiming that she had only belatedly “turned Black” at some
point in her professional career. Trump has since repeatedly questioned
Harris’ racial identity on the campaign trail and during the September
presidential debate.
Harris, the daughter of a Jamaican father and an Indian mother, has
repeatedly dismissed Trump’s remarks as “the same old show.” During her
September debate with Trump, she said it was a “tragedy” that he had
“attempted to use race to divide the American people.”
The vice president insisted she is working to earn the vote of Black men
and not taking any constituency for granted. Black male voters are
traditionally one of the most consistently Democratic-leaning
demographics in the nation. But Republicans have tried to make inroads,
while Democrats worry about flagging enthusiasm at the polls.
“I think it’s very important to not operate from the assumption that
Black men are in anybody’s pocket,” Harris said. “Black men are like any
other voting group. You gotta earn their vote, so I’m working to earn
the vote, not assuming I’m gonna have it because I’m Black”
Harris declined to say if she supported reparations for descendants of
slaves, but said, “we need to speak truth about the generational impact
of our history in terms of the generational impact of slavery, the
generational impact of red lining." She said expressed openness to
studying the question "to figure out exactly what we need to do,” but
said her focus was on building economic opportunity.
In Trump’s interview with NABJ, he lambasted the moderators and drew
boos and groans from the audience at times. The interview also sparked
debate within the NABJ convention itself, which operates both as a
networking and communal space for Black professionals in media as well
as a newsmaking event.
As with Trump’s appearance, the audience was made up of NABJ members and
college students, but the
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Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris, left,
shaking hands with Gerren Keith Gaynor, center, as Eugene Daniels,
second from the right, and Tonya Mosley, far right, look on after
being interviewed by the National Association of Black Journalists
at the WHYY studio in Philadelphia, Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024. (AP
Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
tenor was markedly different. Where Trump called the reporters
interviewing him “rude,” “nasty” and denounced their questions as
“horrible,” Harris referred to the reporters who pressed her as
“esteemed journalists.”
The crowd was inaudible throughout the Tuesday interview with Harris. In
July, Trump’s comments were often met with laughter, shock and confusion
from the room, which largely consisted of student journalists and media
professionals outside political news.
Trump, his running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, and other Republicans have
criticized Harris for largely avoiding media interviews or interacting
on the record with reporters who cover her campaign events. She and her
running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, gave a joint interview to CNN
last month. Her campaign recently said she would be doing more local
media, and last week she sat for her first solo television interview
since becoming the Democratic nominee, taking questions from a
Philadelphia station.
Asked whether Americans are better off today than four years ago when
she and President Joe Biden entered office, Harris did not directly
answer the question, instead referencing the state of the economy during
the COVID-19 pandemic and bringing up her plans to try to lower housing
costs and promoting herself as a “new generation” of leader.
Harris said her candidacy offers the country a chance at “turning the
page on an era that sadly has shown us attempts to by some to incite
fear to create division in our country."
Janiyah Thomas, Black media director for the Trump campaign, said
Harris’ remarks to the National Association of Black Journalists on
Tuesday reveal her record of failures for Black Americans.
“She told the NABJ that after three and half years of her failed
policies, grocery prices are too high and the American Dream is
unattainable for young Americans,” Thomas said. “We can’t afford four
more years of Kamala Harris. It’s time to put President Trump back in
the White House and restore economic prosperity.”
Harris has largely sidestepped traditional media appearances and instead
focused on rallies, grassroots organizing and social media engagement,
where the vice president can sidestep questions from independent
journalists about her policy record and proposed agenda.
Tuesday's event was moderated by Eugene Daniels of Politico, Gerren
Keith Gaynor of theGrio and Tonya Mosley of WHYY, a Philadelphia-area
public radio station that co-hosted the gathering.
Asked whether she would change U.S. policy toward the Israel-Hamas war,
Harris said she endorsed Biden's pause on 2000-lb. bombs to Israel and
didn't signal any daylight with the president.
Harris noted the killing of Israeli civilians — and some Americans – by
Hamas on Oct. 7 and added that far too many "innocent Palestinians have
been killed" in Israel's response.
She added that the Israel-Hamas war has to end and a ceasefire and
hostage deal must get done, while calling for a two-state solution to
the Israel-Palestinian conflict. She said the goal is to ensure “the
Israelis have security and Palestinians in equal measure have security,
have self-determination and dignity.”
NABJ noted the importance of hosting the conversation in Philadelphia, a
major city in a battleground state with a large Black population.
Philadelphia was also the home to one of the major precursor
organizations to NABJ.
For years, the association has invited both major presidential
candidates to speak before the convention. Presidents George W. Bush,
Barack Obama and Joe Biden all attended NABJ events as presidential
candidates or while in office.
___
Brown reported from Washington. AP writers Zeke Miller and Colleen Long
in Washington contributed.
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