White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre is pressed on the president's presence at Vice President Harris' campaign events.
The Harris campaign is appealing to GOP voters who are disaffected with Trump’s wild and vulgar behavior, perceived threats to the Constitution and propensity to pal around with tyrants in a way that horrifies the hawks of the Bush and Reagan administrations — including Cheney’s father, former Vice President Dick Cheney.
Trump speaks to evangelical Christians in North Carolina, while the VP tours swing states with ex-Republican lawmaker Liz Cheney.
There’s a reason Donald Trump and Kamala Harris are intensifying efforts to reach beyond their party’s traditional supporters in the final weeks of this razor-thin campaign.
The crisis in the Middle East is looming over the race for the White House as the campaign enters its final weeks
Kamala Harris’s hesitancy to put daylight between her and President Biden gave Donald Trump’s campaign a big opening.
Trump is seeking to make the election a referendum on the Biden-Harris administration’s record, while Harris hopes to highlight the two contrasting agendas.
Vice President Kamala Harris is hoping more Republicans worried about Donald Trump will take heart in Cheney and Sykes' examples.
One thing we know is this: The universe of gettable Republicans is very small. The last national poll by The New York Times and Siena College found that 9 percent of Republicans planned to support Harris — a group that was slightly more likely to be female than male, and a bit more likely to be older than younger.
Kamala Harris is heading to the suburbs in three critical battleground states — Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin — to court Republican voters uneasy about Donald Trump.