October 16, 2024, presidential campaign news | CNN Politics

October 16, 2024, presidential campaign news

Former President Donald Trump attends a town hall event hosted by Fox News on October 15 in Cumming, Georgia.
Trump declares himself ‘the father of IVF’ while speaking on reproductive rights
02:10 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

• Testy interview on Fox: Vice President Kamala Harris turned questions about her nearly four years in office into attacks on Republican rival Donald Trump’s record in a heated interview Wednesday on Fox News, her first appearance on the conservative network.

• Trump town halls: The former president repeated his false claim about Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, during a town hall with undecided Latino voters. And at an all-female town hall that aired Wednesday, Trump declared himself the “father of IVF.” See fact checks from the event here.

A tight race: A new CNN Poll of Polls average of national polling continues to find no clear leader with just weeks until Election Day.

What to know before you cast your vote: Read CNN’s voter handbook to see how to vote in your area, and read up on the 2024 candidates and their proposals on key issues.

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Buttigieg says denying election results is "disqualifying" for VP or president 

Pete Buttigieg speaks with CNN's Kaitlan Collins.

Pete Buttigieg said Wednesday that it is “disqualifying” for a candidate to not accept the results of an election after Sen. JD Vance said former President Donald Trump did not lose the 2020 presidential race.

“Joe Biden won. Donald Trump lost. And anybody who cannot bring themselves to say that out loud — just the way I, as much as it pains me, will say Donald Trump won and Hillary Clinton lost the election back in 2016 — if you can’t say that, that is literally disqualifying for the vice presidency or the presidency,” said Buttigieg, appearing on CNN’s “The Source” with Kaitlan Collins.

Buttigieg’s comments come after Vance said “no” Trump did not lose the 2020 election after being asked what message it sends to independent voters that he has not directly answered that question. Buttigieg — who spoke in his personal capacity but serves as transportation secretary in the Biden administration — told Collins that the Republican vice presidential nominee doing so is “a mistake politically.”

“Donald Trump lost, and I think (Vance) knows that. I think he’s lying,” Buttigieg said. “I also think it’s a mistake politically because voters have a dim view of election deniers. And up until now, he’s tried to avoid officially becoming an election denier … Now that he’s given a straight answer, he, JD Vance, is officially on the record as an election denier, something that is shameful.”

Buttigieg, a former presidential candidate, also argued that denying the 2020 election results could be a “setback” for the ticket, pointing to election deniers losing races in 2022.

Walz attacks Trump and emphasizes importance of voter turnout at DC-area fundraisers

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, speaking at three fundraisers in the Washington, DC, area on Wednesday, emphasized the importance of voter turnout while slamming the policies and rhetoric of former President Donald Trump.

During remarks at the home of former US Ambassador to Romania Alfred Moses in the Georgetown neighborhood, Walz repeatedly condemned Trump’s language, including his comments targeting political opponents as “the enemy from within,” which he called “the reddest of all red lines.” He also expressed concern to the room of DC residents about Trump’s proposal to remove civil service protections for federal employees.

At the home of Rep. David Trone in Potomac, Maryland — where Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger, former Rep. John Delaney and his wife, congressional candidate April Delaney were in attendance — Walz made reference to CNN’s reporting that Trump is expected to visit a McDonald’s restaurant in Pennsylvania this weekend where he will work the fry cooker. He said Trump “would be pretty funny” if he were a comedian and wasn’t campaigning on issues that Walz disagrees with, while attacking the former president for calling himself “the father of IVF” at a town hall Tuesday evening.

Walz urged attendees to focus on helping the campaign turn out supporters before Election Day. He repeatedly acknowledged that many voters are committed for Trump, and said the election could be decided by getting voters who don’t fully agree with Vice President Kamala Harris or haven’t previously voted to turn out in support for her.

Harris says she will “follow the law” when pressed on position to fund gender-affirming care for inmates

Vice President Kamala Harris takes part in an interview on Fox News.

Vice President Kamala Harris on Wednesday said she will “follow the law” when pressed if she supports using taxpayer dollars to fund gender-affirming care for transgender inmates, including undocumented immigrants.

During an interview with Fox News host Bret Baier, Harris was asked about an ad released by the Trump campaign that features a 2019 clip of Harris saying she supports providing gender-affirming care to prisoners and detained migrants during an American Civil Liberties Union questionnaire.

When asked about her current stance, Harris said she would follow the law, while highlighting the Trump administration’s record on providing services for transgender people.

Harris was referencing a New York Times report that outlined the Bureau of Prisons provided gender-affirming services under the Trump administration. In response to the Trump campaign’s ad, Harris accused them of “throwing stones when you live in a glass house.”

Pressed again by Baier if she would advocate for using taxpayer dollars on “gender reassignment surgeries,” Harris repeated she “would follow the law, just as I think Donald Trump would say he did.”

“Like I said, I think he spent $20 million on those ads trying to create a sense of fear in the voters, because he actually has no plan in this election that is about focusing on the needs of the American people, whereas at $20 million on that ad – on an issue that, as it relates to the biggest issues that affect the American people, is really quite remote. And again, his policy was no different,” she added.

Vance praises Mark Robinson hurricane response, but refuses to say if Trump campaign still endorses him

Sen. JD Vance speaks at a campaign rally in Wilmington, North Carolina, on Wednesday.

Ohio Sen. JD Vance praised the scandal-plagued Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson for his help in North Carolina responding to Hurricane Helene, but failed to answer if the Trump campaign still endorses his candidacy, as Robinson has slipped in the polls.

As CNN’s Michael Williams reported in the aftermath of Helene, Robinson claimed that “virtually every single aircraft currently running missions are privately owned. The few that aren’t are owned by states other than North Carolina,” which directly contradicted an a post from the North Carolina National Guard.

Remember: CNN’s K-File reported that Robinson made a series of inflammatory comments on a porn forum more than a decade ago, including referring to himself as a “black NAZI,” expressing support for reinstating slavery and saying he enjoyed watching transgender pornography. Robinson denied the posts were his and has since sued CNN.

It was a busy day on the campaign trail. Here are the top headlines

Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris participated in several events on Wednesday as they sprint to Election Day.

With less than three weeks to go, there is still no clear leader in the presidential race, according to a new CNN Poll of Polls average of national polling.

Here’s a recap of what happened Wednesday.

Donald Trump:

  • At a Univision town hall in Florida with Latino voters, Trump repeated his false claim that Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, are eating their neighbors’ pets, propping up misinformation that has been rejected by local and statewide leaders from both parties.
  • Trump was also asked about his plan for the “mass deportation” of undocumented immigrants and why, earlier this year, he so fiercely opposed a bipartisan border bill on Capitol Hill. He did not directly answer either question, twice reverting to talking points about his administration’s immigration policy and economic difficulties facing farmers.
  • Trump also participated in a Fox News town hall in front of a female audience that aired on the network Wednesday morning. During the event, he declared himself the “father of IVF” and falsely claimed that “everybody” wanted Roe v. Wade to be overturned and the power to set abortion policy left to individual states.

Kamala Harris:

  • The vice president sat down with Fox News anchor Bret Baier for her first-ever interview on the right-wing cable network. In a testy back and forth, she repeatedly pivoted to the bipartisan border security bill blocked by the GOP when pressed on the Biden administration’s handling of the US-Mexico border
  • Harris also tried to differentiate herself from Biden in the Fox interview and continued to attack Trump. She said she wants to turn the page “on rhetoric that people are frankly exhausted of” and said anyone who wants to be president should be able to take criticism without saying they would “lock people up.”
  • At a rally in Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania, with more than 100 Republican supporters, Harris continued to attack the former president, saying that he is “increasingly unstable and unhinged.” She noted how many of Trump’s closest advisers during his presidency have come out against their former boss.

Other key headlines:

Trump legal troubles: Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis asked the state’s Court of Appeals to reinstate six counts in the election subversion case against Trump and his co-defendants, including three specifically against the former president.

Another former president votes: Former President Jimmy Carter has cast his vote in the 2024 presidential election. Carter, the oldest living US president, cast his ballot by mail on Wednesday, according to spokesperson Matthew De Galan.

Georgia voting rule: A judge in Georgia has struck down a slate of controversial new election rules passed by Trump allies. Among the rules is one that would require county election officials to conduct a “reasonable inquiry” into election results before certifying them.

No clear leader in presidential race, latest CNN Poll of Polls finds

20241014-harris_trump pennsylvania split.jpg

An updated CNN Poll of Polls average of national polling, released Wednesday evening, continues to find no clear leader in the presidential race, with an average of 50% of likely voters supporting Vice President Kamala Harris and 49% backing former President Donald Trump.

Of the five surveys included in the average, two give Harris a slight edge over Trump, while three find an effectively deadlocked race.

The latest average includes a poll released Wednesday evening by Fox News which finds no clear leader in the presidential race nationally, with 50% of likely voters supporting Trump in a head-to-head matchup between the candidates, and 48% supporting Harris.

In the Fox poll, 8 in 10 registered voters backing Trump say their support is mostly for him, rather than against Harris, while a smaller 66% majority of registered voters backing Harris say they’re mostly voting for her rather than against Trump.

When voters were asked to describe in their own words the top issue or factor motivating their vote, the most common reasons among Harris supporters were dislike of the other candidate, protecting democracy and abortion; among Trump supporters, it was the economy, immigration, and the candidates’ characteristics.

Here's why Kamala Harris agreed to her first formal interview on Fox News

Kamala Harris appears on Fox News on Wednesday.

Many Democrats steer clear of Fox News due to the hostile nature of the network’s news coverage and commentary. So why did Kamala Harris agree to sit down with Fox anchor Bret Baier for her first-ever formal interview with the right-wing outlet on Wednesday?

“It serves two purposes,” Harris spokesman Ian Sams told Vanity Fair’s “Inside the Hive” podcast ahead of the interview.

One, he cited Fox’s high ratings and said, “there are a lot of undecided voters who watch,” including some Democrats and independent voters,

The Fox audience “frankly often gets fed a bunch of crap,” Sams said, and Harris wants to make sure that they “get to hear from her directly.”

Sams said the Harris campaign has no illusions about Fox’s political bent; there is, he said, “an entire alternative reality that’s created every single day by Fox News” and other right-wing media outlets. But “getting our message out through Fox is an important piece of the puzzle,” he said. To that end, Harris’ running mate Tim Walz has appeared on “Fox News Sunday” for two weeks in a row.

Harris aides have drawn a contrast between her recent TV appearances and Donald Trump’s. Harris herself has been criticizing Trump for backing out of a “60 Minutes” interview and refusing to debate her again.

Judge rules new Georgia election rules passed by Trump-backed board are unconstitutional

A judge in Georgia has struck down a slate of controversial new election rules passed by Donald Trump allies, including two that Democrats say would inject post-election “chaos” into the critical battleground state.

Among the rules Fulton County Superior Court Judge Thomas Cox said violated state law are two that would require county election officials to conduct a “reasonable inquiry” into election results before certifying them and allow them to “examine all election related documentation created during the conduct of elections prior to certification of results.”

Read more details here about the ruling

In attack on Trump, Harris says the US president should be able to take criticism

Vice President Kamala Harris said the president of the United States should be “willing to handle criticism” without saying they would “lock people up” in an attack on Donald Trump and comments the former president made earlier this week, suggesting using the military to handle what he called “the enemy from within” on Election Day.

“You and I both know that he has talked about turning the American military on the American people,” she told Fox News anchor Bret Baier on Wednesday.

“He has talked about locking people up because they disagree with him. This is a democracy,” she said.

She said democracy is what is at stake and noted how many of Trump’s closest advisers during his presidency have come out against their former boss. Harris also repeated her assertions that Trump is “unstable.”

Harris said her presidency would turn the page “on rhetoric that people are frankly exhausted of”

Kamala Harris speaks during an interview with Fox News on Wednesday.

Fox News anchor Bret Baier asked Vice President Kamala Harris Wednesday what she would be “turning the page from,” referring to her campaign slogan.

She argued that she would turn the page “on rhetoric that people are frankly exhausted of.”

In the last decade, Harris said “we have been burdened with the kind of rhetoric coming from Donald Trump that has been designed and implemented to divide our country and have Americans literally point fingers at each other.”

Trump’s rhetoric “suggests that the strength of a leader is based on who you beat down,” instead of “who you lift up,” she said.

“The vast majority of us have more in common than what celebrates us,” she said.

"My presidency will not be a continuation of Joe Biden's presidency," Harris declares in Fox News interview

Vice President Kamala Harris differentiated herself from President Joe Biden as well as her Republican opponent, Donald Trump, during her first interview with Fox News on Wednesday.

Baier had played clips of Harris in recent interviews where she said she couldn’t think of anything she would have done differently than Biden during the last four years. The comment was quickly seized upon by her Republican rivals and revealed the fine line the vice president must walk between being loyal to her boss and making the case to voters that she can usher in a new era in US politics.

Watch some of the interview below and Wolf Blitzer’s question for Stacey Abrams.

CNN’s Ebony Davis, Edward-Isaac Dovere and Kate Sullivan contributed reporting.

Trump continues to downplay his role in January 6 insurrection

Former President Donald Trump answers a question during a Univision town hall event on in Doral, Florida, on Wednesday.

Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday continued to downplay his role in the violent insurrection at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021 and claimed there was “nothing done wrong at all,” as he faces federal charges related to the riot.

A voter who said he was a Republican told Trump at a Univision town hall that he found some of Trump’s “action and maybe inaction” during his presidency “a little disturbing,” and said he wanted to “give you the opportunity to try to win back my vote.”

The voter pointed specifically to “what happened during January 6, and the fact that, you know, you waited so long to take action while your supporters were attacking the Capitol.”

Trump, who faces federal charges over his role in the January 6 insurrection, claimed it was a “day of love” and that there was “nothing done wrong at all.”

Trump has pleaded not guilty to the charges brought by special counsel Jack Smith that stem from Trump’s attempts to overturn the 2020 election after he lost to Joe Biden resulting in the insurrection on January 6, 2021.

Trump again falsely claimed people who stormed the Capitol didn’t have guns.

“There were no guns down there,” he said. “We didn’t have guns. The others had guns, but we didn’t have guns. And when I say ‘we’ — these are people that walk down, this was a tiny percentage of the overall, which nobody sees and nobody, nobody shows. But that was a day of love.”

Trump has to this day refused to concede he lost the 2020 presidential election and has throughout this 2024 campaign continued to falsely claim it was “rigged.”

Harris defends administration's efforts to find solutions to immigration issues in Fox interview

Vice President Kamala Harris’ interview with Fox News anchor Bret Baier on Wednesday started off with a testy back and forth about immigration.

She repeatedly pivoted to the bipartisan border security bill blocked by the GOP when pressed on the Biden administration’s handling of the US-Mexico border, taking a more hawkish stance while remaining vague on some of her previously held positions in a contentious interview.

Baier asked Harris if she felt like she owed the family of three women who were killed by immigrants an apology.

“Let me just say, first of all, those are tragic cases,” Harris said.

Before that, Harris and Baier went back and forth with Harris arguing that the Fox anchor was not letting her finish answering the question.

After she was asked how many illegal immigrants the Biden administration released into the country, Harris said shortly after being inaugurated, they moved a “bill to fix our immigration system.” Baier was pressing Harris on lines of GOP attack, like the Biden administration’s decision early on to repeal Trump-era policies.

Republicans have hammered the Biden administration for record border crossings over the last three years, casting blame on Harris, who’s been falsely labeled the “border czar.” Homeland Security officials have acknowledged that record migration in the Western Hemisphere — in part fueled by the aftermath of the coronavirus pandemic — presented a steep challenge that strained an outdated immigration system.

“We recognized from day one that — to the point of this being your first question — it is a priority for us as a nation and for the American people,” she said, pointing to actions such as tightening penalties and increasing penalties for illegal crossings.

Harris also emphasized that the Biden administration came up with a bipartisan border plan — which she attacked Donald Trump for killing it to use it as a campaign issue. She added that the American people want solutions “and they want a president of the United States who is not playing political games with the issue.”

CNN’s Priscilla Alvarez contributed reporting to this post, which also was updated with more details and background on the immigration issue.

Conservative states kick off new fight over access to abortion pill mifepristone

A patient prepares to take Mifepristone at a clinic in Carbondale, Illinois, on April 9.

As abortion access is a major flashpoint in the upcoming presidential election, three conservative states are kicking off another legal fight against the abortion drug mifepristone with a new lawsuit. It comes four months after the Supreme Court tossed out a high-profile challenge to the abortion drug.

The states — Missouri, Kansas and Idaho — filed an amended suit in a federal court in Texas asking US District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk to roll back efforts the Food and Drug Administration has taken over the past eight years to ease access to the drug.

The suit may thrust the issue of mifepristone access back on track for Supreme Court review in the next presidential administration, once again threatening the widespread availability of the drug at a time when roughly half of states have imposed severe restrictions on in-clinic abortions.

The claim that mifepristone is unsafe has been widely refuted by mainstream medical organizations. Medication abortions account for nearly two-thirds of all abortions in the US.

The new lawsuit was filed Friday. In addition to the ability to dispense the drug through the mail, the states are also challenging the FDA’s approval of a generic version of the drug and the elimination of a requirement for follow-up doctor visits and a requirement that prescribers be physicians.

What happened last time: The attempt at a legal do-over is a result of the technical ruling the Supreme Court handed down earlier this year. A unanimous court ruled in June that the doctors and anti-abortion groups who had filed the original lawsuit were not injured by the greater access to the drug the FDA’s changes allowed and so they did not have standing to sue.

Vance attempts to explain Trump's "enemy within" remarks

Vance speaks in front of the Minneapolis police department's 3rd precinct on October 14.

Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance, attempting to explain Trump’s fight “the enemy within” remark, said that the former president was suggesting using military force if rioting breaks out after the 2024 election.

Vance brought up the riots that broke out after the death of George Floyd in 2020 as an example but did not mention the unrest at the U.S. Capitol on January 6.

On Monday in Minneapolis, Vance said it would be a justifiable use of military force “if they’re rioting and looting and burning cities down to the ground,” but would depend on “what’s actually happening.”

“I think the question is, is it a justifiable use of assets, depends on what’s actually happening,” Vance told reporters in Minneapolis.

Here’s what Trump said: “I think the bigger problem are the people from within. We have some very bad people. We have some sick people. Radical left lunatics,” he told Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo in an interview on “Sunday Morning Futures.”

“I think it should be very easily handled by, if necessary, by National Guard, or if really necessary, by the military, because they can’t let that happen,” he added.

Fox News did not disclose its all-women town hall with Trump was packed with his supporters

Fox News hosted an all-women town hall with former President Donald Trump, billed as an opportunity for female voters to ask the Republican candidate questions that matter to them. But the network did not disclose that the audience it selected was packed with local Republican supporters of Trump and Fox News edited its broadcast to remove some of their vocal advocacy of the former president.

The Georgia Federation of Republican Women wrote on its Facebook page Wednesday that the group helped host the event, posting photos from the venue and writing they were “Super excited for the opportunity of hosting this event right here in Georgia!”

Shortly after CNN reached out to the group and Fox News about their role, the post was edited to state they were “excited for the opportunity of attending this event right here in Georgia!”

Republican Women of Forsyth County also posted a video from the event showing attendees chatting with Trump and Fox News host Harris Faulkner.

A Fox News spokesperson told CNN the event was not hosted by any Republican group and that it was the network’s event alone. The local Republican groups did not respond to CNN requests for comment Wednesday.

Read more details here about the town hall

Vance says "no" Trump did not lose the 2020 election, "not by the words that I would use"

Sen. JD Vance speaks during a campaign event in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, on Wednesday, October 16.

Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance said “no” former President Donald Trump did not lose the 2020 election, “not by the words” that he would use, when asked what message it sends to independent voters that he has not directly answered that question.

Vance said he cares more about what happened with President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris in leadership over the past three and half years and is focused back on the issues facing Pennsylvania voters.

Campaigning with Republicans in Pennsylvania, Harris calls Trump "increasingly unstable and unhinged"

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a campaign event with supportive Republicans at Washington Crossing Historic Park in Pennsylvania on October 16.

Vice President Kamala Harris called Donald Trump “increasingly unstable and unhinged” Wednesday, as she invoked those who have previously worked for the former president and no longer support him.

She noted how many of Trump’s closest advisers during his presidency have come out against their former boss, She mentioned, in particular, former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley, who reportedly told journalist Bob Woodward that he believes his old boss is a “fascist.”

Harris added that America must heed Milley’s warning “because anyone who tramples on our democratic values as Donald Trump has, anyone who has called for the, quote, termination of the Constitution of the United States as Donald Trump has, must never again stand behind the seal of the president of the United States.”

The Democratic presidential nominee then made an appeal to voters in the battleground state, saying, “If you share that view, no matter your party, no matter who you voted for last time, there is a place for you in this campaign.”

Trump repeats false claims that Haitian migrants in Ohio town are eating pets

Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday repeated his false claim that Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, are eating their neighbors’ pets, using a town hall with undecided Latino voters to prop up misinformation that has been rejected by local and statewide leaders from both parties.

Asked by an audience member if he truly believed the story, Trump insisted he was only “saying what was reported.”

“All I do is report,” Trump said, not sharing his sources other than to name “newspapers.” The former president also – again without any evidence — said the migrant community is “eating other things too that they’re not supposed to be.”

His latest incendiary remarks came during a Univision forum in Florida moderated by Mexican journalist Enrique Acevedo. Trump has made inroads with Hispanic voters, but Vice President Kamala Harris still has an advantage — albeit slimmer than Joe Biden’s in 2020 — with that demographic.

Harris, who appeared at her own Univision town hall last week, has repeatedly ripped Trump over the claims about Haitians, saying at a discussion hosted by the National Association of Black Journalists in September that the former president is “spewing lies grounded in tropes.”

The right-wing misinformation about Haitian people now living in Springfield — legally under Temporary Protected Status — has become a staple of Trump’s dark and often misleading message on immigration. His running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, has also doubled and tripled down on the conspiracy theories — over the objections of his home state’s Republican governor, Mike DeWine, along with the city’s mayor and police chief.

Read more about what Trump said.