For the ABC News presidential debate on Tuesday, Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump will meet for the first time.
Candidates launch attacks in a zinger-filled Trump-Harris debate. With just eight weeks until Election Day, surveys indicate that the two candidates are deadlocked. This is the only debate that the two have arranged, and it comes at a crucial moment.
The two will debate important topics and aim to win over voters from all throughout the nation. ABC will broadcast the discussion, and it can also be streamed on ABC News Live, Disney+, and Hulu.
In addition to introducing herself to viewers who might not be familiar with her policies and background—highlighting her experiences as a prosecutor, California attorney general, and U.S. senator—Harris spent her closing remarks trying to draw a final contrast between her and Trump’s visions for the country.
“We’re not going back,” she said. “And I do believe that the American people know we all have so much more in common than what separates us, and we can chart a new way forward.”
Trump contended that Biden and Harris had three and a half years to carry out her agenda.
She simply began by declaring her intention to do this and that. He declared, “She’s going to do all these amazing things.” “Why hasn’t she done it?”
After claiming that the nation was in “serious decline,” Trump continued by predicting that the US will use nuclear weapons to start World War III. Harris was referred to by the former president as the “worst vice president.”
Vice President Kamala Harris emphasized a positive message about the future in her closing statement, repeating her campaign mantra, “We’re not going back.” Mr. Trump hit at her over not having already accomplished the campaign pledges she is making now. Mr. Trump was pressed on his assertion that Ms. Harris recently “became Black.”
“Whatever she wants to be is OK with me,” he said. Ms. Harris lamented his use of divisive rhetoric on race. She rattled the former president with attacks focused on abortion, immigration and his relationships with dictators. Military leaders, she said, think he’s “a disgrace.” Mr. Trump called her “weak.”
ABOUT US PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE
Kamala Harris vigorously contested Donald Trump in their first and maybe last debate before the election, highlighting their starkly different visions for the nation and taking aim at him on issues including immigration, abortion, the conflicts in Israel and Gaza, Russia and Ukraine, and American democracy.
The discussion offered an insightful look into the volatile presidential campaign with less than two months until Election Day and only hours before Alabama begins distributing early ballots on Wednesday, according to an AP report.
Kamala Harris vigorously contested Donald Trump in their first and maybe last debate before the election, highlighting their starkly different visions for the nation and taking aim at him on issues including immigration, abortion, the conflicts in Israel and Gaza, Russia and Ukraine, and American democracy.
Despite Trump’s description of Biden-Harris as “the worst president, the worst vice president in our country’s history,” Harris expressed confidence in the American people’s understanding that they have much more in common than differences, and that they can find a new path ahead.
American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift endorsed Harris for president on Instagram shortly after the debate ended, referring to her as a “steady-handed, gifted leader.” “I think we can do so much more in this country if we are led by calm and not chaos,” she declared.
Harris attacked Trump for causing the country to experience the “worst employment” since the Great Depression when he was in office. With Trump winning the first presidential debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump in June due to Biden’s unconvincing and repetitious speech and poor articulation, the Democratic Party suffered a great deal.