free website hit counter Harris Suggests Trump Is ‘Weak and Unstable’ in Pointed Challenge – Netvamo

Harris Suggests Trump Is ‘Weak and Unstable’ in Pointed Challenge

Vice President Kamala Harris challenged former President Donald J. Trump on Sunday for refusing to do what she has done in recent days: release a report on his health, sit for a “60 Minutes” interview and commit to another presidential debate.

“It makes you wonder: Why does his staff want him to hide away?” Ms. Harris asked the crowd at a rally in a packed college basketball arena in Greensville, N.C. “One must question: Are they afraid that people will see that he is too weak and unstable to lead America?”

Her line of attack marked an attempt to turn the tables on Mr. Trump, who for months had suggested that President Biden was too old to be president and accused him of hiding from the American people. And it underscored her efforts to present herself as the candidate of change and Mr. Trump as a relic of the past, as she forms a closing message in the final weeks of her campaign.

“From him, we are just hearing from that same, old tired playbook,” she said. “He has no plan for how he would address the needs of the American people. He is only focused on himself.”

Ms. Harris’s rally, which attracted about 7,000 people, was aimed especially at urging supporters in a presidential battleground state to cast their ballots before Election Day. Early voting begins on Thursday in North Carolina. “The election is here,” she said.

It was also meant to mobilize Black voters, a critical Democratic constituency whose support for Ms. Harris is drifting compared to 2020, polls have found. A survey of Black likely voters from The New York Times/Siena College found that roughly eight in 10 Black voters plan to vote for Ms. Harris — an overwhelming majority, but more than 10 points short of the support Mr. Biden had four years ago. The softening of support was especially pronounced among Black men — 70 percent of whom said they planned to support her.

Roughly four in 10 residents of Greenville are Black, and the city is surrounded by rural communities with significant Black populations that often say they are ignored by national campaigns. A Democratic presidential candidate has not won North Carolina since Barack Obama in 2008. A Times polling average shows Ms. Harris within one point of Mr. Trump in the state, which he almost certainly must win to reclaim the White House.

The Trump campaign did not immediately respond on Sunday to a request for comment about Ms. Harris’s remarks. Mr. Trump, speaking at a rally in Prescott Valley, Ariz., on Sunday, cast himself as an indefatigable campaigner, who can give multiple long speeches each day and keep up with the rigors of political travel.

“Who the hell can do this two, three times a day?” Mr. Trump said. “So I speak for hours, mostly without a Teleprompter.” And he mocked reporters for seizing on any mispronunciation of a word to claim “he’s cognitively impaired” or “he’s getting old.”

After avoiding the media during the initial rollout of her truncated campaign, the vice president has embarked on a blitz of interviews recently, both with mainstream journalists and on nontraditional settings like podcasts. She appeared on a “60 Minutes” special last Monday; CBS said that Mr. Trump had agreed to be interviewed on the program as well, but then backed out.

Ms. Harris also released a letter from her doctor on Saturday declaring that she was in “excellent health” and possessed the “physical and mental resiliency required to successfully execute the duties of the presidency.”

Ms. Harris’s allies say the final three weeks of the campaign will focus on engaging the Black voters who have not yet committed to casting their ballots for her. Through town hall-style events, get-out-the-vote efforts geared toward Black men and the use of campaign surrogates, Democrats hope to consolidate their base of Black voters around the party once more.

They also plan to ramp up efforts to counter what they see as misinformation about Ms. Harris’s record on criminal justice, and they are holding events at historically Black colleges and universities to engage Black voters during their season of homecoming celebrations.

On Tuesday, Ms. Harris will sit for an interview in Detroit with Charlamagne Tha God, one of the nation’s most popular Black radio hosts, on his nationally syndicated show.

“The job of any great candidate in their campaign is to, number one, listen, and I think the Harris campaign has been listening and is addressing that concern pretty aggressively,” said Quentin James, the co-founder and CEO of the Collective PAC, an organization that supports Black political candidates.

Last week, the Harris campaign unleashed one of its biggest weapons: Mr. Obama, the nation’s first Black president. At a campaign event in Pittsburgh, Mr. Obama suggested that, although some voters cite the economy or immigration for their skepticism of Ms. Harris, he suspected another factor was playing a role.

“Part of it makes me think that, well, you just aren’t feeling the idea of having a woman as president, and you’re coming up with other alternatives and other reasons for that,” Mr. Obama said, in blunt comments that represented a remarkable, if calculated, risk to win support with the election close at hand.

Jeffrey McIlwain, 59, who attended the Greenville rally on Sunday, said he had come to a similar conclusion after talking with some of his male friends and family.

“I think they have a problem with a woman in the White House,” said Mr. McIlwain, a retired bonds trader and banker who lives in Durham.

But polls also suggest a broader anxiety among some Black voters that Democrats have not made life measurably better for them, even though they back the party in overwhelming numbers. Forty percent of African American voters under 30 said the Republican Party was more likely to follow through on its campaign commitments than Democrats were.

Ms. Harris’s weekend visit to North Carolina also included local outreach efforts as the state recovers from the devastation of Hurricane Helene last month. On Saturday, she helped put together care packages at a barbecue restaurant and met with local Black elected officials and faith leaders.

Then, before her rally on Sunday, Ms. Harris attended a service at a predominantly Black church in Greenville as part of her campaign’s wider initiative to engage Black faith voters, which will include a “Souls to the Polls” initiative centered around churchgoers.

At the church, the vice president condemned efforts to spread misinformation about post-storm relief efforts. Mr. Trump and Republicans have amplified many false claims, although Ms. Harris did not name the former president in her remarks.

“Instead of offering hope, there are those who are channeling people’s tragedies and sorrows into grievances and hatred,” she said, arguing that their goal was “to play politics for other people’s heartbreak.”

The post Harris Suggests Trump Is ‘Weak and Unstable’ in Pointed Challenge appeared first on New York Times.

About admin