September 9, 2024, presidential campaign news | CNN Politics

September 9, 2024, presidential campaign news

Kamala Harria and Donald Trump.
Why Axelrod says Trump has been ‘off his game’ since Harris entered race
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Ahead of debate, Ocasio-Cortez says Harris should change US policy towards Israel

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez speaks during the Democratic National Convention on August 19, in Chicago.

Progressive Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez told CNN’s Manu Raju “we need a new chapter,” on Israel policy under Vice President Kamala Harris, when asked if she should break from Joe Biden on the issue.

Some background: In March, the New York Democrat accused Israel of genocide against the Palestinian people and advocated for cuts to US military aid until humanitarian relief flows freely in Gaza.

Her decision to use the term genocide, as she did during a floor speech in the House chamber, was “taken with extraordinary gravity,” she told CNN.

Trump accuser says she "laughed out loud" when she heard former president again deny her assault allegation

Jessica Leeds, who previously accused Donald Trump of sexual assault and was a trial witness in a high-profile case against the former president, said Monday that she “laughed out loud” when she heard he recently disputed her allegation and said she “would not have been the chosen one.”

Leeds was one of the first women to come forward during the 2016 presidential campaign to allege that Trump sexually assaulted her. She said she was seated in first class on an airplane next to Trump in the 1970s when he suddenly began groping her. Leeds said she fought off Trump and moved to the back of the airplane.

“I was not the first, of course I was not the last. But there have been enough so that he doesn’t remember,” Leeds told Cooper.

Asked about Leeds’ comments, Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung again denied Trump had ever met Leeds and said that “whatever fable she’s trying to peddle is only meant to interfere in the election and distract from” Vice President Kamala Harris, his Democratic rival.

Read more about Leeds’ interview here

Trump campaign and JD Vance promote false rumors about Haitian immigrants eating pets

Several prominent Republicans, including the party’s vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance, promoted false claims on Monday that Haitian migrants in Ohio are killing and eating family pets.

It’s the latest turn in a campaign that has increasingly embraced race-baiting messaging, questioning Vice President Kamala Harris’ racial identity while seeking to undermine her immigration policies.

The rumors center on the Ohio city of Springfield, which has experienced a surge in recent migration from Haitians seeking to escape a Caribbean country that has been rocked from years of natural disasters, political assassinations and gang rule.

A post in a Springfield Facebook group recently claimed a neighbor’s daughter’s friend found their missing cat hanging from a branch at a Haitian neighbor’s home, and it was being prepped to be eaten, according to the Springfield News-Sun. Those rumors were picked up by conservative media and then spread on X, where they gained widespread traction on Monday.

Vance posted a video of himself discussing migration to Ohio at a recent hearing. “Reports now show that people have had their pets abducted and eaten by people who shouldn’t be in this country. Where is our border czar?” Some accounts shared AI-generated pictures of Trump holding a cat in his hands while being chased by crowds of Black men.

The unsubstantiated claims appear to be the result of an unwieldy game of telephone that began as a rumor in a local Facebook group before spiraling to reach the highest echelons of conservative media and the Republican Party.

Read more here about the false rumor about Haitian immigrants

Analysis: Harris is taking a big risk by playing it safe on immigration and crime

Vice President Kamala Harris has so far largely avoided confronting Donald Trump on some of his most racially inflammatory policy proposals — even as she continues to underperform among the Hispanic and Black voters who could face the harshest consequences from the former president’s plans.

Not calling out his ideas for the mass deportation of undocumented migrants, for example, or the pressure he wants to put on local governments to adopt tougher policing tactics is a cautious strategy that may reflect the unease in some Democratic circles about bringing attention to the volatile issues of immigration and crime.

But it could also deny her some of her best potential tools to pry back some of the Black and Hispanic voters among whom most polls show Trump is still running better than in 2020.

Since Harris replaced President Joe Biden as the Democratic nominee, Trump has constantly attempted to portray her as weak on immigration and crime. The former California attorney general has sought to rebut those charges by emphasizing her toughness on those questions — especially her prosecutorial background in a border state — and highlighting Trump’s torpedoing of a bipartisan border deal. 

But the real question for many of the groups working on these issues is whether she tries to turn the tables by portraying Trump’s solutions to these problems as extreme, impractical and racially divisive.

Gary Segura, a pollster who works with UnidosUS, a leading Hispanic advocacy group that has endorsed Harris, said that the vice president was missing an opportunity by avoiding a confrontation with Trump over his mass deportation plans, for example.

Read more of the analysis here

ABC shares photo of presidential debate stage

The stage for tomorrow's debate on September 9.

The stage is set for the first presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump.

ABC, which is hosting the event, shared a photo of the stage at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia.

For Harris, it will be a marquee moment to show Americans that she is ready to assume the presidency. Trump, meanwhile, is eager to negatively shape voters’ perceptions of his Democratic rival and halt the gains she has made since ascending to the top of the Democratic ticket in July.

The White Stripes sue Trump campaign over use of "Seven Nation Army"

The White Stripes during a rehearsal for the Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, California, in 2004.

The Trump campaign may be “goin’ to Wichita” before the November election, but The White Stripes would prefer former President Donald Trump stop traveling with their music as part of his playlist. 

Jack and Meg White, formerly of the rock duo The White Stripes, filed a lawsuit in federal court in New York on Monday, accusing Trump and his campaign of “flagrant misappropriation” and copyright infringement of their 2003 song “Seven Nation Army.” 

Their complaint, obtained by CNN, states the two musicians “vehemently oppose the policies adopted and actions taken by Defendant Trump when he was President and those he has proposed for the second term he seeks,” noting that the song was used without their “knowledge or consent.” 

CNN has reached out to the Trump campaign and representatives for Jack White for comment.

Last month, White said he would seek legal action after Margo Martin, a deputy director of communications for the Trump campaign, shared on social media a since-deleted video of Trump boarding a plane with “Seven Nation Army” playing.

In the Whites’ lawsuit, their attorneys write that the defendants “chose to ignore and not respond to Plaintiffs’ pre-litigation efforts to resolve the matters at issue in this action, leaving Plaintiffs with no choice but to seek judicial recourse in order to hold Defendants accountable.”

Jack and Meg White are among several artists, including Celine Dion, Foo Fighters and ABBA, who have objected to Trump using their music for his campaign. They are the only living artists to file a lawsuit against Trump in 2024. The estate of soul singer Isaac Hayes also sued the Trump campaign for copyright infringement.

Senate Republicans dismiss Dick Cheney's endorsement of Harris

Senior Senate Republicans on Monday downplayed former Republican Vice President Dick Cheney’s endorsement of Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris, saying they doubt it would affect the outcome of the election.  

Iowa Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley argued that Cheney was “just one person” and that the “millions and millions of votes that (former President Donald) Trump got in the primary to be our nominee” is more important “than just one vote.”

Sen. John Barrasso, a Republican who represents Cheney’s home state of Wyoming, blasted Cheney’s move, saying, “He’s clearly not thinking about Wyoming anymore. It’s no longer part of his life. President Trump is really, really good for Wyoming and he’s just out of touch with people of his home state.”

Asked if Cheney is influential with some GOP voters, Barrasso said he’s not in Wyoming and then took a swipe at Cheney’s daughter, former Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, a fierce Trump opponent.  

“I don’t think it’s any surprise given what his daughter had done over the last two years,” Barrasso said.  

North Carolina Republican Sen. Thom Tillis also pointed to the influence of Liz Cheney on her father.  

“I was a bit surprised by that, but you also sort of have a daughter involved,” he said. “I don’t know what exactly led him to do that. But I look at the world today, I look at Ukraine, I look at Israel from a national security perspective it’s hard for me to understand why somebody with the depth of experience in national security went that way. But people get to endorse who they want to endorse.”

Fact check: Trump and Vance's claims that tariffs wouldn't drive up costs for Americans are not true

Former President Donald Trump and Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance continue to falsely describe how one of their major policy proposals, across-the-board tariffs, would work.

Trump has falsely, and repeatedly, claimed that China – not US importers – pays the tariff.

At a rally in Arizona in mid-August, he claimed that Vice President Kamala Harris, his Democratic opponent, is lying when she refers to his tariff plan as a “Trump tax.”

“She is a liar. She makes up crap … I am going to put tariffs on other countries coming into our country, and that has nothing to do with taxes to us. That is a tax on another country,” Trump said. In September, he repeated the claim during an interview with Fox News that it’s “a tax on another country.”

Vance said in late August that as a result of tariffs Trump imposed during his presidency, “prices went down for American citizens.” But that’s not true.

Facts FirstTrump and Vance’s claims about how tariffs work are false. A tariff is a tax that is paid by US businesses – not other countries – when a foreign-made good arrives at the American border. One of the intended goals of a tariff is to raise prices on foreign-made goods, and study after study show that the duties do drive up costs for Americans.

Here’s how tariffs work: When the US puts a tariff on an imported good, the cost of the tariff usually comes directly out of the bank account of an American buyer.

“It’s fair to call a tariff a tax because that’s exactly what it is,” said Erica York, a senior economist at the right-leaning Tax Foundation. “There’s no way around it. It is a tax on people who buy things from foreign businesses.”

Trump has said that if elected, he would impose tariffs of up to 20% on every foreign import coming into the US, as well as another tariff upward of 60% on all Chinese imports. He also said he would impose a “100% tariff” on countries that shift away from using the US dollar.

These duties would add to the tariffs he put on foreign steel and aluminum, washing machines, and many Chinese-made goods including baseball hats, luggage, bicycles, TVs and sneakers. President Joe Biden has left many of the Trump-era tariffs in place.

A foreign company may choose to pay the tariff or to lower its prices to stay competitive with US-made goods that aren’t impacted by the duty. But study after study, including one from the federal government’s bipartisan US International Trade Commission, have found that Americans have borne almost the entire cost of Trump’s tariffs on Chinese products.

Read the full fact check

Watch video: What we can learn about Trump and Harris' past debates

CNN chief national affairs correspondent Jeff Zeleny looks back at moments from Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump’s past debates to see what to expect in their encounter on Tuesday.

Families of American hostages in Gaza want Trump and Harris to offer new ways to bring them home

Ahead of a key US presidential debate, families of several American hostages held in Gaza are calling on US presidential candidates Donald Trump and Kamala Harris to offer new ideas for securing the immediate release of their loved ones.

CNN spoke with relatives of three US citizens held in Gaza who all expressed frustration that attempts to free their family members over the past 11 months had so far failed.

“Perhaps the deal proposed by President (Joe) Biden back in December was good then, but maybe we need something different now,” said Adi Alexander, whose 20-year-old son Edan was serving in the Israeli military when he was abducted by Hamas on October 7.

The family members told CNN that the approach should include the US seeking new pressure points on Hamas and its sponsor Iran, as well as on other nations with potential influence, like Egypt, Turkey and Qatar, the Gulf state which hosts Hamas officials and has helped facilitate negotiations.

Incentives, such as trade deals, sanctions relief and international prisoner swaps should also be evaluated, the hostage families told CNN, similar to recent deals agreed between Washington and Moscow to free US citizens such as Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich and US basketball star Brittney Griner.

Read more about what families are saying

Democrats and Republicans hope Trump and Harris draw policy contrasts during debate

Donald Trump and Kamala Harris.

Both Democratic and Republican politicians are hoping tomorrow’s debate between Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris is an opportunity for voters to see the difference between the candidates.

He said Harris is an “unselfish person” who cares about “people and families,” and attacked Trump’s agenda as “selfish” and “centered on Project 2025,” a right wing policy blueprint that Trump has tried to distance himself from, though several people linked to him authored it.

Republican Whip John Thune said he is hoping Trump can draw a stark contrast with Harris and “expose her record” on the debate stage. 

Thune said Trump needs to “stay focused on the issues. And don’t make things personal. This is a choice for the American voters. It ought to be about people’s records, their positions and their vision for the future.”

Analysis: What Harris' previous debate performance could tell us about what could happen against Trump

The world knows what kind of a debater former President Donald Trump is: loose with the facts, quick with an insult and cocksure to the extreme.

But what about Vice President Kamala Harris?

While her 2020 presidential campaign barely registered – she ended her campaign in December 2019, before the first primary votes were cast – Harris did leave a mark in one important way. On the primary debate stage in June 2019, before she was his running mate or he was anywhere near the White House, Harris eviscerated Joe Biden, attacking him on his past praise of men like the late Sens. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina and John Stennis of Mississippi, “who built their reputations and career on the segregation of race in this country.”

Harris has, no doubt, spent her debate prep time working on material to use against her rival this year. She and Trump are set to meet for the first time and debate Tuesday night in the key state of Pennsylvania. ABC News is broadcasting the event.

Unlike with Biden, Harris won’t have to go back to the 1970s to come up with lines of attack. She can look to his criminal conviction in New York, his liability in a sex abuse and defamation case, his nationalist policies, his unfounded claims about election fraud – for which there is no evidence – or his outrageous pledge to jail election officials.

But, also during that 2019 debate, Harris was criticized by former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard about her record as a prosecutor. Gabbard argued that Harris was too hard on marijuana offenders and had other criticisms of her time as a prosecutor.

Gabbard has reportedly helped Trump with his own debate prep, and Trump will want to paint Harris as to the left of the American mainstream – someone who changed her positions for political expediency in 2019 and has now changed them again to run for president.

RFK Jr. to remain on ballot in Michigan, state Supreme Court rules

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will be on the ballot in Michigan, the state’s highest court ruled on Monday, despite Kennedy pushing to have his name removed after the former presidential candidate ended his campaign and endorsed former President Donald Trump.

The court said its majority opinion that Kennedy “has not shown an entitlement to this extraordinary relief” after seeking to have his name removed from the ballot, reversing a Michigan Court of Appeals decision to take him off the ballot on Friday after an appeal from the Michigan secretary of state.

Kennedy had qualified for Michigan’s ballot after being nominated by the Natural Law Party, a minor party with ballot access in the state. In a concurring opinion, Michigan Supreme Court Justice Elizabeth Welch cited Natural Law Party chair Doug Dern’s opposition to Kennedy’s withdrawal four months after his party nominated Kennedy as part of her basis for concluding Kennedy did not have a “clear right” to be removed from the state’s ballot.

Some background: The decision undercuts Kennedy’s hope to push his supporters toward Trump after he endorsed the former president last month. Kennedy has been attempting to remove his name from battleground states as part of a strategy to maximize Trump’s support in places that could determine the outcome of the election. Last week he told his supporters to back Trump “no matter what state you live in.”

The ruling settles a hard-fought legal effort by Kennedy to remove his name from Michigan’s ballot, after initially losing a Michigan Court of Claims decision. He then appealed to the Michigan Court of Appeals, which ruled in his favor to remove him from the ballot on Friday before that decision was overturned on Monday.

Absentee voting in Michigan is scheduled to start September 26, although ballots for overseas and military voters are required to go out by September 21.

Ethan Cohen contributed to this report

Largest immigrant youth-led organization endorses Harris

United We Dream Action, the political arm of the largest immigrant youth-led organization, endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris, marking the first presidential endorsement in a general election. 

Sollod underscored the stakes of the election for immigrants, telling CNN that the importance of it contributed to the group’s decision to weigh in at this point of the race. UWDA has previously endorsed candidates in the primaries.

Since Harris assumed the top of the ticket, allies and immigrant advocates have pushed her team to address not only border security but also the millions of undocumented immigrants in the US.

Harris allies have often pointed to her longstanding relationship with the immigrant community dating back to her days holding office in California when describing her approach to immigration. 

The Harris campaign quickly went on the offensive on immigration in late July, citing her work prosecuting transnational gang members and the failed bipartisan border measure.  

“We want her to be a pro-immigrant president,” Sollod said.

"She’s ready," second gentleman says of Harris ahead of debate

Vice President Kamala Harris walks alongside Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff at the Pennsylvania Air National Guard Base, 171st Air Refueling Wing, in Moon Township, Pennsylvania, on September 8.

Second gentleman Doug Emhoff on Tuesday weighed in on Vice President Kamala Harris’ preparation ahead of the presidential debate, telling a crowd in North Carolina that “she’s ready.”

“There’s a debate tomorrow, and the one thing she did say to the press yesterday was simply, ‘I’m ready,’” Emhoff said during a campaign stop in Raleigh. He was referencing remarks Harris made during their walk in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, yesterday in which she gave a thumbs up and said “I’m ready” after being asked by pool reporters if she is ready to debate Trump.

Emhoff gave a preview of the past few weeks on the trail, emphasizing the robust campaign schedule has resulted in him barely seeing the vice president. 

Emhoff’s remarks came during a stop on the campaign’s “Fighting for Reproductive Freedom” bus tour where he was joined by Minnesota first lady Gwen Walz. The two outlined the stakes of the election for reproductive freedom while laying out the Harris-Walz ticket’s vision to move the country forward.

Trump campaign previews attacks ahead of debate

The Trump campaign on Monday previewed some of the lines of attack that former President Donald Trump is likely to deploy during ABC’s presidential debate tomorrow.

The campaign argued that Vice President Kamala Harris “owns everything from this administration.”

In a call with reporters ahead of Tuesday’s debate, Trump campaign spokesperson Jason Miller pointed to the handling of the US-Mexico border and illegal immigration, Harris casting tie-breaking votes in the Senate to pass stimulus bills and the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan as issues that the campaign believes Harris “owns.” 

Miller also said he expects “there’ll be some surprises during the debate tomorrow.”

Miller pointed to Harris’ interview with CNN in which she said her “values have not changed,” even as her positions on some issues have changed, and argued that answer, “really opens the door to talking about what are those values, what has Kamala Harris stood for over the years going all the way back to the beginning.”

Miller claimed Harris has been the one in charge of the country, not President Joe Biden, and at one point referred to the Biden administration as the “Harris-Biden” administration, though Harris is not the president. 

On Trump, Miller said that the former president is “going to be himself. I think that’s an important thing to keep in mind here.” Adding that Harris is “in this debate bootcamp being drilled by new advisers who worked for President Obama that she doesn’t know.”

Miller said, “All these new people, these strangers trying to put thoughts in her head. These binders of stats and details. She has no idea what any of this is. No idea whatsoever. And she’s trying to figure out what type of person she wants to be, because her positions are changing, though her values have stayed the same.” 

Asked how Trump has been preparing, Miller said Trump has been giving both longer interviews and shorter pull-aside interviews, news conferences, rally speeches and town halls. 

“Every possible style of question President Trump is prepared for because that’s what he’s been doing this entire campaign,” he said.

Presidential race remains tight with no clear leader ahead of debate, new CNN Poll of Polls shows

A new CNN Poll of Polls, including national polls conducted since the Democratic National Convention, finds a tight race with no clear leader between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump.

Harris has an average of 49% support in the new CNN Poll of Polls while Trump has 48% across five polls conducted between August 23 and Sept. 6. That’s effectively unchanged from the previous Poll of Polls average.

The latest average includes a Pew Research Center poll released Monday, which finds Harris and Trump tied at 49% among registered voters and shows little change in voter preference from their previous survey conducted in early August.

More on the poll: The CNN Poll of Polls is an average of the five most recent non-partisan, national surveys of registered or likely voters that meet CNN’s standards and ask about a 2024 presidential general election between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump. Surveys including named third-party or independent candidates are not included.

White House places blame over Afghanistan withdrawal on Trump administration

White House national security communications adviser John Kirby speaks during a news conference in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on September 9 in Washington, DC.

White House National Security spokesperson John Kirby blamed the Trump administration for the botched Afghanistan withdrawal, which was outlined in a report from House Foreign Affairs Chairman Michael McCaul on Monday.

The report released Monday has been lambasted by Democrats for being politically motivated while revealing no new information. Republicans have said the withdrawal, which saw the deaths of 13 service members after an explosion near the Kabul airport, was a failure of the Biden administration. Kirby declined to further “belabor” the White House’s feelings about the partisan nature of the report.

Retired military leaders place blame on Trump administration as well: Several retired military officials issued a letter in support of Vice President Kamala Harris as Republicans attempt to tie her to the chaotic 2021 US withdrawal from Afghanistan.

The letter comes after House Republicans and Democrats issued dueling documents casting blame for mistakes made in the US exit from Afghanistan. The Republican report cites Harris as having worked “in lockstep with President Biden behind the scenes to withdraw all US troops.” It also aims to implicate Harris in its accusations by referring to the current government as “the Biden-Harris administration.”

The group of retired generals placed blame on former President Donald Trump for “putting service members in harm’s way” while he was in office, and argued he didn’t leave the Biden administration in a position to execute a withdrawal efficiently.

There are new rules in Georgia from the GOP-majority election board. Here's why they could cause chaos

With less than two months to Election Day, three Republicans on Georgia’s five-member board are pushing through new rules that could jeopardize election certification, particularly if Vice President Kamala Harris wins the state, election experts and voting rights groups say.

The reshaping of the election board in one of the most critical battleground states of 2024 highlights how some Republicans who cast doubt on the 2020 presidential election results have now taken on prominent roles driving election rules and, in some areas, overseeing elections.

The board is set to consider another slate of new rules at its September 20 meeting.

Read more about how the changes could impact the 2024 election.