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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Léonie Chao-Fong

US election live: former Trump officials to join Harris campaign at debate

Kamala Harris campaigns in North Hampton, New Hampshier, on 4 September 2024. Donald Trump speaks at the Economic Club of New York on 5 September 2024.
Kamala Harris campaigns in North Hampton, New Hampshier, on 4 September 2024. Donald Trump speaks at the Economic Club of New York on 5 September 2024. Composite: Reuters, Getty Images

Melania Trump claims there is 'definitely more' to assassination attempt against husband

Melania Trump, the former first lady, questioned the official account of the attempted assassination of her husband, Donald Trump, in a bizarre new video posted to X to promote her new memoir.

“The attempt to end my husband’s life was a horrible, distressing experience,” she said.

Now, the silence around it feels heavy. I can’t help but wonder: Why didn’t law enforcement officials arrest the shooter before the speech?

“There is definitely more to this story, and we need to uncover the truth, she added.

The video ends with an image of her new book, “Melania”, due to be released on 8 October.

The dispatching of election police to voters’ homes is not the only beef Ron DeSantis critics have with the Republican Florida governor’s efforts to upend the amendment 4 abortion ballot measure.

The official Florida health department’s website is urging voters to reject it, an unlawful use of taxpayers’ money for what amounts to political advertising, according to the ACLU of Florida.

Bacardi Jackson, executive director of the ACLU of Florida, said in a statement:

To our knowledge, it is unprecedented for the state to expressly advocate against a citizen-led initiative.

This kind of propaganda, using taxpayer money and operating outside of the political process, sets a dangerous precedent. This is what we would expect to see from an authoritarian regime.

The state’s illegal act to undermine amendment 4 is nothing more than an abuse of power, aimed at preventing voters from rejecting the cruel and extreme abortion ban in place.

DeSantis has railed against amendment 4, which would nix the six-week abortion ban he signed into law in April last year, and allow abortions until viability of the fetus.

There’s a new squabble in Florida over an amendment on November’s ballot to protect abortion rights.

Having failed to persuade the state’s supreme court from blocking the measure going before voters in the first place, Ron DeSantis, the state’s hard-right Republican governor, now claims the signature collection process for amendment 4 was fraudulent, and is reportedly sending his election police force to voters’ homes to try to gather evidence.

The Tampa Bay Times spoke to voters who said uniformed officers from the Florida department of law enforcement showed up at their door. One told the newspaper that the officer had a 10-page dossier on him, including a printout of his driver’s license and a copy of his signature.

After the voter confirmed he had indeed signed the petition, the officer left.

DeSantis set up his own election fraud unit in 2022 and has been busy scouring thousands of the almost one million signatures that put the abortion measure on the ballot for authenticity.

Democrats are calling foul. State representative Anna Eskamani told the Orlando Sentinel:

These tactics set a very dangerous precedent for the future of our elections where [an] election police force can be sent in to intimidate, to try to re-evaluate history and to take away our votes and to take away our voices.

At a press conference Monday, DeSantis defended his tactics. His investigators, he said, found signatures that “appeared” not to be authentic.

“It may be… that voter will say, ‘No, I actually did do that,’ maybe they signed their name. That is absolutely possible,” DeSantis conceded.

Kamala Harris was asked to explain her shifts on certain policy issues over the years during a CNN interview last month.

Pressed on her reversals on fracking and decriminalizing illegal border crossings, Harris insisted that her “values had not changed”. She said:

I think the most important and most significant aspect of my policy perspective and decisions is my values have not changed.

On fracking, she said she made clear in the 2020 debate that she no longer supports a ban, and that as president she would not ban fracking.

On immigration, Harris said she thought laws on illegal border crossing should be followed and enforced on immigration. She pointed to her record as California attorney general, when she prosecuted gangs accused of cross border trafficking, as an indication of her values on immigration.

My values have not changed. So that is the reality of it. And four years of being vice president, I’ll tell you, one of the aspects, to your point, is traveling the country extensively. I believe it is important to build consensus, and it is important to find a common place of understanding of where we can actually solve problems.

Donald Trump said he is feeling “great” ahead of tonight’s debate and that his biggest challenge facing off against Kamala Harris is that she has changed her positions on so many issues over the years.

Trump told NBC News this morning:

You don’t know what to expect. She’s changed all of her policies over the years.

“It makes it much easier. She’s no longer believable,” he added.

Trump’s debate preparations have been far less extensive and structured than Harris’s, but he participated in intensive sessions over the past two days, the outlet reported.

Sources told NBC that Trump has been nervous or disengaged with debate preparation in the past few weeks, but that he has been more focused as debate day neared.

Obama mocks Trump's 'weird obsession' with 'crowd sizes' in new Harris campaign ad

A new Harris-Walz campaign ad features Barack Obama mocking Donald Trump over his “weird obsession” with crowd sizes during his speech at the Democratic national convention last month.

The ad, titled Crowd Size, features footage from the former president’s remarks the convention in Milwaukee where he decries Trump for “whining about his problems” such as his “weird obsession with crowd sizes”.

“This weird obsession with crowd sizes ... it just goes on, and on, and on,” Obama says, making a suggestive hand gesture that drew laughter from the audience.

The ad launched this morning and will air nationally and in markets that appear intentionally targeted at Trump, including on Fox News and in West Palm Beach, Florida, as well as Philadelphia, where tonight’s debate is taking place.

Updated

Kamala Harris and Donald Trump will arrive in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on Tuesday for their first (and potentially only) presidential debate.

The event will mark the first time that Harris and Trump have ever met face to face, and it comes less than two months after Joe Biden withdrew from the presidential race following his own fateful debate performance in June.

The change at the top of the Democratic ticket appears to have unnerved Trump and his campaign advisers, who have struggled to land attacks against Harris. The debate will present Trump with his most significant opportunity yet to negatively define Harris in voters’ minds, as polls show a neck-and-neck race in key battleground states.

For Harris, the debate could allow her to deliver on her oft-repeated promise to voters: that she will prosecute the case against Trump. Her political history – both on the debate stage and in Senate hearings – suggest she is well-positioned to make that case. But Harris is not without her vulnerabilities either.

Here are five key moments from Harris’s career that could offer a preview of her debate strategy.

The Harris campaign noted that the two former Trump White House officials joining them as surrogates tonight, Anthony Scaramucci and Olivia Troye, are not the only former Trump aids and officials speaking out against him.

The Harris campaign also released a new TV ad, titled The Best People, to coincide with tonight’s debate featuring former top officials in Donald Trump’s administration, including his vice-president, Mike Pence, secretary of defense, Mark Esper, national security adviser, John Bolton, and chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, Gen Mark Milley.

“In 2016 Donald Trump said he would choose only the best people to work in his White House,” a narrator in the ad says.

Now those people have a warning for America: Trump is not fit to be president again.

Updated

Former Trump officials to join Harris campaign at debate

Two former Trump White House officials will join Kamala Harris’s campaign in Philadelphia as surrogates for Tuesday’s presidential debate, the Harris campaign announced.

Anthony Scaramucci, who served as Donald Trump’s White House communications director, and Olivia Troye, who was homeland security adviser to Mike Pence and a top aide on the Trump White House’s coronavirus task force, will speak out against Donald Trump and for Harris ahead of the debate, the campaign said.

Announcing the campaign’s plans to bring Scaramucci and Troye to the debate, the Harris-Walz campaign’s communications director Michael Tyler said:

Listen, don’t take it from us: Take it from the ones who know Donald Trump the best and who are telling the American people exactly how unfit Trump is to serve as president. They saw firsthand the abject failure of Donald Trump’s presidency.

Updated

The White Stripes’ Jack White and Meg White have filed a lawsuit against Donald Trump for what they allege is the “flagrant misappropriation” of a recording of their hit song Seven Nation Army in a campaign video.

The video that spurred the legal action was posted by Trump staffer Margo McAtee Martin on X on 29 August, but has since been deleted. It shows the Republican presidential nominee boarding a plane with the opening riff of Seven Nation Army playing in the background.

Responding via Instagram at the time, Jack White wrote:

Don’t even think about using my music you fascists. Law suit coming from my lawyers about this (to add to your 5 thousand others).

The singer has made good on the threat, filing a copyright infringement suit, alongside Meg White, as the White Stripes, seeking “significant monetary damages”, and listing Trump, his campaign and Martin as defendants.

The suit alleges that the campaign did not seek or obtain permission from the band to use the song, and did not respond to pre-litigation efforts to resolve the issue.

Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota governor Tim Walz, will rally supporters in critical battleground states following tonight’s presidential debate.

The Harris campaign will kick off a “New Way Forward” tour involving a four-day campaign trip through major swing states, a new television spot, rallies, canvassing events and programs designed to target important voting groups, it said.

Harris is expected to attend 9/11 memorial ceremonies on Wednesday, and will embark on her tour on Thursday. Harris will visit North Carolina on Thursday and Pennsylvania on Friday. Walz will be in Nevada on Tuesday, Michigan on Thursday and Wisconsin on Friday.

Harris v Trump: How to watch tonight's debate

As Kamala Harris and Donald Trump meet tonight for their only scheduled debate, here’s what to know:

What time is the debate?

The debate will start at 9pm Eastern Time (1am GMT) and is expected to last 90 minutes with two commercial breaks.

Where is the debate?

Tonight’s debate will take place at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, a key election battleground state. As with the previous debate between Trump and Joe Biden, there will be no audience present.

World News Tonight anchor David Muir and ABC News Live Prime anchor Linsey Davis will moderate the debate.

How can I watch the debate?

ABC News will carry the debate live on its broadcast network as well as its streaming platform ABC News Live, Disney+ and Hulu. Several networks have also agreed to carry the event live.

When is the next debate?

As of now, there is only one debate scheduled before the election. Tim Walz and JD Vance are due to face off at a vice-presidential debate on 1 October in New York City.

Updated

Harris and Trump to face off in presidential debate

Good morning US politics readers. It was the debate that was never meant to happen. Tonight, Donald Trump and Kamala Harris will meet for the first time ever when they take the stage at Philadelphia’s national constitution center for the presidential debate.

With just eight weeks until election day and recent polls showing the candidates neck-and-neck, the stakes couldn’t be higher for both Harris and Trump. Today’s debate, which will start at 9pm ET and is expected to last 90 minutes, may well be the only chance the American public have to see their Democratic and Republican presidential candidates face off against each other on what voters say are their key issues, including the economy, immigration and reproductive rights.

We will be covering the debate tonight on our live blog. In the meantime, here’s what else we’re watching:

  • The Harris-Walz campaign unveiled a new ad for debate day, entitled “Crowd Size”, that features Barack Obama ridiculing Trump’s insecurities about his crowd size.

  • Paul Dans, the former director of Project 2025, sharply criticized the Trump campaign, revealing discontent on the right about what some see as a pivot to the center.

  • Voters in Delaware, New Hampshire and Rhode Island will cast their ballots in a slate of primary races today.

  • Andrew Cuomo, the former New York governor, appears before the House select subcommittee on the coronavirus pandemic this afternoon.

  • Antony Blinken, the secretary of state, is in the UK for a US-UK strategic dialogue and will meet with the UK prime minister, Keir Starmer.

Updated

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