Sept 10 news on Trump Harris debate on ABC | CNN Politics

Trump and Harris face off in contentious debate

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Van Jones on who he thinks won the Trump-Harris debate
01:15 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • Debate showdown: Donald Trump and Kamala Harris battled fiercely over inflation, abortion, immigration and foreign policy during Tuesday’s high-stakes ABC News presidential debate as they tried to make their case to voters with just eight weeks until Election Day. Read fact checks and key takeaways from the night.
  • Harris baits Trump: Harris appeared to have a plan to throw Trump off his game, and she seemed to succeed during the contentious debate, saying that foreign leaders were laughing at him and accusing him of belittling people. Harris also called out Trump for attacking her racial identity.
  • Trump’s arguments: Trump blamed Harris for President Joe Biden’s policies, including the US withdrawal from Afghanistan and immigration, as he vowed to improve the economy. He also repeated lies about widespread fraud in the 2020 election.
  • Big endorsement: After the debate, superstar singer Taylor Swift endorsed Harris, saying that the vice president “fights for the rights and causes I believe need a warrior to champion them.”
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Our coverage of the debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump has moved here.

Key takeaways from the presidential debate between Trump and Harris

Republican presidential nominee, former President Donald Trump and Democratic presidential nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris debate at The National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on September 10.

Kamala Harris on Tuesday night baited Donald Trump for nearly all of the 1 hour and 45 minutes of their first and potentially only debate — and the former president took every bit of it.

The vice president had prepared extensively for their debate, and peppered nearly every answer with a comment designed to enrage the former president. She told Trump that world leaders were laughing at him, and military leaders called him a “disgrace.” She called Trump “weak” and “wrong.” She said Trump was fired by 81 million voters – the number that voted for President Joe Biden in 2020.

Trump was often out of control. He loudly and repeatedly insisted that a whole host of falsehoods were true. The former president repeated lies about widespread fraud in the 2020 election. He parroted a conspiracy theory about immigrants eating pets, and lied about Democrats supporting abortions after babies are born – which is murder, and illegal everywhere.

Here are some takeaways from the debate:

A turning point when Harris jabs Trump over the size of his rally crowds: Harris came onstage with a clear plan: Throw Trump off his game. It was, by any measure, a dramatic success. When the vice president mentioned Trump’s criminal conviction and outstanding legal issues, he bit. When she called him out for sinking a bipartisan immigration bill, he bit harder. And when Harris suggested Trump’s rallies were boring, he nearly choked on the bait.

Rather than engage on the issues raised by the moderators, including a few that Trump considers some of his political strengths, the former president went on at length about the entertainment value of his rallies, claims the Biden administration was legally targeting him and, in a long, bizarre spell, insisted – against all available evidence, that migrants were eating Americans’ pets.

Trump indulges in conspiracy theories: Despite signals from even his running mate, Trump did not refrain from repeating the conspiracy theory du jour during the debate. The former president brought up the unfounded conspiracy theory that migrants from Haiti living in Springfield, Ohio, are eating people’s cats and dogs. He said at one point that “in Springfield, they’re eating the dogs. They’re eating the cats. They’re eating the pets of people who live there.”

When ABC moderator David Muir pointed out that city officials have denied any evidence that migrants in Springfield were eating pets, Trump doubled down, saying that “the people on television” were saying it. When pressed, Trump just said, “We’ll find out.” When the debate moved to crime, Trump claimed that crime was up in the United States contrary to the rest of the world. There too Muir pointed out that, according to FBI data, crime had declined in the past few years.

Fierce argument over abortion, a key issue for both candidates: The vice president, who has long been one the administration’s strongest surrogates on reproductive rights, was able to respond to the former president’s defense of his abortion policy in a way Joe Biden was not.

The former president, who appointed three of the Supreme Court judges who voted to overturn federal abortion protections, has sought to moderate his stance on the issue by criticizing six-week abortion bans and reiterating his support for exceptions for rape, incest and the life of the mother. But he has also defended the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

Read more takeaways from Harris and Trump’s first debate.

Analysis: "Devastating debate for Donald Trump," says Lincoln Project co-founder

Tuesday’s debate with Vice President Kamala Harris was “devastating” for former president Donald Trump, argues Mike Madrid, co-founder of The Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump Republican group.

Trump rarely delivers on policy, Madrid said; instead, he usually scores points with his style of rhetoric.

Not tonight.

“This was an old, tired performance from a feeble old man who’s suffering from mental decline,” Madrid said, adding that Harris overwhelmingly won the debate.

Harris, on the other hand, had a tall task to master, and she did it, he said.

Analysis: Watch Harris bait Trump into arguments

Vice President Kamala Harris repeatedly pushed former President Donald Trump off his talking points during the ABC News Presidential debate.

“This was a very different debate than what we saw just a couple months ago with Joe Biden,” CNN Chief Congressional Correspondent Manu Raju told viewers.

And she succeeded in doing so, Raju argued.

From Harris’s comments about abortion, to Trump’s crowd sizes, to his economic record, it was clear Trump was “irritated,” he said.

Analysis: Harris bests Trump in debate, but no guarantee it will shape election

Harris looks in Trump's direction during their debate in Philadelphia on September 10.

Donald Trump beat Kamala Harris in a virtual coin toss before their presidential debate – but that’s about all he won.

From the opening moments Tuesday night, when the vice president strode over to Trump’s podium and all but forced him to shake her hand, she dictated the terms of their critical clash exactly eight weeks before Election Day.

From Harris’ point of view, the night could hardly have gone better.

She came across as fresh and energetic and brimmed with a positive future vision. Trump glowered and ranted and blasted America as a failing nation and seemed off his game.

The vice president, who has sometimes struggled in spontaneous situations, delivered the most imposing performance of her political career. Trump, who had gone into the debate predicting he’d prove boxing champ Mike Tyson’s maxim that “everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth,” was himself stunned by multiple jabs and landed few in return.

At a time when nearly a third of voters suggested in one recent poll that they wanted to know more about Harris, the vice president’s performance seemed more likely to expand her coalition. Trump, meanwhile, didn’t make much effort to change perceptions about his dystopian intentions among the key swing state voters who will decide the election.

While it’s too early to say whether Harris’ performance will translate into new momentum, her campaign will be optimistic that she’s improved her chances among, perhaps, 200,000 movable voters who will decide the next election in a handful of states.

Read the full analysis.

Vance and Trump inconsistent on question of national abortion ban

Republican vice presidential nominee, Sen. JD Vance in the spin room following the presidential debate between Trump and Harris on September 10.

Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance said he thinks former president Trump finds the question about vetoing a national abortion ban “ridiculous” because it’s “legislation that’s never going to actually happen.”

Vance said he had not spoken to the former president about whether or not he would veto a national abortion ban, despite Vance saying on NBC’s Meet the Press last month that Trump would veto such a ban.

But during the debate, Trump danced around the question of whether or not he would veto a national abortion ban.

An ABC moderator brought up Vance’s previous comments, to which Trump responded:

In pictures: The Harris-Trump debate

Kamala Harris and Donald Trump faced each other in a presidential debate Tuesday in Philadelphia.

It was the first debate between the two nominees, and it came less than two months before Election Day. 

David Muir and Linsey Davis of ABC News moderated the debate. The rules mirrored those used in the Biden-Trump debate: there was no live audience, and, with a few exceptions, the candidates’ microphones were muted while their rival spoke.

Trump and Harris stand on stage at the start of the debate.
People attend a debate watch party at the Dew Drop Inn in Washington, DC.
Trump reacts during the debate.
People watch the debate on a cross-country flight.
Harris reenacts the thumbs-down gesture that former Sen. John McCain used to vote against a repeal of the Affordable Care Act in 2017.
Trump walks off stage at the end of the debate. Harris and Trump didn't interact after the debate ended. 

See more photos from the debate.

Fact Check: Harris on US military members on active duty in combat zones  

Vice President Kamala Harris said Tuesday:

Facts First: This claim is misleading. While US service members are not engaged in major wars like those in Iraq and Afghanistan, US service members have come under fire in the Middle East repeatedly over the last year and increasingly been in harm’s way since Hamas’ attacks on Israel last October.  

There are currently roughly 2,500 US troops in Iraq, who have come under repeated fire since Hamas attacked Israel on October 7. Also since October, more US troops have deployed to the Middle East, including on Navy ships to the Gulf of Oman and Red Sea.

CNN cited two US officials in reporting Tuesday that the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group was last operating near the Gulf of Oman, and the USS Theodore Roosevelt carrier strike group is expected to leave the region this week after last operating in the same area.

In the last several months, US service members have taken fire in the Middle East and been wounded or killed. Last month, eight US service members were treated for traumatic brain injuries and smoke inhalation after a drone struck Rumalyn Landing Zone in Syria. In January, three US soldiers were killed, and dozens more were injured, in an attack on a small outpost in Jordan called Tower 22. The same month, two US Navy SEALs died after going missing one night at sea while trying to seize lethal aid being transported from Iran to Yemen. 

Trump allies attack ABC moderators, while some privately acknowledge Harris successfully baited him

Former US Representative from Hawaii Tulsi Gabbard works the spin room on behalf of Republican presidential nominee, former President Donald Trump after the ABC Presidential Debate at The National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on September 10

Donald Trump allies and advisers are publicly attacking ABC News and its moderators over their fact checks of the former president and lines of questioning at Tuesday’s debate, while some privately acknowledge that he fell for some of Vice President Kamala Harris’ attempts to bait him into attacking her.

One person close to Trump acknowledged that Harris “at times, successfully baited Trump.” But they also argued that ABC’s live fact checks appeared to anger Trump and throw him off, while also claiming Harris was not receiving the same scrutiny.

A Trump adviser told CNN they believe Harris isn’t getting enough questions on inflation and the economy, though they acknowledged Trump could have done a better job of steering the conversation back to the issue they believe is the most important ahead of November. 

Trump adviser Tim Murtaugh told CNN that Harris’ response to her changing policy positions, her answers on how she would fix inflation, and her handling of the southern border were some of the brighter moments of the night. 

Voters in New Hampshire and Delaware pick nominees for key races

A voter enters a booth fill out a ballot in a primary election to pick candidates for governor, the US House, and the state Legislature, in Nashua, New Hampshire on September 10.

While most eyes were on the presidential debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, the final round of primary elections before November took place Tuesday.

In New Hampshire, former Sen. Kelly Ayotte is projected to win the Republican primary to succeed retiring GOP Gov. Chris Sununu, according to The Associated Press. Ayotte, who narrowly lost her bid for reelection in 2016, will next face Democrat Joyce Craig, the former mayor of Manchester, who won a hard-fought Democratic primary. The race is expected to be competitive.

In New Hampshire’s 2nd Congressional District, Maggie Goodlander, who is married to President Joe Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, will win the Democratic nomination to succeed retiring Rep. Annie Kuster, according to the AP. Goodlander, a former congressional and White House aide, will be favored in November against Republican Lily Tang Williams in the Democratic-leaning seat.

Meanwhile, Sarah McBride has won the Democratic nod for the at-large House seat in deep-blue Delaware, according to the AP, as the state senator bids to become the first openly transgender member of Congress.

McBride is looking to succeed Democrat Lisa Blunt Rochester, who is running for Senate and also hopes to make history this November. Blunt Rochester, who was unopposed Tuesday for the Democratic nomination, would be the state’s first Black senator if elected.

CNN Flash Poll: Debate watchers are closely divided on who better understands their problems

Registered voters who watched Tuesday’s debate are closely divided over which candidate better understands the problems facing people like them, according to a CNN poll of debate watchers conducted by SSRS, with 44% saying Harris does and 40% picking Trump. 

That marks a shift in Harris’ favor from prior to the debate, when 43% said Trump had a better understanding of their problems while 39% said Harris did. 

But voters who tuned in give Trump a 20-point advantage over Harris after the debate on handling the economy, 55% to 35% – a margin that’s slightly wider than before they took the stage in Philadelphia.

The poll’s results reflect opinions of the debate only among those voters who tuned in and aren’t representative of the views of the full voting public. Debate watchers in the poll were 6 points likelier to be Republican-aligned than Democratic-aligned, making for an audience that’s about 4 percentage points more GOP-leaning than all registered voters nationally.

An 82% majority of registered voters who watched Tuesday’s debate say it didn’t affect their choice for president. Another 14% said it made them reconsider but didn’t change their minds, with 4% saying it changed their minds about whom to vote for. Debate watchers who supported Trump prior to Tuesday night were modestly more likely than those who supported Harris to say the debate had left them reconsidering.

Methodology: The CNN poll was conducted by text message with 605 registered US voters who said they watched the debate Tuesday, and the poll findings are representative of the views of debate watchers only. Respondents were recruited to participate before the debate and were selected via a survey of members of the SSRS Opinion Panel, a nationally representative panel recruited using probability-based sampling techniques. Results for the full sample of debate watchers have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 5.3 percentage points.

Fact Check: Trump claims he saved Obamacare  

Former President Donald Trump claimed in Tuesday night’s debate that he saved Obamacare, his predecessor’s landmark health reform law that Trump repeatedly vowed to repeal and replace.  

“I had a choice to make: Do I save it and make it as good as it can be, or do I let it rot? And I saved it,” Trump said. 

Facts First: Trump’s claim is misleading. The only reason Obamacare wasn’t repealed was because congressional Republicans could not amass enough votes to kill the law in 2017. During Trump’s administration, he and his officials took many steps to weaken the Affordable Care Act, though they did continue to operate the Obamacare exchanges.  

Within hours of taking the oath of office, Trump signed an executive order aimed at rolling back Obamacare – stating that the administration’s official policy was “to seek the prompt repeal” of the Affordable Care Act.  

Although Congress failed to repeal it, Trump did manage to undermine the law, which led to a decline in enrollment. He cut the open enrollment period in half, to only six weeks. He also slashed funding for advertising and for navigators, who are critical to helping people sign up. At the same time, he increased the visibility of insurance agents who can also sell non-Obamacare plans. 

Trump signed an executive order in October 2017 making it easier for Americans to access alternative policies that have lower premiums than Affordable Care Act plans – but in exchange for fewer protections and benefits. And he ended subsidy payments to health insurers to reduce eligible enrollees’ out-of-pocket costs.  

Plus, his administration refused to defend several central provisions of the Affordable Care Act in a lawsuit brought by a coalition of Republican-led states, arguing that key parts of Obamacare should be invalidated. The Supreme Court ultimately dismissed the challenge and left the law in place. 

Enrollment declined until the final year of his term, which was in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic. 

Trump says he thought the ABC News moderators were “very unfair” 

Former President Donald Trump said he thought the ABC News moderators were “very unfair” and that it was “three on one” during his debate with Vice President Kamala Harris.

Trump said he would “think about” another potential debate.

Asked by a reporter why he came to the spin room and let the performance speak for itself, the former president said: “Well, I think it did.”

Chinese social media users track "match full of gunpowder"

Discussion of tonight’s debate was trending high on China’s X-like social media platform Weibo as Kamala Harris and Donald Trump took the stage, with a related topic getting more than 25 million views.

Social media users in the Chinese Communist Party-ruled country seized on Trump’s unfounded accusation that Harris is a “Marxist,” with one user asking: “Is this a competition of who’s more loyal to the (Communist) Party?”

Other discussion focused on the clash between candidates, with one post describing it as a “match full of gunpowder.”

Some social media users complimented Harris’ performance.

Users appeared to be largely following along by watching clips on social media because the debate was not broadcast by state television. There was little discussion, as of Wednesday morning local time, about the back-and-forth between the candidates that centered on China trade policy.

In that exchange, Trump praised his move to implement a range of tariffs on Chinese goods, while Harris accused him of not protecting US interests against China. Harris said the former president “invited trade wars” and “ended up selling American chips to China to help them improve and modernize their military.”

Some context: The Trump administration restricted exports to Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation, China’s top chipmaker, and added dozens of Chinese companies to an entity list, while slapping massive trade tariffs on a range of Chinese goods.

The Biden administration has largely kept those tariffs in place, while touting its policy of explicitly targeting China’s tech sector with sweeping controls designed to curtail China’s access to technology critical to the manufacturing and operations of its military power.

Most undecided Pennsylvania voters at CNN focus group say Harris won debate

CNN's Phil Mattingly speaks to 13 undecided voters at a CNN focus group in Erie, Pennsylvania.

The majority of voters participating in a CNN focus group at Mercyhurst University in Erie, Pennsylvania, say they thought Vice President Kamala Harris won the presidential debate on Tuesday.

The group was made up of 13 voters who had not yet made a decision on who to vote for before the debate. When CNN’s Phil Mattingly asked the group who won the debate, eight of the voters said Harris won the showdown. Mattingly noted that Erie is “the swingiest county” in the battleground state.

One voter said she thought Harris was “more optimistic” and “more respectful” and was able to describe her plans more effectively.

Another voter, however, who said she felt like Donald Trump won the debate, said she felt like the former president is the candidate that could improve things like inflation and the economy.

“I think it’s important to remember that we are voting for the leader of our country and not who we like the most or who we want in our wedding party, but who is actually going to make our country better,” she said.

One critical moment of the debate the voters reacted to was when Trump and Harris debated about abortion rights. One voter responded positively to Harris’ answer because the vice president’s “impassioned response” resonated with her. She said she still had a favorable reaction to the moment even though she said she doesn’t agree with all of the vice president’s positions on the issue.

“One does not have to abandon their faith or deeply held beliefs to agree the government and Donald Trump, certainly, should not be telling a woman what to do with her body,” Harris said.

Another voter said that although she also doesn’t agree with Harris’ stance on abortion, she thought it was “nice to see the passion and believability that she stands behind and then have something to gauge more of what she says on since she hasn’t spoken a lot, solidly about a lot of issues.”

On Trump’s strongest moment, one voter, who is a veteran, said he felt like the former president’s remarks about the Afghanistan withdrawal were strong.

"This was my best debate," Trump tells CNN

Former President Donald Trump.

Former President Donald Trump defended his debate performance to CNN’s Kaitlan Collins as he exited the spin room on Wednesday.

“This was my best debate,” Trump said when pressed by Collins on whether he took the bait from Vice President Kamala Harris.

Asked about his answer to whether he would veto a national abortion ban, Trump said:

Trump reacts to Taylor Swift endorsement of Harris: "I have no idea"

Former President Donald Trump said he had “no idea” when asked by CNN what his reaction was to Taylor Swift’s endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris. 

Swift said in a post on Instagram that she watched the debate and would cast her vote for Harris, ending speculation about whether the megastar would share her political views ahead of November’s election.

CNN Flash Poll: Views of Harris improved among debate watchers after face-off with Trump

Registered voters who watched Tuesday’s debate ended the night with split opinions of Kamala Harris: 45% say they view her favorably, and 44% unfavorably , according to a CNN poll of debate watchers conducted by SSRS.

That’s an improvement from before the debate, when 39% of the same voters said they viewed her favorably. Debate watchers’ views of Trump, meanwhile, shifted little – 39% rated him favorably and 51% unfavorably following the debate, similar to his pre-debate numbers among the same voters.

The poll’s results reflect opinions of the debate only among those voters who tuned in and aren’t representative of the views of the full voting public. Debate watchers in the poll were 6 points likelier to be Republican-aligned than Democratic-aligned, making for an audience that’s about 4 percentage points more GOP-leaning than all registered voters nationally.

Identical shares of debate-watchers, 54%, said that they had at least some confidence in Harris’ and Trump’s respective abilities to lead the country, with 36% saying they had a lot of confidence in Trump and 32% that they had a lot of confidence in Harris. In June, just 14% who tuned in for the presidential debate between Trump and Joe Biden expressed a lot of confidence in Biden’s ability to lead. 

Asked specifically about Tuesday’s debate, viewers said, 42% to 33%, that Harris offered a better plan for solving the country’s problems than Trump did, with 22% saying that neither candidate offered up a better plan.

Methodology: The CNN poll was conducted by text message with 605 registered US voters who said they watched the debate Tuesday, and the poll findings are representative of the views of debate watchers only. Respondents were recruited to participate before the debate and were selected via a survey of members of the SSRS Opinion Panel, a nationally representative panel recruited using probability-based sampling techniques. Results for the full sample of debate watchers have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 5.3 percentage points.

Fact Check: Harris on manufacturing jobs  

Workers at the Linamar Corp. of Canada EV battery case manufacturing facility in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, in October 2023.

Vice President Kamala Harris claimed Tuesday that the economy added 800,000 new manufacturing jobs during the Biden-Harris administration.  

Facts First: Harris was rounding up and was referring to labor market data available through July 2024, which showed the US economy added 765,000 manufacturing jobs from the first full month of the Biden-Harris administration, February 2021. But it’s worth noting that the growth almost entirely occurred in 2021 and 2022 (with 746,000 manufacturing jobs added starting in February 2021) before a relatively flat 2023 and through the first seven months of 2024.  

In August, the US economy lost an estimated 24,000 manufacturing jobs, bringing that tally down to 739,000, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics’ preliminary employment data released Friday.

The gain during the Biden-Harris era is, however, over 800,000 using non-seasonally-adjusted figures that are also published by the federal government – in fact, the non-seasonally adjusted gain is 874,000 through August – so there is at least a defensible basis for Harris’ claim. However, seasonally adjusted data smooths out volatility and is traditionally used to observe trends. 

An estimated 172,000 manufacturing jobs were lost during former President Donald Trump’s administration, however, most of those losses occurred following the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic in early 2020. From February 2017, the first full month that Trump was in office, through February 2020, the US economy added 414,000 manufacturing jobs, BLS data shows

Presidential terms don’t start and end in a vacuum, and economic cycles can carry over regardless of party. Additionally, the ups and downs of the labor market and the broader economy are influenced by factors beyond a single president, although specific economic policies can influence economic and job growth. 

"Wasn't even close": Biden weighs in on debate

President Joe Biden said he feels Vice President Kamala Harris won tonight’s debate, writing in a post on X that it “wasn’t even close.”

The president watched the debate from a hotel in New York City with family and staff, per a person familiar.