Harris looks for boost from Oprah as part of digital-first media
strategy
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[September 20, 2024]
By JOSH BOAK and ZEKE MILLER
FARMINGTON HILLS, Mich. (AP) — Vice President Kamala Harris looked for a
boost with persuadable and less-motivated voters as she participated in
a livestream Thursday evening with former talk show host Oprah Winfrey
to focus on her plans to cut costs for the middle class, restore a
national right to abortion and address gun violence.
The event, billed as “Unite for America,” and hosted by Winfrey from
suburban Michigan, one of this election’s key battlegrounds, sought to
tap into the same energy as long-running Winfrey’s talk show, which
drove bestseller lists and allowed celebrities to share their softer
side and everyday people to share stories of struggle and inspiration.
It leaned on celebrities like Bryan Cranston, Jennifer Lopez and Meryl
Streep, but also the stories of ordinary voters to promote Harris'
message over the course of 90 minutes and to draw a contrast with former
President Donald Trump, the GOP nominee. More than 300,000 people were
watching the Harris campaign livestream on YouTube alone and the event
was also being streamed on other major social media platforms.
“We each have those moments in our lives when it’s time to step up,”
Harris said when Winfrey asked about her overnight transformation as she
went from President Joe Biden’s running mate to being the Democratic
nominee in her own right after he suddenly dropped out in July. “I felt
a sense of responsibility, to be honest with you, and with that comes a
sense of purpose."
Winfrey told Harris it looked as if a “veil dropped” and she “stepped
into your power."
At one point Harris reminded viewers that she owns a gun — which
surprised Winfrey — saying, “If somebody’s breaking into my house
they’re gettin’ shot.” She added, “I probably shouldn’t have said that.”
Harris was given the chance to talk about her plans to reduce the cost
of housing and lower taxes for the middle class, as she took questions
from voters in Michigan and Virginia.
Oprah recognized Hadley Duvall in the audience, a 22-year-old woman who
became an abortion rights advocate after she was raped by her stepfather
as a child.
“You can't wait until it's too late to care about reproductive
healthcare, because then it's too late,” said Duvall, who is featured in
a new Harris campaign ad. “Thank you for hearing us and seeing us when
the Supreme Court won't,” Duvall added in praise of Harris.
Harris and Winfrey also welcomed the mother and sister of a young
Georgia mother who died after waiting 20 hours for a hospital to treat
her complications from an abortion pill. Amber Thurman’s death, first
reported Monday by ProPublica, occurred just two weeks after Georgia’s
strict abortion ban was enacted in 2022 following the U.S. Supreme
Court’s decision to overturn nationwide abortion rights. Harris has
blamed her death on Trump.
“Amber was not a statistic, she was loved by a family, a strong family
and we would have done whatever to get my baby, our baby, the help that
she needed," said Thurman's mother, Shanette Williams.
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Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris joins
Oprah Winfrey at Oprah's Unite for America Live Streaming event
Thursday, Sept. 19, 2024 in Farmington Hills, Mich. (AP Photo/Paul
Sancya)
Harris praised their courage in speaking out and called out a
“healthcare crisis” caused by the overturning of Roe v. Wade. “They
have no right to be in your womb,” added Winfrey.
Natalie Griffith, a student who was shot twice last month at
Apalachee High School in Georgia, joined with her parents. Her
mother described the fear she felt after learning about the gunfire
at her child's school.
“No parent should go through this," Marilda Griffith said through
tears, describing rushing out of work, then running to the school to
learn if her daughter was OK. She appealed for federal action to
curb gun violence.
Harris, after pointing out that she herself owns a gun, said
assault-style rifles were designed to kill as many people as
possible on a battlefield, and “don't belong on the streets of a
civil society.”
The event comes as Harris is working to continue to share her
biography and governing philosophy with voters during her
abbreviated presidential campaign, with early voting already
underway in some states.
Harris has limited her interactions with the traditional media,
instead prioritizing digital engagement and casual — and often more
controlled — moments that her campaign hopes will reach voters who
increasingly get their news from digital sources.
“I want to bring my daughters to the White House to meet this Black
woman president,” comedian Chris Rock said.
The in-the-round stage has the appearance of a college campus, with
faux brick pillars and a background of trees and green turf under
the chairs of the several hundred guests in the audience. Dozens
more supporters were featured on video screens in the hall.
“I look around at these screens, Oprah, and I look at who’s in the
room, and this is America,” Harris said.
The event is meant as a unifying event of Harris supporter groups
that spun off organically after a “Black Women for Harris” call drew
tens of thousands of viewers — and raised $1.5 million — in the
hours after Harris took over for Biden after he ended his campaign.
They included “White Dudes for Harris," "Comedians for Harris" and 'Swifties
for Harris."
The event included a direct call to action to viewers to volunteer
for Harris' campaign and to make calls and knock on doors for the
Democrat.
Winfrey ended with a call "for all decent people, for all caring
people” to back Harris, saying of Trump, “We’re better than this.”
—
Miller reported from Washington.
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