NEW YORK -- Vice President Kamala Harris is in the midst of a burst of media appearances designed to introduce her to a range of voters with just a month to go in a close election, but it's gotten rocky at times -- giving former President Donald Trump and his running mate, Sen. JD Vance an opening to attack.
WASHINGTON - For more than an hour, Vice President Kamala Harris and radio host Howard Stern bantered Tuesday about the state of the country, former President Donald Trump, Harris' cereal and workout preferences, and her favorite musicians and race-car drivers.
Vice President Kamala Harris cracked open a Miller High Life beer with Stephen Colbert Tuesday and blasted her opponent Donald Trump in an interview.
While appearing on ‘The Late Show,’ Harris touched on the issues while taking shots at Trump: “My opponent, the former president, has been running since 2020.”
Vice President Kamala Harris was mocked Tuesday for telling "The View" that "not a thing" came to mind for what she would change about Biden's presidency.
According to Polymarket, Trump has a 53.2 percent chance of winning the election while Harris has a 46.2 percent chance. While Polymarket gives Trump the edge in the election now, the former president once had a a 70 percent chance of winning when President Biden was still in the race in July.
Senator Mitt Romney, who ran as the Republican presidential candidate in 2012, was speaking at a University of Utah event.
The command center for Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's campaign in one of the most hotly contested counties in the most important election battleground state of Pennsylvania sits in a small room of a strip-mall office rented by Erie County's Republican Party.
Kamala Harris joined Stephen Colbert for a beer and a candid chat about the state of politics, Donald Trump, and her whirlwind presidential campaign.
Tim Walz's spokesman said he wasn't speaking for the Harris campaign in his comments about the electoral college.
Democratic nominee Kamala Harris appeared Tuesday on Howard Stern's satellite radio show and 'The View,' two programs with starkly different audiences.