July 25, 2024, presidential campaign news | CNN Politics

July 25, 2024, presidential campaign news

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'Desperation', 'panic': SE Cupp reacts to Trump refusing to commit to debate Harris
01:36 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • Netanyahu in Washington: Vice President Kamala Harris met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday, saying afterward that she urged the Israeli leader to get a Gaza ceasefire deal done. Netanyahu’s visit placed a key foreign policy issue in the spotlight for Harris’ newly launched presidential campaign.
  • Tight race: The likely presidential election race between Harris and former President Donald Trump begins with no clear leader, according to a CNN poll conducted after Biden ended his bid for reelection.
  • Possible Harris-Trump debate: Harris on Thursday said she’s “ready” to debate Trump, and earlier this week, the former president has said he “absolutely” wants to debate Harris. Fox News has proposed a debate between Trump and Harris on September 17 in Pennsylvania.
  • Veepstakes: Democrats on Wednesday adopted the rules for a likely Harris nomination, with voting expected to begin August 1. Vetting is underway for Harris’ running mate, with the goal to announce the pick before August 7, sources say.
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Our live coverage of the 2024 presidential race has ended for the day. Follow the latest updates or scroll through the posts below.

Future Forward launches $50 million Harris ad blitz ahead of convention

Vice President Kamala Harris, Democratic presidential candidate, speaks to reporters upon arrival at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on July 25.

The Future Forward super PAC is launching a $50 million ad blitz to introduce Vice President Kamala Harris to voters in six key battleground states in the three weeks leading into the Democratic National Convention, a senior advisor to the group said.

The advertising push is another example of how quickly the Democratic party has mobilized to boost Harris’ candidacy after President Joe Biden bowed out of the 2024 race.

The ad campaign will begin on Saturday with a 30-second spot titled “Ready,” which features a narrator ticking through Harris’ accomplishments and declaring, “As America turns the page, Kamala is ready.” Watch the 30-second spot here.

The effort will run on broadcast and cable television as well as digital streaming and YouTube platforms in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin through August 18, the senior adviser said.

The group is gearing more than half of the ad buy over the next two weeks toward audiences watching the Olympics, including voters who might be less politically engaged.

Future Forward moved quickly to begin making and testing new ads once the makeup of the 2024 race shifted this week. The group has produced more than 50 different spots about the expected contest between Harris and former President Donald Trump since Sunday.

The super PAC had previously committed to spending $250 billion in advertising between the Democratic National Convention and Election Day. Future Forward has also seen an influx of cash in recent days, securing $150 million in new commitments in the 24 hours since Biden announced his decision to leave the race.

Labor leader Dolores Huerta campaigns for Kamala Harris in Arizona

Labor and civil rights leader Dolores Huerta campaigned for Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday in Arizona, giving Harris the boost of an influential Latino activist.

Huerta endorsed Harris the morning of her visit to Arizona, which has a large Latino voting population that could help decide who wins the battleground state in November. Huerta endorsed Joe Biden in 2020 and Hillary Clinton in 2016.

On Thursday, Huerta accused former President Donald Trump of having “attacked the Latino community on day one” with his speech launching his 2016 presidential campaign.

“And he’s doing it again,” she argued.

 Huerta applauded the Biden-Harris administration for allowing certain undocumented spouses and children of US citizens to apply for lawful permanent residency and providing temporary status to migrants from South American countries.

She was joined by Harris’ campaign manager Julia Chavez Rodriguez, who is the granddaughter of labor icon Cesar Chavez. Rodriguez called Harris the “perfect candidate to take on Donald Trump because she is Trump’s worst nightmare.”

Thursday night’s campaign event was held in a hot warehouse belonging to a local carpenters’ union. The event featured a local Cumbia band and attendees could help themselves to free popsicles and tacos. Blaring over the speakers ahead of the event were Charli XCX songs off her “Brat” album.

Earlier Thursday, Huerta and Rodriguez also visited a field office, the first to be opened in Arizona for the Biden-Harris campaign, and met with campaign volunteers.

Gov. Chris Sununu says a matchup between Trump and Harris could be a "coin toss"

New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu appears on CNN on Thursday, July 25.

New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu told CNN’s Pamela Brown that November’s race between Republican nominee Donald Trump and likely Democratic nominee Kamala Harris will be an “absolute coin toss.” 

Sununu, who predicted on CNN last June that Biden would not end up being the party’s nominee, said he anticipates Harris will get a bump in the polls after the Democratic National Convention in Chicago next month. 

Sununu, who was a vocal supporter of former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley while she campaigned earlier this year to be atop the GOP ticket, said the way Republicans can defeat Harris through their messaging is by sticking to the issues and policy.

Haley, who exited the race in March, said recent GOP attacks against Harris’ race and gender were “unhelpful” in an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper earlier today.

Sununu agreed with that position, saying Haley was “100% right” and that such personal attacks against Harris won’t move voters.

Biden stressed to Netanyahu the need to finalize ceasefire and hostage deal as soon as possible

President Joe Biden meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Thursday, July 25.

President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday met at the White House and discussed the ongoing ceasefire and hostage deal negotiations, with Biden stressing the need to finalize the deal as soon as possible, according to a readout from the White House. 

Hostage families asked Netanyahu "very difficult questions" during meeting, father of hostage says

Jonathan Dekel-Chen, father of Israeli-American hostage Sagui Dekel-Chen, appears on CNN on Thursday, July 25.

Jonathan Dekel-Chen, father of the Israeli-American hostage Sagui Dekel-Chen, said he was able to ask “very difficult questions” to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a meeting with hostage families in Washington on Thursday.

Six of the seven families of US hostages, including Dekel-Chen, were represented in the room to discuss the current hostage situation in Gaza with US President Joe Biden and Netanyahu.

Dekel-Chen, speaking to CNN’s Erin Burnett on Thursday after the meeting, could not provide many details about what Biden and Netanyahu spoke about with the families of hostages, but said that both leaders offered “a promise” that they “completely understand the urgency of this moment.”

When asked if he thinks former US President Donald Trump had more “leverage” over Netanyahu to get a hostage deal, Dekel-Chen said it was an “illusion that a change in administration in the US is going to give more freedom of action to Israel to somehow negotiate some bigger, better deal.”

Trump campaign says future debate details can't be finalized until Democratic nominee is official

Former President Donald Trump’s campaign is refusing to commit to any future debates until the Democratic nominee is officially chosen.

Trump previously committed to a debate with President Biden on September 10 on ABC.

Vice President Kamala Harris responded on social media to the Trump campaign’s statement.

Earlier today, Harris said she was ready to debate the former president but added that Trump was “back pedaling” on debating her. 

This post has been updated with additional comment from Vice President Kamala Harris.

Analysis: Harris plants her flag on Gaza and says she "will not be silent”

Vice President Kamala Harris delivers remarks at a news conference following a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington, DC,  on Thursday, July 25.

Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday gave the most forceful speech we’ve heard from the White House about the situation in Gaza since the war started almost 10 months ago.

With Vice President Harris jumping into the presidential race the same week as Netanyahu’s unprecedented fourth address to Congress, questions immediately arose about how forceful she would be with Netanyahu and whether she would go farther than — or split from — President Joe Biden.

Harris echoed Biden’s repeated comments about the “ironclad support” and “unwavering commitment” to Israel. The country has a right to defend itself, she said while noting, “how it does so matters.”

But the empathy she used to describe the Palestinian plight and suffering is where you start to see the daylight between Biden and the president. As was how she described the ceasefire deal.

She mentioned twice the “serious concern” she expressed to Netanyahu. About the civilian deaths in Gaza, the humanitarian situation and destruction she called “catastrophic” and “devastating.”

She went on to describe “the images of dead children and desperate hungry people fleeing for safety, sometimes displaced for the second, third or fourth time.”

Harris emphasized the need to get the Israeli hostages back from Hamas captivity, naming the eight Israeli-American hostages (three of whom have been killed).

But when describing the ceasefire deal in the works, she didn’t highlight the hostage for prisoner exchange, or aid to be let into Gaza. Instead she singled out the fact that the deal stipulates the withdrawal by the Israeli military from populated areas in the first phase before withdrawing “entirely” from Gaza before “a permanent end to the hostilities.”

That stands in stark contrast to Netanyahu’s speech to Congress. He didn’t mention the words “ceasefire” or “deal.” Instead there is a need for the “foreseeable future” he said, for “overriding security control” in Gaza.

Whether the White House achieved their objective of getting Netanyahu to a place where he will agree to a ceasefire remains to be seen.

Harris meanwhile left little doubt where she stands: “As I just told Prime Minister Netanyahu, it is time to get this deal done.”

Vance echoes criticism that Harris is more liberal than Biden

Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance speaks at a campaign rally at Radford University on Monday, July 22, in Radford, Virginia.

Vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance echoed former president Donald Trump’s criticisms of Vice President Kamala Harris, saying she is a more liberal candidate than President Joe Biden.

He argued that Biden stepping down and handing the reins to Harris is “fundamentally illegitimate” and that Republicans, by contrast,” respect the democratic process.

“Kamala Harris has no democratic legitimacy,” Vance said. “Look at her record, Don. It is the worst record imaginable.”

Claiming that the media is disinterested in focusing on Harris’ record, Vance said she will be rebranded as a moderate to win over voters in November.

Vance criticized Harris for supporting an end to fracking and providing universal healthcare for undocumented immigrants as well as her policy on the US border. 

Harris' unexpected remarks were a move to quickly prove herself, official says

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks on Thursday, July 25.

Vice President Kamala Harris’ decision to come out and deliver remarks after her meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is one more way in which she is quickly trying to prove herself in different ways following President Joe Biden leaving the 2024 race, a senior administration official tells CNN.

Her remarks provided one of the clearest explanations yet of her views on the conflict as she warned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government that how the war is prosecuted matters.

Harris’ comments serve as one of the clearest distillations yet of her views as she works to thread the needle on the hot button issue that has not only divided the country but caused friction within the Democratic Party. And while the content of her remarks illustrate little daylight between her and President Joe Biden, they serve as an example of how her rhetoric has been far sharper than his on this issue. 

Remember: The vice president and presumptive Democratic nominee expressed her “serious concern” about the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, she named the American hostages held in the strip and in a notable moment, she illustrated her desire to acknowledge the “nuance” and “complexity” of the conflict. 

Gov. Andy Beshear says he's "honored" to be considered a potential vice presidential nominee

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said Thursday that he’s “honored” to be a rumored contender for selection as Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate.

While acknowledging the speculation, Beshear declined to reveal any details about the vice presidential vetting process during his weekly news conference in Frankfort, Kentucky.

On offense against Vance: Beshear continued to attack the Republican vice presidential nominee, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, who he has repeatedly criticized for claiming roots in Kentucky despite growing up in southern Ohio.

Beshear said his attacks aren’t connected to his potential role on the Harris ticket or Vance’s place on the GOP ticket, but come from a desire to “stand up for our people.” 

Kamala Harris joins TikTok

Vice President Kamala Harris has joined TikTok, posting her first video this afternoon.

The campaign Tiktok, @kamalaHQ, has 1.6 million followers.

People Magazine first reported Harris joining the social media app.

Harris states her "unwavering commitment" to Israel but expresses concerns about the suffering in Gaza

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks following a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington, DC, on Thursday, July 25.

After her meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Thursday, Vice President Kamala Harris made clear her “unwavering commitment to the existence of the state of Israel, to its security and to the people of Israel.”

While she supported Israel’s right to defend itself and also remembered the hostages still held in Gaza, she said she expressed to Netanyahu her “serious concern about the scale of human suffering” in the besieged enclave, including the civilian deaths and dire humanitarian situation that is unfolding there.

Harris also urged Americans not to consider the war in Gaza a “binary issue.”

She called on everyone to condemn terrorism, violence, antisemitism, Islamophobia and hate of any kind, and “do what we can” to prevent the suffering of innocent civilians.”

“Let us work to unite our country,” the vice president concluded.

Watch here:

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05:48 - Source: cnn

"It is time to get this deal done," Harris said she told Netanyahu

Vice President Kamala Harris delivers remarks after meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday, July 25.

In remarks after meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Thursday, Vice President Kamala Harris said it is time to get the ceasefire and hostage release deal done.

Recalling the details of the US-backed deal proposed, she said “it is time for this war to end and end in a way where Israel is secure, all the hostages are released, the suffering of Palestinians in Gaza ends, and the Palestinian people can exercise their right to freedom, dignity and self-determination.”

Harris also put her support behind the two-state solution as “the only path that ensures Israel remains a secure Jewish and democratic state, and one that ensures Palestinians can finally realize the freedom, security, and prosperity that they rightly deserve.”

Harris will deliver remarks after meeting with Netanyahu

Vice President Kamala Harris will deliver remarks after meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Harris and Netanyahu are currently holding a meeting

Vice President Kamala Harris meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington, D.C.,on Thursday, July 25.

Vice President Kamala Harris is meeting now with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the vice president’s ceremonial office. 

She did not take questions, and the press was escorted out quickly.

Haley offers no apologies for comments about Trump during primary and defends backing him over Harris

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley speaks to CNN's Jake Tapper in an interview on Thursday, July 25.

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley offered no apologies Thursday for the “tough things” she said about former President Donald Trump during their bruising Republican primary fight, but she told CNN’s Jake Tapper she does not doubt her choice to support the former president over presumptive Democratic nominee Kamala Harris in the November election.

In her first interview since endorsing Trump and speaking at the Republican National Convention, Haley said President Joe Biden’s decision to drop out of the race Sunday did not come as a surprise.

Haley added: “I never thought he would make it to the election. I always said a vote for Joe Biden is a vote for Kamala Harris, and I think that’s what’s playing out.”

Haley’s comments come in the wake of her decision to endorse Trump and speak at the GOP convention last week following a tumultuous primary, during which she repeatedly attacked the former president as “toxic,” “unhinged” and lacking “moral clarity.” In a wide-ranging interview, Haley brushed aside the rhetoric as just part of a campaign — which included Trump’s attacks on Haley and her husband while he was deployed overseas.

Read more from the interview with Haley.

House Speaker Mike Johnson is on his way to the southern border in California

House Speaker Mike Johnson makes a statement to the media alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu before Netanyahu addresses a joint session of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on July 24.

House Speaker Mike Johnson is headed to Southern California on Thursday to visit the border, according to his office. He will be joined by Rep. Darrell Issa. 

Johnson and Issa are expected to hold a news conference while in town and discuss the Biden/Harris administration’s border policies, as Republican attacks ramp up over the vice president’s record on the border.

Johnson’s office confirmed that the news conference will happen along the “Whiskey 8” section of the border in San Ysidro, California, and visit the US Customs and Border Protection facilities at the San Ysidro Port of Entry and Imperial Beach locations.

ABC News first reported the visit. 

Harris will make a cameo on “RuPaul’s Drag Race: All Stars” urging audiences to vote

Vice President Kamala Harris appears on the set of "RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars."

“RuPaul’s Drag Race: All Stars” ends its ninth season on Friday, but not without a PSA from a VIP: Vice President Kamala Harris.

Harris, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, stopped by the beloved reality show to remind viewers about the importance of voting. Her message will appear in Friday’s finale, which airs on Paramount+.

Harris ended her message by encouraging viewers to register to vote and clapping along to RuPaul’s optimistic anthem “A Little Bit of Love.”

Pritzker says he’s in contact with Harris campaign to promote their message

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, a contender to be Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate, denied reports that he spoke with Harris campaign staff specifically yesterday about the role, but said he is in contact with the campaign about promoting their message to help Harris win in November. 

Pritzker told reporters at a news conference in Chicago on Thursday he has had “a number of conversations” with people in the Harris campaign but denied a Chicago Sun-Times report that Pritzker spoke with Harris aides on Wednesday about the vice presidential role. 

When pressed on whether he’s spoken to Harris aides, Pritzker suggested his conversations have focused on his role as a surrogate for the Harris campaign. 

“Well, sure, I don’t know anybody who’s involved with Democratic politics that isn’t talking to their campaign,” Pritzker said. “I know people who work on the campaign, and I am involved in transmitting the message of the campaign and excited about the next days.”