Vice President Harris was on clean-up duty Wednesday after President Biden stumbled into a gaffe at the worst possible moment for her campaign.
In Biden’s garbled remarks during a Latino get-out-the-vote event on Zoom, the president appeared to call Trump’s supporters “garbage,” a line that was reminiscent of Hillary Clinton’s 2016 remarks calling half of Trump’s supporters “deplorables.”
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“First of all, he clarified his comments, but let me be clear: I strongly disagree with any criticism of people based on who they vote for,” Harris told reporters on her way to a rally in North Carolina, one of three swing states she was visiting Wednesday.
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The White House sought to immediately correct the record Tuesday night, claiming Biden was only referring to the comedian at a Trump rally who called Puerto Rico a “floating island of garbage.”
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Biden later tweeted his own clarification.
Still, Harris and Democrats do not want the controversy to fester, with every utterance magnified in the final hours before Election Day.
- Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro (D) went on CNN in the moments after Biden’s remarks went viral on social media.
- “I would never insult the good people of Pennsylvania or any Americans even if they chose to support a candidate that I didn’t support,” he said.
Biden has largely been sidelined by the Harris campaign, underscored by his appearance on a Zoom event as Harris made her big closing argument in front of 75,000 people at the Ellipse near the White House.
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At a speech in New Hampshire last week, Biden said of Trump, “we gotta lock him up,” before correcting himself to say he meant it as a metaphor that Trump should be “politically” locked up.
- Biden will campaign Friday for Harris in Pennsylvania, where he’ll rally union workers.
GOP ON ATTACK: Republicans are all over Biden's gaffe, which trampled on Harris’s big closing speech and moved the news cycle beyond shock comic Tony Hinchcliffe’s remarks about Puerto Rico at Trump's Madison Square Garden rally on Sunday.
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Trump tied Harris to Biden's remarks during a rally on Wednesday in Rocky Mount, N.C.: “This week, Kamala has been comparing her political opponents to the most evil mass murderers in history, and now speaking on a call for her campaign last night, Joe Biden finally said what he and Kamala really think of our supporters. He called them ‘garbage,’ and they mean it … My response to Joe and Kamala is very simple — you can’t lead America if you don’t love Americans.”
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Trump is fundraising off the remarks, after being informed of them in real-time while onstage at an Allentown rally on Tuesday night with Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.). “We are not garbage, we are patriots,” Rubio said.
- Trump's running mate Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) said on X: “This is disgusting. Kamala Harris and her boss Joe Biden are attacking half of the country. There's no excuse for this. I hope Americans reject it.”
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Downballot Republicans running in swing states sought to tie their opponents to the remarks. Businessman Eric Hovde is up with an ad against Sen. Tammy Baldwin (R-Wis.) in their hotly contested Senate race. “Remember when Hillary Clinton called you a deplorable? … well Tammy Baldwin hates you too,” the narrator in the ad states.
DUELING RALLIES: Trump and Harris shadowed one another across the swing states Wednesday, holding dueling events in North Carolina, where about 3.4 million people have already voted.
This evening, Trump and Harris will be holding dueling events in Wisconsin, where almost 1 million ballots have already been cast.
- Trump will campaign in Green Bay alongside Packers legend Brett Favre.
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Harris will campaign in the college town of Madison with an indie rock line-up that includes Mumford & Sons, Gracie Abrams and members of The National.
💡 Perspectives:
RealClearPolitics: It’s too early to draw conclusions about early voting.
The Liberal Patriot: Both parties ignore working class voters.
The Hill: Republicans need real election solutions, not conspiracy theories.
The Hill: Who will decide this election - does it even matter?
The Hill: What South Texas can teach the GOP about winning Hispanics.
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