August 14, 2024, presidential campaign news | CNN Politics

August 14, 2024, presidential campaign news

Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump.
This group of voters is helping Harris cut into Trump’s lead in swing states
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What Harris is trying to do that Biden and Clinton could not

Vice President Kamala Harris is attempting to do something Democratic presidential hopefuls haven’t done in 16 years, win North Carolina.

CNN’s Jeff Zeleny explains why the state has seen an influx of campaign focus from both parties.

Vance campaign criticizes coverage of 2020 podcast appearance

A spokesperson for Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance is pushing back on the implications of a clip circulating online from an interview the Ohio Republican did in 2020 where he appeared to respond affirmatively to a podcast host saying the “purpose of a postmenopausal female” is to help raise children. 

Vance’s own story of being raised by his grandmother amid his mother’s struggles with addiction is central to his best-selling 2016 memoir “Hillbilly Elegy,” as well as his campaign trail rhetoric.

Vance spoke of his new experience living within a multigenerational family structure in an April 2020 podcast episode hosted by Eric Weinstein, the managing director of Thiel Capital, an investment firm founded by close Vance ally Peter Thiel.

Vance emphasized the impact of Usha’s parents being present in their family’s life, saying it makes his son a “much better human being to have exposure” to his loving grandparents, adding “the evidence on this, by the way is like, super clear.”

Weinstein then cut in to say, “that’s the whole purpose of the post menopausal,” to which Vance could be heard saying “yes,” before Weinstein ended the sentence saying, “female, in theory.” Vance did not respond further before the host asked a different question.

Vance spokesperson Taylor Van Kirk accused the media of “dishonestly putting words in JD’s mouth” as a clip of the 2020 exchange has circulated on X. 

Democratic lawmaker, an Air Force veteran, defends Walz against Vance's attacks on military record

 Rep. Ted speaks at a veterans’ luncheon in Guadalupe, Arizona on Wednesday, August 14/

Democratic Rep. Ted Lieu of California, an Air Force veteran who served with Gov. Tim Walz in Congress, on Wednesday called the vice presidential candidate “one of the strongest champions for veterans benefits” and defended him against GOP vice presidential nominee JD Vance’s attacks.

Vance claimed Walz misrepresented his military record and evaded an overseas deployment. On Wednesday, Lieu pointed out that the military has to approve retirement and argued that the only response to Walz’s military service is saying “Thank you.”

Lieu, who served on active duty and in the reserve for the Air Force, told CNN that Walz is the “best asset” to Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign and that Walz will “definitely” address veterans’ issues during his speech to the Democratic National Convention next week.

RFK Jr. reached out to Harris about administration role in exchange for endorsement, officials say

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. appears in Brooklyn, New York on May 1.

Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s campaign reached out to Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign to arrange a meeting about a possible role in her administration if he drops out of the race and endorses her, a Kennedy campaign official and a Democratic official told CNN.

The Washington Post first reported the outreach.

The approach from Kennedy’s team occurred last week, and no meeting between the two candidates materialized, the Kennedy campaign official told CNN.

The effort to meet comes weeks after Kennedy and Trump met in person during the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, where the two discussed a potential role for Kennedy in the Trump’s administration in exchange for an endorsement.

Kennedy campaign staff also attempted to reach out to intermediaries for Ron Klain, former White House chief of staff for President Biden, but those efforts were fruitless, the Kennedy campaign official said.

While Kennedy continues to make progress on ballot access, arrange campaign events and make media appearances, the Kennedy campaign official told CNN he remains open to dropping out of the race if he believes he can serve the country another way.

Kennedy campaign spokesperson Stefanie Spear said in a statement to CNN that Kennedy “is willing to meet with leaders of both parties to discuss the possibility of a unity government.”

CNN has reached out to the Harris campaign for comment.

Democrats have strongly combatted Kennedy’s campaign since the beginning of the year through ads labeling Kennedy a “spoiler” and highlighting his ties to GOP megadonor Timothy Mellon, who has contributed to an outside group backing Kennedy and a separate group backing Trump. The Democratic National Committee and a super PAC ran by Democratic allies have filed objections to Kennedy’s ballot access in several states.

“No one has any intention of negotiating with a MAGA-funded fringe candidate who has sought out a job with Donald Trump in exchange for an endorsement,” DNC spokesperson Matt Corridoni said in a statement to CNN.  

Biden and Harris will deliver remarks Thursday on lowering costs for Americans, White House says

President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris will deliver remarks “on the progress they are making to lower costs for the American people” on Thursday, according to the White House.

The event, at Prince George’s County Community College in Maryland, will be their first public joint appearance since Biden withdrew from the presidential race last month.

Vance says he wants to debate Walz, but first wants to talk through the rules and parameters

Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance appeared on Fox News on Wednesday, August 14.

Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance would not yet commit to debating his Democratic opponent Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz on October 1, saying he wants to go over the debate’s rules and setup first. 

“Look Laura, we want to actually look at the debates, look at the moderators, talk about the rules a little bit,” he told Fox News’ host Laura Ingraham on Wednesday night.

CBS News on Wednesday offered Walz and Vance two dates in September and two dates in October. Walz responded to the invitation on social media, writing, “See you on October 1, JD.”

Vance told Fox News that while he is “certainly going to debate Tim Walz,” because his team only got notice from CBS hours ago, “we’re going to talk to them and figure out when we can debate.” 

He said that he wants to do more than one debate and suggested that he wants to face off against Walz earlier than October.

Vance said that while he “strongly” suspects he’ll be at the October 1 debate, he argued against a debate without an audience. The Donald Trump-Joe Biden debate did not have a live audience.

Trump says he'll keep Obamacare in place "unless we can do something much better"

Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally in Asheville, North Carolina, on Wednesday.

Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday said he would keep the Affordable Care Act in place “unless we can do something much better.”

Trump, who previously promised to repeal Obamacare and sought to weaken it while in office, told his supporters that he’ll push forward a new healthcare policy proposal if it means “less expensive and better health care for you.”

“(Vice President Kamala Harris) goes around saying, ‘Oh, he’s going to get rid of the health-’ No, no, I’m going to keep it unless we can come up with something that’s better for you and less expensive for you. Otherwise, we’re not doing it,” he said. 

Campaigning for a second term, Trump has more recently made promises to improve the ACA but has not elaborated on how he’d accomplish that.

Harris and Trump economic policy positions converge ahead of the vice president's rollout on Friday

As the economic policy positions of the Harris-Walz ticket start to come into view, they’re increasingly converging with those of her Republican opponents: Donald Trump and JD Vance. 

Over the weekend, Vance told CBS News he would support expanding the Child Tax Credit to $5,000 per child, while acknowledging a difficult road to secure support on Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans earlier this month blocked an expansion of the child tax credit. 

Harris’ allies say she continues to support a larger child tax credit, which earlier this year she suggested should return to the amount temporary established under the American Rescue Plan of up to $3,600 per child under 6 and $3,000 for children between 6 and 17. The Harris campaign declined to say where her position on the CTC would eventually land. 

Two sources close to Harris suggested that, while she would lay out a set of new economic proposals during her remarks on Friday, they would be “additive” to what the Biden administration has done thus far, not wholesale revisions of those policies. But with Harris holding more centrist views than the party’s left flank that drove much of the early Biden agenda, the sources suggested that seemingly proposals to lower costs through government programs could be coupled with tax cuts elsewhere. 

To be sure, Harris over the weekend proposed eliminating tips on wages during a rally in Las Vegas, where one-third of workers are employed by the leisure and hospitality industry. That policy was first floated by Trump during a rally in the same location back in June, marking the second time in a week that the opposing political parties have found themselves on common policy footing. 

Fact check: Trump falsely accuses Harris and Biden of lying about $35 insulin

Former President Donald Trump delivered a Wednesday speech that was laden with false claims he has made before. One of them was about insulin prices for seniors.

Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, claimed in the North Carolina address that Vice President Kamala Harris, Trump’s Democratic opponent in the presidential election, and President Joe Biden are lying when they tout their success in bringing insulin prices for Medicare recipients down to $35 per month (per prescription). Trump claimed that they are taking credit for his own work.

Trump could fairly say he played a role in lowering insulin costs and that Biden and Harris do not deserve sole credit. The Biden-era federal government has acknowledged that Biden’s mandatory $35 monthly cap “closely aligns with” the voluntary $35 monthly cap in the Trump-created program that was announced in 2020 and launched in the final month of the Trump presidency in 2021.

Read more about other false claims made Wednesday by the former president

How RFK Jr.’s presence on the Maine ballot could delay a projection in the 2024 race

Presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks at the Nixon Library in Yorba Linda, California, on June 12.

The 2020 presidential election took days to be decided, but it’s possible that 2024 could take even longer, thanks to a specific voting process used in two states that aren’t typically the focus of national political campaigns.

Maine and Alaska each use ranked choice voting to determine the winners of their electoral votes for president, and with independent Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on the ballot in Maine and aiming to qualify for access in Alaska, it’s more likely that this process will come into play.

Under the system, voters rank the candidates in order of preference. If someone wins a majority of first-choice votes, that candidate is elected. But if not, voters’ other choices are used to determine a winner.

First, the candidate with the fewest first-place votes is eliminated. The votes that had gone to that candidate are then redistributed to the second choices listed on those voters’ ballots. The process continues until a winner with majority support emerges.

Advocates for ranked choice voting argue that the process minimizes the issue of “spoiler” candidates by allowing voters to support both the candidate they like best and a candidate more likely to win. But one of the downsides of the system is that it can take some time to get a final result.

In Maine, for example, if no candidate wins a majority on election night, election officials must gather vote data from across the entire state and deliver it a central location in the state capital, where the actual tabulation takes place. That process could take more than a week, the Maine secretary of state’s office told CNN in 2020.

Read more about how ranked choice voting works

Walz again taunts Trump over AI crowd-size conspiracy

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz again attacked former President Donald Trump at a fundraiser in Denver on Wednesday for promoting a false conspiracy theory that images of the crowd sizes at a rally for Vice President Kamala Harris in Michigan last week were created by artificial intelligence, according to a pool report. 

Walz spoke at a fundraiser for Harris hosted by software entrepreneur Tim Gill and again talked about the new experience of addressing large crowds at rallies since joining the ticket. 

The comment echoes a similar remark Walz made at a fundraiser in Newport Beach, California, on Tuesday. 

Walz is attending another fundraiser in Boston this evening, part of a cross-country swing this week that will take him to Rhode Island and New York tomorrow.

Harris stopped by Howard University on Monday, where she addressed students, source says

Vice President Kamala Harris stopped by Howard University in Washington, DC, on Monday, a source familiar with the vice president’s schedule told CNN on Wednesday. She welcomed new students to her alma mater ahead of the fall semester, according to a student in attendance. 

Harris has remained largely out of sight this week. She’s been receiving briefings and conducting internal meetings with staff this week behind closed doors, per her official office. On Monday, she recorded video remarks for the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees’ (AFSCME) 46th International Convention. 

Harris spoke outside the university’s Cramton Auditorium while on campus, according to a brief video shared with CNN.

She resumes a public schedule on Thursday when she’s set to share the stage with President Joe Biden in Prince George’s County to discuss the administration’s efforts to lower costs — the first public joint event the two will hold since Biden withdrew from the presidential race last month.

CNN has reached out to the Harris campaign, the vice president’s office and Howard University for additional comment.

RFK Jr. appeals ruling blocking his ballot access in New York

Presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. gives a speech during the Bitcoin 2024 conference in Nashville on July 26.

Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. filed an appeal on Wednesday seeking to reverse a New York court decision that denied his ballot access petition in the state earlier this week.

Kennedy’s lawyers filed the appeal after a judge ruled he used a “sham” address when listing a New York residence on his petition despite living in California.

The ruling, if it stands, could have implications for Kennedy’s ballot access in other states where he faces challenges concerning the listing of his New York residency on the petition, including in battleground Pennsylvania.

In a statement, Kennedy’s senior ballot access counsel Paul Rossi argued New York’s residency requirements for ballot access applications were wrongly applied to block Kennedy from the ballot.

Clear Choice, the group behind the challenge to his New York petition, said Kennedy didn’t understand the facts of the case.

“Based on Kennedy’s own testimony and evidence, he does not reside, has never resided, and will not reside in the future at 84 Croton Lake Road in Katonah,” said Pete Kavanaugh, the founder of Clear Choice. “No appeal will change those facts.”

This post was updated with a statement from Clear Choice.

Biden jokes at White House event that he is "looking for a job"

President Joe Biden speaks at the White House Creator Economy Conference on Wednesday.

More than three weeks after dropping out of the 2024 race, President Joe Biden on Wednesday joked about “looking for a job” at an event at the White House where he was addressing digital creators.

The conference comes as Biden’s campaign team built a significant digital ground game that failed to gain traction under his candidacy but has significantly taken off under Kamala Harris’ campaign with the same staff. The strategy for both was to meet viewers where they are — including on social media, where many young people get their news. 

Biden recognized the role that creators are playing in the media ecosystem.

“I have a bunch of grandchildren, and with all due respect, they don’t read the same newspapers and watch the same television I do. They listen to all of you. I want to welcome you here to the White House — and I’m glad you’re here,” he said, holding a microphone in his hand as he walked around the stage. 

“You are the source of news, and more people want to go into your business than the other these days. When I retire, where do you think I’m going? I got contacts,” he joked. 

Vance argues Trump has earned the right to run whatever campaign he wants

JD Vance speaks during a campaign rally at Cordes, Inc., an industrial trucking company, in Byron Center, Michigan, on Wednesday.

Vice presidential nominee JD Vance said that Donald Trump has “earned the right” to run the campaign he desires, in response to a question from CNN about whether he agrees with those urging the former president to focus less on personal attacks against Vice President Kamala Harris and more on policy and messaging.

“To the people who say that Donald Trump should do something different, they had an opportunity to make Donald Trump do something different by challenging him over three separate primaries, every single one of which he won. So, I think that Donald Trump has earned the right to run the campaign that he wants to run,” Vance said.

This comes as CNN reported some allies have privately expressed serious concerns about the former president’s recent inability to stay on message. But Vance argued that he and Trump are making the case against Harris on policy.

Vance’s own attacks on Harris today largely focused on policy and criticizing her ascension to becoming the Democratic presidential nominee, after President Joe Biden dropped out, as well as her failure to take questions from the media.

“Everything about her campaign is fake, a fake joy that comes from being promoted to a new position instead of using the position you already have to do your job and make the lives of the citizens of this country better,” Vance said.

Trump says there’s a housing crisis. He’s right, but he’s wrong on what’s causing it

If there’s one thing both former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris can agree on, it’s that the US housing market is dealing with an affordability crisis.

The former president at a rally on Wednesday said that the “colossal influx of migrants is driving rent absolutely through the roof.”

More migrants are not driving rents higher. But it is true that renters have been increasingly burdened over the past year, according to a recent report from the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies.

The situation, of course, varies by location. In markets where apartment construction isn’t keeping up with demand, and there’s already a shortage of available units, such as New York City and Honolulu, apartments remain out of reach for many. However, in markets where apartment construction is picking up, such as in the Tampa Bay region over the past year, rents have actually been falling.

And high interest rates have further constrained buyers, with elevated mortgage rates potentially adding hundreds of dollars a month to the costs of purchasing and keeping a home.

Investigators identify suspect in break-in at Trump’s campaign office in Virginia, sheriff's office says

Toby Shane Kessler is seen in a booking photo on Wednesday.

The Loudoun County Sheriff’s Office said it has identified the man who allegedly broke into Donald Trump’s Virginia campaign office earlier this week as Toby Shane Kessler, according to a news release from the sheriff’s office.  

Shortly after 8 p.m. ET, Kessler, 39, spent a “brief period of time” in the office, the release said, and did not leave anything behind when he left. Officers still have not yet determined if he took anything with him. 

Investigators say Kessler has a history of criminal behavior and has “no fixed address.” They say he has a California driver’s license. Kessler “appears to have been in the Washington metropolitan area at least since 2018,” according to the release.

The sheriff’s office says it is working with other law enforcement agencies to find Kessler.

Earlier this week, the sheriff’s office said it was called Sunday for a burglary at the office, which is being leased by the Trump campaign and operates as the headquarters of the Virginia 10th District Republican Committee. 

Investigators released stills of surveillance video that show the suspect, now identified as Kessler, inside the campaign office wearing dark clothing, a dark cap and a backpack.

Vance blames Harris for Americans' struggles ahead of economic policy rollout

Sen. JD Vance speaks to supporters during a campaign stop in Byron Center, Michigan, on August 14.

Ohio Sen. JD Vance, the Republican vice-presidential candidate, blamed the ongoing struggles of Americans on Vice President Kamala Harris on Wednesday as the presumptive Democratic nominee prepares to rollout an economic policy agenda later this week.

During a Q&A with press after his remarks to Michigan voters, Vance was asked about a report this morning showing a key inflation indicator, the Consumer Price Index, being at its lowest rate in more than three years.

After the reporter asked the question, the crowd responded with jeers, a reaction that Vance noted “says it all.”

Pushing back on Harris’s insistence that she’ll begin to tackle affordability issues on the first day of her presidency, Vance argued Harris has been “well under control of government policy for three and a half years,” while President Biden has been “at home.”

“She says she wants to tackle the affordability crisis on day one. And then, on the other hand, she’ll say, well, we’ve already got inflation under control. Well, which is it, Kamala?” he asked.

Harris’s campaign on Wednesday touted the CPI report as an indicator that “our economy is strong.”

Trump says he will terminate the Green New Deal if elected

Donald Trump speaks in Asheville, North Carolia, on Wednesday.

Donald Trump said Wednesday that he will combat inflation by “terminating Kamala’s green new scam,” referencing the climate change proposal called the Green New Deal.

He said he will use the unspent funds on infrastructure and the government.

The former president then went on to tout his policies when he was in office.