September 11, 2024, presidential campaign news | CNN Politics

September 11, 2024, presidential campaign news

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Hear Trump’s reaction to Taylor Swift endorsing Kamala Harris
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Harris campaign releases first digital ad following debate to highlight contrast with Trump

The Harris campaign on Wednesday released its first digital ad following the presidential debate featuring clips from her performance as it seeks to highlight the contrast with Donald Trump.

The ad, titled “Leadership,” aims to emphasize Harris’ message to “chart a new way forward,” and spotlights her commitment to bring “a sense of optimism about what we can do,” according to a news release from the campaign.

The 30-second slot shows Trump on the debate stage in what the Harris campaign referred to as “thrashing” the country.

“We’re a failing nation. A nation that is dying. We’re a nation that’s in serious decline,” Trump said.

“What I do offer is a new generation of leadership for our country. One who brings a sense of optimism about what we can do. We all have so much more in common than what separates us. And we can chart a new way forward,” Harris said. 

The ad will air across digital platforms and is part of the Harris campaign’s $370 million investment in digital and television reservations between Labor Day and Election Day.

Trump stand-in during Harris debate prep says former president has changed since 2016

Philippe Reines, the former Hillary Clinton aide who portrayed Trump during debate prep with Kamala Harris, has shared a photo of his costume and make-up from the run throughs.

Philippe Reines, a former Hillary Clinton aide who played the role of former President Donald Trump in Kamala Harris’ debate preparations, celebrated the vice president’s performance at Tuesday’s debate while reflecting on how Trump has changed since his first presidential run eight years ago.

Reines told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins on “The Source” Wednesday that Harris was successful in carving out the space to remind viewers of Trump’s record while sharing her own plans for the next four years.

Reines, who also played Trump in Hillary Clinton’s debate preparations in 2016, argued that that Trump’s messaging is now “all over the board” and described him as a “malfunctioning appliance.”

Reines also gave insight that Harris initiating a handshake with Trump was “not a matter of rehearsal.”

Ohio Gov. DeWine knocks down false rumors about Haitian immigrants eating pets

Ohio Republican Gov. Mike DeWine appears on CBS News on Wednesday, September 11.

Ohio Republican Gov. Mike DeWine weighed in on the false claims promoted by the Trump campaign that Haitian migrants in Ohio are killing and eating family pets.

Asked about the false claims during an interview with CBS on Wednesday DeWine said: “This is something that came up on the internet, and the internet can be quite crazy sometimes.”

Former President Donald Trump repeated the false claim during Tuesday’s debate that had been amplified this week by right-wing media figures and echoed by Republican leaders.  

“In Springfield, they’re eating the dogs,” Trump said. “The people that came in, they’re eating the cats. They’re eating the pets of the people that live there. And this is what’s happening in our country and it’s a shame.” 

In a statement to CNN, a spokesperson for the City of Springfield said: “There have been no credible reports or specific claims of pets being harmed, injured or abused by individuals within the immigrant community.”

Trump allies view his debate performance as a wash at best, a loss at worst

Former President Donald Trump speaks to members of the media in the spin room following the debate at the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia, on Tuesday, September 10.

As soon as Donald Trump exited the debate stage in Philadelphia Tuesday night, he immediately began quizzing those waiting in his viewing room about how the last 90 minutes had gone. While several praised him to his face, telling him he did a “great job,” that’s not what many of them are saying privately. 

Instead, those around Trump have described what happened on stage as a draw at best and a loss at worst. Several of them told CNN they were stunned that the former president failed to do a better job executing on the talking points he had prepared against Vice President Harris, her record and her policy reversals. 

Trump had done more debate prep ahead of his first meeting with Harris than he did for his debate with President Biden earlier this summer, two people told CNN. Yet Trump didn’t make one of his central arguments against Harris — about why she hasn’t carried out the promises she’s making now in the last 3.5 years in office — until his closing argument, surprising many of them who have heard him make the argument in private and on the campaign trail. 

Instead, one person conceded, Trump took the bait every single time Harris offered it.

While multiple Trump allies described what happened Tuesday night as a “missed opportunity,” they have since started downplaying the debate’s overall significance, arguing it won’t shift his numbers with voters in states like Pennsylvania. 

Trump himself was noncommittal about a second debate Wednesday morning, though almost every ally of his who CNN spoke with said they believe he will ultimately agree to one. 

RFK Jr. says Trump won “on substance” but Harris “clearly won the debate in terms of her delivery”

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. acknowledged in a Fox News interview Wednesday that while he believed former President Donald Trump won the debate, Harris “clearly won the debate in terms of her delivery, her polish, her organization and her preparation.” 

Kennedy predicted the debate may cost Trump support in upcoming polls. 

“I think on substance, President Trump wins in terms of his governance,” Kennedy said. “But he didn’t tell that story.”

Kennedy, who dropped out of the presidential race last month and endorsed Trump, highlighted the exchange on economic policy as “an extraordinary lost opportunity” by the Republican nominee, arguing Trump should have emphasized more strongly the consequences of rising inflation but instead became “distracted.” 

Kennedy predicted Trump will see a dip in support in post-debate polling, particularly among independent voters. He also undercut Trump’s claim that rapid reaction polls on the debate universally show he won the debate. 

“Polling over the next week is going to show, you know, probably a slight drop in his support, particularly among independents,” he continued. 

When asked if he had any reservations about endorsing Trump, Kennedy said he still believes Trump is the better candidate on policy. 

“I was listening to the substance, and on the substance, President Trump wins,” he said.

Pelosi on debate: Harris looked “presidential” while Trump looked “foolish”

Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi appears on CNN on Wednesday, Septemb

Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Wednesday she was “proud” of Kamala Harris’ debate performance and hit back at Donald Trump, who name-checked her during Tuesday night’s debate over the January 6, 2021, insurrection.

“I was so proud of her,” Pelosi said of Harris, adding that Trump “looked foolish last night. I thought [Harris] looked presidential.”

Trump, during the debate, incorrectly claimed that then-Speaker Pelosi was responsible for inadequate security at the Capitol on January 6, 2021, and that she rejected his call to send in the National Guard.

Pelosi pointed out Wednesday that the speaker of the House has no authority over the deployment of the District of Columbia National Guard, which reports to the president. She added that she pleaded with then-President Trump to send in the National Guard “and he never did, until finally he did hours later.”

“We’re dependent on the president who has incited the insurrection and refused to send the National Guard,” she said, adding, “You know what? We don’t agonize, we organize. We just us have to win, we have to win big.”

Harris and Trump are still locked in a tight race after debate. Here are the top headlines from Wednesday

(Left to right): Vice President Kamala Harris, President Joe Biden, former NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg, former President Donald Trump and Sen. JD Vance attend the annual 9/11 Commemoration Ceremony at the National 9/11 Memorial and Museum on September 11, in New York City.

Voters and lawmakers are reacting to the presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump as the countdown to Election Day continues in a very tight race.

The two candidates came face-to-face for a second time this week at an event commemorating the 23rd anniversary of the September 11 attacks Wednesday morning.

Here are the key headlines to know:

  • 9/11 events: President Joe Biden, Harris, Trump and Trump’s running mate JD Vance were at the 9/11 Memorial in New York City, where they attended a ceremony at Ground Zero. Trump and Harris shook hands when they arrived. Trump and Vance also visited a fire station where they met with firefighters. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz participated in a day of service commemorating the terrorist attacks in Minnesota. Biden also attended an event in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, where photos showed him briefly wearing a Trump hat.
  • General election voting: Voters will soon start casting ballots for the 2024 presidential election as in-person, early voting is set to begin in several states later this month. The first ballots are already going out in some places. Alabama started sending absentee ballots today to those who requested them. Most states will not offer mail-in ballots until later in September or October. The next firm date on the calendar is September 19, when ballots are supposed to be available in the key state of Wisconsin. 
  • Will there be another debate? A top Harris campaign official, Quentin Fulks, declined to say whether the vice president would agree to a second presidential debate on September 25, but said she thinks Harris “is open to a debate in October.” Trump campaign senior adviser Jason Miller said the former president already agreed to the September 25 debate and attacked Harris for “throwing out some fictional day in October.” Trump himself, however, said Wednesday he didn’t know if he wanted to debate Harris again. He later said his team is still weighing the possibility of another debate.
  • What’s next for Harris’ campaign? The vice president is now looking ahead in the final stretch to Election Day. Despite her debate performance, the Harris campaign is emphatic that the debate did not change the trajectory of the tight contest. One aide said from here until November, the campaign will continue to operate as though it is a 50-50 race between Trump and Harris. The campaign is working on ways to amplify Trump’s answers they believe were the most problematic.
  • Where the candidates will be in the coming days: Harris will attend two campaign rallies in Charlotte and Greensboro, North Carolina, on Thursday. Her running mate, Walz, will travel to Michigan to hold a campaign event in Grand Rapids. Trump is heading to Arizona Thursday where he will deliver remarks in Tucson. The former president is also scheduled to attend a fundraising event Friday that’s taking place in Los Angeles, California.

Some House Republicans defend Trump's debate performance

Rep. Ralph Norman speaks with CNN's Manu Raju on Wednesday, September 11.

Several House Republicans defended former President Donald Trump’s performance in last night’s debate with Vice President Kamala Harris, insisting that he was able to communicate his views on the economy, despite moving away from the issues at times.

Conservative Rep. Ralph Norman accused the debate of being biased and told CNN’s Manu Raju that Harris did not have to meet high expectations.

Norman also baselessly suggested that Harris possibly knew the questions that the moderators would ask ahead of time, but was unable to offer any evidence to back this up.

“I think she knew the questions. I think she had her lines rehearsed, but the American people, whatever she says, they’re feeling it at the pump. They’re feeling it, you know, with crime, the policies haven’t worked, she’s been a part of it,” he said.

Rep. Anthony D'Esposito speaks with CNN's Manu Raju on Wednesday, September 11.

Rep. Anthony D’Esposito a vulnerable New York Republican, praised Trump’s performance and said the former president “did a good job of talking about the issues that matter most to the American people, while Kamala Harris continued to pivot back and forth and spin what it is that she’s trying to portray now.”

Rep. John Duarte speaks with CNN's Raju Manu on Wednesday, September 11.

On the issue of abortion, Rep. John Duarte of California, another vulnerable Republican, argued that Trump “was clear that he wants abortion to be kept in the states,” and didn’t need to explicitly say he is against a national ban.

Duarte also said that Trump, “did a great job communicating the economy, communicating inflation being so low under his presidency” and dismissed concerns that Trump focused too much on his false claims that the 2020 election was stolen.

“I don’t think that’s what voters are voting on. Voters are voting on inflation and opportunity right now, and right now, the American people are seeing out-of-control inflation and their opportunities are falling apart in the job market,” Duarte said.

67 million watched the Harris-Trump debate, blowing past Biden-Trump matchup, Nielsen says

Patrons watch the ABC presidential debate between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris, during a watch party at Union Pub in Washington, DC on Tuesday, September 10.

The first presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump drew an estimated 67.1 million viewers across 17 television networks, according to Nielsen data.

Tuesday debate in Philadelphia hosted by ABC News and aired across 17 television networks easily surpassed the 51 million who tuned in to the June debate hosted by CNN between Trump and President Joe Biden. 

While Tuesday’s debate drew the largest television audience of the year, it represents a drop in total audience from 2020, when more than 73 million people watched the first debate between Trump and Biden across all television networks. In 2016, a record 84 million tuned in to the first debate matchup between Hillary Clinton and Trump.

Viewership habits have changed dramatically since 2016, and Nielsen does not account for the myriad streaming and social media platforms that many also used to watch Tuesday’s debate. While fewer Americans watched the debate on television than in previous election years, millions more watched on digital platforms.

ABC drew the most viewers with more than 19 million people tuning in, followed by NBC with more than 10 million and Fox News with more than 9 million.

RFK Jr. to attend first campaign event as a Trump surrogate

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in the spin room ahead of the debate at the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia, on Tuesday, September 10

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is set to attend his first campaign event as a Trump surrogate since endorsing the former president last month, according to a news release from the Donald Trump-JD Vance campaign.

Kennedy will appear with former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard in a moderated discussion at a “Team Trump Reclaim America Tour” event in Glendale, Arizona, on Saturday.

White House says photo of Biden wearing Trump hat was gesture of bipartisan unity

"At the Shanksville Fire Station, @POTUS spoke about the country's bipartisan unity after 9/11 and said we needed to get back to that. As a gesture, he gave a hat to a Trump supporter who then said that in the same spirit, POTUS should put on his Trump cap. He briefly wore it," White House spokesman Andrew Bates explained via X.

The White House is offering an explanation of a photo circulating that shows President Joe Biden wearing a Trump hat at the firehouse in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, earlier Wednesday.

Inside the fire station, Biden briefly donned a Trump hat as an apparent gesture of bipartisan unity.

A White House spokesperson said the president was talking about how the country was united in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, attacks and said it needed to return to that. He handed a hat to a man wearing a Trump cap as a gesture, and that man gave Biden his hat to briefly wear, the spokesperson said.

Pictures show Biden smiling widely while wearing the hat.

Persuadable Pennslyvania voters say they want more specifics from Harris

Joan London knew when Tuesday’s debate began she would not vote for Donald Trump. But when it ended, she was in a most unfamiliar place: ready to cast her first vote for a Democrat for president. In battleground Pennsylvania, by the way.

“Harris clearly won,” said London, an attorney who lives in conservative Berks County. “And I’m now voting for her even though I have many serious policy differences.”

London became a Republican when she turned 18, a fan of Ronald Reagan’s brand of conservatism. Earlier this year, she cast a primary vote for former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, then switched her registration to independent because she sees Trump as an angry populist.

Until this week’s debate in Philadelphia, though, she planned to honor her conservative principles and write in some other Republican. But everything changed when the former president repeatedly refused to say he believed it was critical that the United States stand with Ukraine. Trump said he wanted to end the war, and suggested he could negotiate peace between Russia and Ukraine.

Several voters who are undecided or leaning toward Harris or Trump, but open to changing their candidate, gave Harris more positive reviews for her debate performance. Several though, significantly, said she was not specific enough in explaining her policy proposals.

“Kamala Harris says she wants to lift up the middle class, but how?” said Linda Rooney, a Haley primary voter who lives in the Philadelphia suburbs. She also voiced concern about Harris shifting her positions on fracking and other issues.

Cynthia Sabatini, a Reagan Republican and “never Trump” voter, plans to write in a conservative or vote third party unless Harris wins her over. The vice president did not do so Tuesday night.

“She is a good debater,” Sabatini said. “But in my opinion, she needs to answer questions on point.” Specifically, Sabatini said Harris failed out of the gate when asked whether she believed Americans are better off than they were four years ago and again on questions about the border.

Read more about what voters had to say about the debate.

Taylor Swift's post leads to uptick in visits to voter registration website, federal agency says

Taylor Swift performs onstage at Wembley Stadium on August 15, in London, England.

Taylor Swift’s call to encourage people to register to vote may be having an impact, according to the General Services Administration (GSA), a federal agency that provides government services.

It was not immediately clear how many of those visitors registered to vote. 

Vote.gov, which is the link Swift shared in her endorsement, is the federal government’s voting registration site run by the GSA. The website directs voters to their individual states and territories to register to vote and provides answers to frequently asked questions.

Swift endorsed Kamala Harris in an Instagram post on Tuesday night,

Vote.org also saw a huge spike in engagement around the debate and Swift’s endorsement. A spokesperson for Vote.org told CNN there was a 585% jump in voters on the website between 9 p.m. through midnight ET, during the debate and shortly after Swift’s post endorsing the Harris-Walz campaign. 

While voter engagement across the country likely increased also due to the debate, the CEO of Vote.org attributed the spike, in part, to the Taylor effect. 

“Taylor Swift’s impact on voter engagement is undeniable,” Andrea Hailey, Vote.org CEO, said in a statement to CNN.

The post was updated with more details on the reaction from Vote.org

Democratic senator praises Harris' performance against "uniquely difficult debate opponent"

Sen Chris Coons speaks with reporters on Wednesday, September 11.

Democratic Sen. Chris Coons praised Vice President Kamala Harris’ performance in last night’s debate, noting that she was up against a “uniquely difficult” opponent in former President Donald Trump.

Asked whether the debate moved the needle at all for voters, Coons argued that it did by mobilizing Harris’ supporters and possibly swaying some undecided voters.

“I also think it will move what is a very small number of unpersuaded voters, or voters who’ve gone back and forth,” he said.

The senator from Delaware also criticized Trump’s unsubstantiated claim that Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, are eating pets.

“That was a misleading story that had, I would argue, ill intent, that had already been debunked, and was deployed almost on cue by Donald Trump to make what was a fairly vicious anti-migrant slur,” Coons said.

Jeffries calls for Trump to be given cognitive test after debate 

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries called for a cognitive test to be given to Donald Trump, saying his debate performance Tuesday night left him doubting the former president’s mental acuity.

Jeffries pointed to Trump’s echoing of false claims that Haitian immigrants in Ohio are eating residents’ pet dogs and cats.

“It was hard to follow some elements of the debate when the Republican nominee is making up stories about people eating cats and dogs. You can’t make this stuff up,” Jeffries said.

Vance dismisses Swift's endorsement of Harris as he discusses preparations for upcoming VP debate

Sen. JD Vance appears on Fox News on Wednesday, September 11.

Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance dismissed the impact of Taylor Swift’s endorsement of Vice President Harris, arguing she is a billionaire and is “fundamentally disconnected” from the interests and problems of most Americans.  

“When grocery prices go by up by 20%, it hurts most Americans. It doesn’t hurt Taylor Swift. When housing prices become unaffordable, it doesn’t affect Taylor Swift or any other billionaire. It does affect middle-class Americans all over our country,” Vance told Fox News. 

Swift signed her endorsement as “Childless Cat Lady,” in obvious reference to Vance’s controversial past comments. Vance said his pitch to women voters is that former president Trump will return public safety and an affordable cost of living.

“Donald Trump delivered policies that lower the prices of groceries, lower the prices of housing, and most importantly, Donald Trump delivered public safety in our country,” Vance said. 

As the vice presidential debate approaches in October, Vance said he is aiming to be “as well-versed in the policy” as possible.

“The way that I think about this is it’s an opportunity,” Vance said. “I get 90 minutes to talk to the American people about how Donald Trump can make their lives better.” 

“We’re going to talk about a lot of policy. I’m trying to read and just understand as much as possible, you know, what Tim Walz has done, what policies he supported, and how it’s so different from the prosperity and peace that Donald Trump delivered,” Vance said. 

Trump campaign launches ad featuring clips of CNN's interview with Harris

A new ad launched by the Trump campaign on Wednesday features clips of Kamala Harris’ high-profile interview with CNN earlier this month, while slamming the vice president and the Biden administration over inflation.

The ad opens with a clip of Harris saying that “Bidenomics is working” — a soundbite frequently referenced in pro-Trump ads — and proceeds to clips of news coverage about inflation, including one from Harris’ CNN interview, in which she is pressed on the cost of living.

“When it comes to the economy, groceries were less expensive, housing was more affordable when Donald Trump was president,” CNN’s Dana Bash says in the interview clip. The ad’s narrator picks up, “Yet, Harris still says Bidenomics is working. No, it isn’t.”

The economy and inflation have been a major point of attack for Trump and his Republican allies, in addition to their emphasis on immigration and crime. Several of the most recent ads from the Trump campaign have focused on prices, including one saying that “Kamala Harris cast the tie breaking vote that created America’s inflation,” a reference to the party-line vote on the Inflation Reduction Act.

The new ad began airing this afternoon in Georgia, and the Trump campaign’s quick deployment of soundbites from Harris’ first major interview since becoming the Democratic nominee underscores the Harris campaign’s cautious approach to press availability, another point of criticism from Republicans. 

"We’re looking at it": Trump says he’s still weighing debate rematch with Harris

Former President Donald Trump said his team is still weighing whether he would engage in another debate with Vice President Kamala Harris, after her team immediately called for a second debate in October. 

“I would do NBC. I would do FOX too, but right now, we have to determine whether or not we even want to do,” Trump said, after visiting the Shanksville Volunteer Fire Department in Pennsylvania.

“When you don’t win, it’s like a fighter—when a fighter has a bad fight gets knocked out or loses the fight, the first thing he says is we want a rematch. So, we won the debate according to every single poll, every single poll. Are we going to do a rematch? I just don’t know,” Trump said. “But we’ll think about it.”

CNN’s flash poll after the debate found that registered voters who watched it broadly agreed that Harris outperformed Trump.

As CNN reported this morning, a top Harris campaign official declined to say whether Harris would agree to a second September 25 presidential debate on NBC following Tuesday’s performance.

Trump said it was “very polite” between him and Harris this morning, who shook hands at the 9/11 commemoration ceremony.

“Just, uh, very polite, very polite,” Trump said, when asked what he said to Harris.

Several GOP senators give Trump poor reviews of debate performance

Several senior Senate Republicans gave former President Donald Trump poor marks for his debate performance last night.

Here’s what they said:

  • Asked if he thought Trump took the bait last night from Vice President Kamala Harris, North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis said: “I do.” Tillis told CNN, “If you do not heed the advice of people who are specialized in certain areas about messaging — about what do people really respond most to in terms of your legacy — when you do not heed the advice of experts in politics, you’re probably going to go into dangerous waters.”
  • Texas Sen. John Cornyn, who is running for GOP leader, would not say if he believed that Trump acquitted himself well. Instead, he said: “I think he’s going to win, is that the question?” “I thought the format was not one that was very helpful to him,” he said as he criticized the moderators.
  • Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, who has yet to endorse Trump but plans to vote for him, said he wants “more of a commitment to fiscal responsibility and more of a commitment to continue the investigations of Covid.”

Others were more critical.

  • Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, who isn’t backing his reelection, said, “I don’t think it was his best evening.”
  • Maine Sen. Susan Collins, another Trump critic, said, “I don’t think the debate was helpful to undecided voters because it did not illuminate the positions of either of the candidates.”
  • Sen. Roger Marshall, a Kansas Republican, said he didn’t know who won the debate but, “I can tell you who the real loser is – and that’s America. And Americans didn’t get to hear anything about what Kamala Harris’ policies really are.”