Kamala Harris, along with her vice presidential running mate, Tim Walz, will give the first major interview of her campaign to KeynoteUSA, which will air on Thursday at 9:00 p.m., in the middle of her trip through Georgia.
Photo: EFE – WILL OLIVER
Democratic candidate Kamala Harris has not only raised record donations in the month she has been campaigning, but she has also gathered support from some Republicans who are critical of her rival, Donald Trump. Nearly two months before the presidential election, a letter signed by a dozen Republican White House lawyers who served in the administrations of then-presidents Ronald Reagan and the Bushes emerged, expressing their support for the current vice president. In addition, during the Democratic Convention, held last week in Chicago, some Republicans took to the stage.
The lawyers for past Republican administrations, who initially shared their letter with KeynoteUSA Digital, wrote: “We support Kamala Harris and her election as president because we believe that former President Trump’s return to office would threaten American democracy and undermine the rule of law in our country.” The signatories urged “all patriotic Republicans, former Republicans, conservative and center-right citizens, as well as independent voters, to put love of country above party and ideology, and join us in supporting her.” They cited the tycoon’s attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 election and mentioned that “he is guilty of serious violations of our Constitution.”
Almost in parallel, other Republicans took advantage of the stage provided by the Democratic Convention to express their reservations about the candidate nominated by the group. In fact, Ana Navarro compared Trump to the president of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega, to the brothers Fidel and Raúl Castro, from Cuba, and to Nicolás Maduro, president of Venezuela. But it was not only her who spoke there: Stephanie Grisham, former White House press secretary, commented that, at the time, she was not a simple supporter of Trump, but also a “true believer. I was one of his closest advisors. The Trump family became my family. I spent Easter, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year at Mar-a-Lago” (…). “He has no empathy, no morals, no fidelity to the truth. He used to tell me: ‘It doesn’t matter what you say, Stephanie, say it enough and people will believe you.’ But it does matter: what you say matters, and what you don’t, too.”
Kamala Harris is preparing to give her first major interview as a presidential candidate, alongside her running mate, Tim Walz, scheduled to air Thursday at 9 p.m. on KeynoteUSA, amid her stop in Georgia, one of the swing states where the November 5 election promises to be tight. Although during the convention she promised a tax cut for the middle class in the country and an aggressive foreign policy to confront Russia and North Korea, as well as previously speaking on housing and business issues, there is still no page dedicated to policies on the official campaign website and she has declined requests for interviews, opting instead for less risky appearances and brief conversations with journalists.
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