September 20, 2024, presidential campaign news | CNN Politics

September 20, 2024, presidential campaign news

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'Time to step up': Harris on accepting Democratic presidential nomination
02:51 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • On the campaign trail: Vice President Kamala Harris held campaign events in battleground states Georgia and Wisconsin on Friday. On Saturday, former President Donald Trump will hold a rally in Wilmington, North Carolina, another key state.
  • New Georgia rule: Trump allies who control the Georgia State Election Board on Friday approved a controversial new rule requiring counties to hand count the number of ballots cast on Election Day, despite bipartisan objections from election officials and poll workers.
  • CNN investigation: Offensive posts by North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson were removed from a pornographic website Thursday, hours after a CNN KFile investigation revealed a series of inflammatory comments by the socially conservative GOP nominee for governor.
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Arizona Supreme Court rules voters caught in proof-of-citizenship glitch can still get "full ballot," including state races

The Arizona Supreme Court ruled Friday that nearly 100,000 residents who may not have fulfilled the state’s proof-of-citizenship requirements can still vote in state and local races this year, quickly resolving how election officials should address a clerical glitch that had left in question the eligibility of those registered voters in the critical battleground state.

The court was asked to decide whether these voters should get a “federal-only” ballot or the “full ballot,” which would also include state and local races. Regardless of the outcome, these voters would have been able to cast presidential ballots.

Arizona uses these separate ballots because the state requires all voters to prove their citizenship before they can vote in state and local races. Such documentation isn’t required to cast ballots for federal office in Arizona.

The decision to let these roughly 98,000 voters use the full ballot is a victory for Arizona’s Democratic secretary of state, Adrian Fontes, and liberal groups that pushed for this outcome.

The Arizona Supreme Court ruled just three days after the lawsuit was filed. Election officials hoped a quick resolution of the issue would reduce confusion heading into voting season.

Besides state and local races, the ruling could also affect Arizona’s referendum on abortion rights this fall.

Read more about the ruling here

Harris stresses it’s going to be a "tight race until the very end" in pitch to Wisconsin voters

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign event in Madison, Wisconsin, on Friday.

Vice President Kamala Harris on Friday emphasized to Wisconsin voters that it will be a “tight race until the very end” ahead of November’s election.

A Quinnipiac University poll released earlier this week finds no clear leader in the race between former President Donald Trump and Harris in Wisconsin. Harris takes 48% to Trump’s 47% when third party candidates are included – with similar results in a head-to-head matchup between just Harris and Trump. Meanwhile, other polls also show a tight race nationally.

In her first rally in the Badger State since the presidential debate, Harris again contrasted her debate performance with that of Trump.

“I talked about issues that matter to families across America, like bringing down the cost of living, investing in America’s small businesses, protecting reproductive freedom and keeping our nation safe and secure,” Harris said.

“But that is not what we heard from Donald Trump. Instead, it was the same old tired show, the same old tired playbook we’ve heard for years with no plan on how he would address the needs of the American people,” she added. 

She again painted the former president as an “unserious man,” warning of the serious consequences of a second Trump term. She hit him on a number of policy issues including his economic plan, women’s reproductive rights and health care. 

North Carolina GOP senator weighs in on Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson

North Carolina Republican Sen. Thom Tillis said North Carolina Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson should put the future of the state and the party “before himself” if CNN’s reporting on his past disturbing comments in a porn forum “is true.” 

Tillis said in a social media post on Friday that Robinson must “take immediate legal action” if CNN’s reporting is “a total media fabrication.” But if the reporting is accurate, Tillis said Robinson “owes it to President Trump and every Republican” to take responsibility.

Tillis is among the most prominent North Carolina Republicans calling out Robinson in the wake of CNN’s reporting.

On Thursday, hours after CNN’s reporting was published, Tillis urged North Carolina Republicans to shift focus to the presidential election and state legislative and judicial races.

Lewd posts by North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson removed from porn forum

North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson speaks on stage at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee on July 15.

Offensive posts by North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson were removed from the pornographic website Nude Africa on Thursday, hours after a CNN KFile investigation revealed a series of inflammatory comments posted on the forum by the controversial and socially conservative Republican nominee for governor of North Carolina.

It’s unclear whether the comments were removed by Robinson or Nude Africa administrators. Neither the Robinson campaign nor Nude Africa responded to inquiries from CNN.

Robinson denies making the comments, which were made between 2008 and 2012 – predating his entry into politics and current tenure as lieutenant governor – and stand counter to his public stances on issues such as abortion and transgender rights.

Robinson listed his full name on his profile for Nude Africa, a pornographic website that includes a message board, as well as an email address he used on numerous websites across the internet for decades.

Many gratuitously sexual and lewd in nature, the comments were made under the username minisoldr, a moniker Robinson used frequently online. CNN was able to identify the username as Robinson by matching a litany of biographical details and a shared email address between the two.

Robinson commented on issues of race, gender and abortion in posts. In some, he referred to himself as a “black NAZI!” and expressed support for reinstating slavery. In others, he discussed his affinity for transgender pornography – despite a recent history of anti-transgender rhetoric.

Following the revelations, pressure mounted on Robinson, who is currently in a competitive race against Democrat Josh Stein to succeed term-limited Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper, to exit the race. But the deadline under state law for Robinson to remove his name from the ballot passed Thursday without him doing so, and the state’s first absentee ballots were set to be mailed out Friday.

Read more about the latest developments here

Michigan Democratic Senate candidate slams Trump over his comments about the auto industry

Democratic Senate candidate Rep. Elissa Slotkin warned of the high stakes in her battleground state of Michigan with a little more than six weeks until Election Day. 

“We know real well that it is not over until it is over,” she said at an event in Oakland County. 

Mail ballots will start going out to Michigan voters next week. Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump, as well as their running mates, have all made stops in the state within the past week.

Slotkin slammed Trump’s comments in Flint on Tuesday that if he doesn’t win Michigan will have “no auto industry within two to three years” because “China is going to take over” all manufacturing plants “because of the electric car.”

Slotkin was joined by Democratic Sen. Cory Booker, who stressed the importance of keeping a majority in the Senate.

Early voting starts in some states as candidates look toward Election Day. Get up to speed here

Some people can already start casting their ballots in the 2024 presidential race while both candidates continue to hit the campaign trail as Election Day gets closer.

Widespread early voting started Friday in Minnesota, South Dakota and Virginia.

Here’s what to know today:

  • Candidate schedules: Vice President Kamala traveled to Georgia to deliver remarks on women’s reproductive rights before going to Wisconsin for a campaign event tonight where a local union president will introduce her after the national Teamsters organization declined to endorse a candidate. The Harris campaign has been highlighting Dane County as a crucial part of their path to victory in the key battleground state. On Saturday, former President Donald Trump will hold a rally in Wilmington, North Carolina.
  • Jewish voters: Second gentleman Doug Emhoff condemned Trump for “scapegoating Jews” after he suggested Jewish voters would be partially responsible if he loses November’s election. Trump has repeatedly said Jewish voters who plan to support Harris “should have their head examined.”
  • Voting: With some early voting already underway, Postmaster General Louis DeJoy pledged Thursday that the US Postal Service will undertake “heroic efforts” to deliver all mail ballots on time this year. In Georgia, the election board approved a controversial new rule that requires counties to hand count the number of ballots cast on Election Day. The FBI is also investigating suspicious packages that were sent to election offices in more than 20 states this week.
  • Scandal fallout: North Carolina lawmakers reacted to the scandal surrounding gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson, following CNN’s reporting about his extreme and graphic comments on an adult website. Republican Rep. Greg Murphy and Democratic Rep. Jeff Jackson both said it could affect other elections in the state while Democratic Rep. Deborah Ross said Robinson is “not fit to be governor.” Harris’ campaign launched a new ad seeking to tie Trump to Robinson.
  • Presidential protection: The House unanimously voted Friday to pass a bill bolstering Secret Service protection for major presidential and vice presidential candidates. The bill’s fate is unclear in the Senate, in part, because many Democrats in the chamber have pointed to the enhanced security already in place for Trump.

Analysis: The one key issue Harris is banking on

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign event in Atlanta on Friday.

A fired-up Vice President Kamala Harris adopted a rapid-response mentality to seize on the key issue of abortion rights over the last several days. The pivot to an intense focus on the issue evolved over the course of the week after the nonprofit newsroom ProPublica published a report on two Georgia women who died as a result of delayed medical care linked to the state’s abortion ban.

By Thursday, the mother of one of the women was in the audience of an event live streamed from Michigan, telling the story of her daughter’s tragedy to Harris and Oprah Winfrey.

On Friday, at the direction of Harris, according to reporting by CNN’s Priscilla Alvarez, the campaign had planned a last-minute rally in Georgia, where Harris spoke in front of signs that argued a third of women live under a “Trump abortion ban,” a phrase she repeated throughout the speech.

People take photos of the Reproductive Freedom Bus during the kickoff of the Harris-Walz campaign reproductive rights bus tour in Boynton Beach, Florida, on September 3.

Former President Donald Trump has argued that he did the country a favor by appointing Supreme Court justices to overturn Roe v. Wade and return the abortion issue to state legislatures. Trump says that’s what “everyone” wanted, but polling and recent elections suggest the opposite is true.

Harris’ strength on abortion rights is built on key groups that she hopes will show up in droves for her on Election Day. Among young people, ages 18-29, nearly three-quarters said they trust Harris on the issue. Among Black voters, 83% trust Harris, and among Hispanic voters, it was 63%.

A majority of voters, 61% in a KFF poll released this month, said they would prefer a federal law restoring abortion rights nationwide, although such a law seems unlikely to pass through the US Senate, where it would likely require a supermajority of 60 votes to enact such a change.

Read the full analysis

Trump briefly called into a meeting with Nebraska lawmakers this week about change to winner-take-all 

Former President Donald Trump made a brief call on Wednesday to Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen and a group of state legislators who were gathered at the governor’s residence in Lincoln, a Nebraska Republican official and a source familiar with the call told CNN.

The official described it as a brief conversation with the former president, who talked about the importance of Nebraska changing its election law to winner-take-all, rather than awarding electoral votes by congressional district. At one point, the official said, Trump described the law as unfair, not mentioning that he won the Omaha-area district in 2016, but lost it four years later.

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina also attended the meeting, at the request of Nebraska Republican Sen. Pete Ricketts, the sources said.

Trump was neither threatening nor overly persuasive in his brief remarks, the official said, which Graham arranged.

Graham has been fully supportive of the move and has discussed the effort with Trump directly.

The Washington Post was first to report the call.

Some background: Nebraska is one of two states – along with Maine – that divide Electoral College votes by congressional district, rather than statewide, winner-take-all rules. Under the system, the statewide winner receives two electoral votes, and the rest are split, one apiece, among the leading vote-getters in each district.

Omaha is a blue dot in a sea of Nebraska red, which is precisely why Trump and his allies are furiously fighting to change the system.

Chair of Republican Governor's Association cancels fundraiser for Mark Robinson

A previously scheduled fundraiser for North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson is no longer happening, according to a source familiar.

The fundraiser was to feature Republican Governor’s Association Chair Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, who is no longer traveling to North Carolina.

It follows a CNN investigation that unearthed dozens of disturbing comments Robinson made on a porn forum more than a decade ago. 

Robinson now faces mounting pressure to exit the gubernatorial race following the revelations, but the deadline under state law for a candidate to drop out was Thursday, with the state’s first absentee ballots set to be mailed out Friday.

Biden meets with Cabinet to set his post-presidential legacy

President Joe Biden wrapped a meeting with his Cabinet on Friday, the first high-profile convening of his advisers in a year as he tries to set his post-presidential legacy.

Ahead of the meeting, a White House official said Biden would instruct Cabinet members to “sprint to the finish,” as he looks to burnish legacy items while ensuring as much of his agenda is implemented before a potential second Trump presidency.

Coming almost a year after he last convened his Cabinet and exactly four months until the next president is inaugurated, Biden’s position at Friday’s meeting was drastically different from when he last spoke to his top officials.

He is no longer a candidate for president and is now staring down his final months in office. His unexpected withdrawal from the race over the summer prompted White House officials to urgently assemble his final-months agenda that hadn’t been considered before his decision.

Biden wants to ensure Americans know what he accomplished while also making irreversible as much of his record as possible, should former President Donald Trump return to the Oval Office.

Harris rails against Trump over reproductive rights in Georgia

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a campaign event in Atlanta on Friday.

Vice President Kamala Harris on Friday railed against former President Donald Trump and Republicans during an impassioned speech Friday about reproductive rights.

Harris’ trip to Georgia marks a rapid response from the vice president to highlight the story of a Georgia mother who died in 2022 from a treatable infection due to delays to her medical care stemming from the state’s restrictive abortion law, as first revealed in a recent report from ProPublica.

Harris also tailored her message to Peach State voters, warning of the stakes of the election under a second Trump term, calling it “a fight for the future” and “a fight for freedom.” She also mocked Trump’s record on flip-flopping on the issue, while again arguing he would implement a federal abortion ban. 

Trump says he will "save Vaping" if reelected, but his administration enacted a partial vaping ban in 2020

In this 2020 photo a woman holds a flavored disposable vape device in New York.

Former President Donald Trump on Friday said he would “save Vaping” if reelected — despite his administration enacting a partial ban on flavored e-cigarettes in 2020. 

“I saved Flavored Vaping in 2019, and it greatly helped people get off smoking. I raised the age to 21, keeping it away from the ‘kids,’” Trump posted on Truth Social

“I’ll save Vaping again!” Trump posted. 

Trump claimed without evidence that “Kamala and Joe want everything banned, killing small businesses all over the Country,” but neither President Joe Biden nor Vice President Kamala Harris have proposed a ban on vaping. 

Some background: Trump said in 2019 that he would ban flavored e-cigarettes to address a surge in youth vaping but later backed off of a full ban and supported a partial one.

The FDA in 2020 announced a policy that would clear the market of most flavors for cartridge-based e-cigarettes but that did not apply to flavored products for open tank systems that are sold in vape shops. Still, many flavored products remain available for purchase while the agency reviews marketing applications.

Prior to this move, the Trump administration moved the tobacco buying age from 18 to 21.

Local union group president will introduce Harris at Wisconsin rally tonight

The president of a local union group will introduce Vice President Kamala Harris at her campaign rally this evening in Madison, Wisconsin, according to a source familiar.

Milwaukee-based Teamsters Joint Council 39 President Bill Carroll is among a group of state labor leaders who endorsed Harris in the wake of the national Teamsters organization declining to support any presidential candidate this cycle in spite of a long history of backing Democrats in recent decades.

However, a host of other local labor organizations have endorsed Harris and the campaign has been intentional about highlighting support from organized labor while characterizing her as an ally to working-class voters through policy pledges and leaning into her personal biography. 

“As Vice President of the most pro-union administration ever, Kamala Harris worked with the Teamsters and other union workers to pass the historic Butch Lewis Act which has saved the pensions of over a million retirees to date,” said Carroll in a statement released earlier this week. 

Teamsters Joint Council 39 represents about 15,000 workers at three locals across Wisconsin.

Emhoff condemns Trump saying Jewish voters would bear some blame if he loses

Doug Emhoff attends Harris' debate against Trump at The National Constitution Center on September 10, in Philadelphia.

Second gentleman Doug Emhoff condemned former President Donald Trump for “scapegoating Jews” after he suggested Jewish voters would be partially responsible if he loses November’s election.

Emhoff, who is Jewish, was responding to Trump’s comments at an event in Washington DC, on Thursday billed as combatting antisemitism.

Trump’s comment on Thursday marks the latest escalation in rhetoric attacking Jewish voters who support Democrats. He has repeatedly said Jewish voters who plan to support Harris “should have their head examined.”

Emhoff also called Trump’s repeated criticisms of Harris’ positions on Israel and outreach to Jewish voters “gaslighting,” pointing to the former president’s previous comments about Jewish people.

“He is somebody who has had dinner with known antisemites, he is somebody who during — after the horrific events of Charlottesville, people marching with tiki torches and chanting ‘Jews will not replace us,’ and he said fine people were on both sides of that,” Emhoff said in an interview with ABC News that aired Friday.

“This is a guy who has had a record of saying incredibly vile, antisemitic things,” he said of Trump.

In 2022, Trump hosted Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes at his Mar-A-Lago home during a visit with rapper Kanye West. In 2017, then-President Trump said there were “fine people on both sides” of a clash between white supremacist protesters and counter-protesters in Charlottesville, Virginia.

This post has been updated with comments from Emhoff’s interview with ABC.

Democrats maintain overall lead in presidential ad spending

To date, Democrats have outspent Republicans on ads overall and in the swing states, and Democrats also have the edge in future bookings.

Since President Joe Biden dropped out on July 22, the presidential race has seen almost $950 million worth of advertising, and Democrats lead by about $563.5 million to $380.2 million, according to data from AdImpact.

The split is closer in the swing states, where there’s been $762.6 million worth of presidential advertising since Biden dropped out, and Democrats lead by about $418.5 million to $340 million.

Emphasis on digital ads: A big part of Democrats’ overall edge is their commitment to digital advertising. Outside of the swing states, the Harris campaign and its allies have plowed more than $100 million into digital advertising, much of it aimed at online fundraising, powering a record-breaking fundraising surge. Over the same period, Republicans have spent about $27 million on digital ads.

Looking ahead, Democrats have more than $325 million in total remaining advertising reservations, with $281 million of that targeting the seven key swing states. Republicans have about $185 million worth of total remaining ad time booked, virtually all of it in the battlegrounds.

Pennsylvania dominates the lists of both states that have seen the most ad spending so far, and states with the most ad time remaining. The parties have already combined to spend more than $200 million in the commonwealth since Biden dropped out, Democrats leading by about $113 million to $91 million. And $129 million worth of presidential advertising remains to air in Pennsylvania, Democrats with $74 million left booked, and Republicans with $56 million.

Walz posts video changing his car's air filter while warning of Project 2025

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz posted a video of him changing the air filter on his car while warning of the consequences of Project 2025, the policy proposal authored by conservatives that the Harris campaign has sought to frame as the road map for a possible future Trump administration.

In the video, Walz leans over the open hood of a turquoise truck parked at his home in St. Paul, Minnesota, where he inspects the car’s “old school carburetor” and its air filter.

“You can always tell something about somebody’s maintenance when how clean their air filter is,” he said.

Walz then drew a comparison between the owner’s manual of the vehicle and Project 2025, which he said provides instructions for former President Donald Trump and Ohio Sen. JD Vance to “stick it to the middle class” through policies he says would provide tax cuts to wealth Americans.

Walz ended the video by referring back to his car’s mechanics, holding his car’s air filter while suggesting that someone who’s car has a clean air filter indicates they “do good maintenance.”

“And you can always tell again, somebody, if they keep a clean air filter, they do good maintenance,” he said.

North Carolina lawmakers react to Robinson's comments

North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson arrives to speak during the first day of the 2024 Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on July 15.

North Carolina lawmakers are reacting to the scandal surrounding gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson, following CNN’s reporting about his extreme and graphic comments on an adult website. 

Here’s what some lawmakers are saying:

  • Republican Rep. Greg Murphy said the scandal surrounding Robinson could have a “deleterious effect” on other Republicans running in the state. “Well I think any bad news of a particular candidate in a personal life can have a deleterious effect on other candidates, I mean, it is,” Murphy said, before adding that his belief that Republicans run on subjects Americans care about.
  • Democratic Rep. Deborah Ross said Robinson “wasn’t fit to be governor before the story and he’s even more — it’s even more clear today that he is not fit to be governor today,” said.
  • Democratic Rep. Jeff Jackson – who’s running to be the state’s attorney general this fall – said that the fallout from the scandal embroiling Robinson could “swing a whole bunch of elections, including the presidential election” in the Tar Heel State.
  • Republican Rep. Chuck Edwards said voters should weigh if the allegations against his state’s lieutenant governor are true and said it’s possible Robinson is the victim of “social media spoofing” possibly by the Russians or Iranians.

Exclusive: Harris campaign launching new ad linking Trump to North Carolina governor GOP nominee

Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign on Friday launched a new television ad seeking to tie former President Donald Trump to North Carolina’s Republican gubernatorial nominee Mark Robinson, a day after a bombshell KFile report detailed a series of inflammatory comments Robinson made more than a decade ago.

Robinson denied he made the remarks, which predated his political career. 

This is the first Harris campaign ad tying Trump to a down-ballot campaign, the Harris campaign told CNN.

The spot, titled “Both Wrong” and obtained exclusively by CNN, intersperses Trump’s past praise for Robinson with the gubernatorial candidate’s anti-abortion comments, including him voicing support for a statewide abortion ban that would not include exceptions.

It opens with Trump’s comments calling Robinson “an unbelievable lieutenant governor” and referring to him as “better than Martin Luther King” while interspersing with Robinson saying, “For me, there is no compromise on abortion” and “we could pass a bill and say, ‘You can’t have an abortion in North Carolina for any reason.’”

The new ad is part of the Harris campaign’s $370 million in digital and television advertising reservations between Labor Day and Election Day, the Harris campaign told CNN. The spot will begin airing Friday on television across North Carolina markets on a variety of programs including local news, “Jeopardy” and “Wheel of Fortune.”

Read the full story.

Georgia election board approves controversial new rule requiring some ballots to be hand-counted

Allies of former President Donald Trump who control the Georgia State Election Board approved a controversial new rule Friday requiring counties to hand count the number of ballots cast on Election Day, over bipartisan objections from election officials and poll workers.

The vote was 3-2, with the three Trump allies supporting the controversial move, and a Democratic and independent GOP-appointed member of the board strongly opposing it.