September 26, 2024, presidential campaign news | CNN Politics

September 26, 2024, presidential campaign news

<p>A new analysis by the Peterson Institute for International Economics finds that the Republican presidential nominee’s plans for tariffs, deportations and the Federal Reserve would not only fail to solve inflation – they would make it much worse.	CNN’s Matt Egan reports. </p>
New study finds Trump’s economic policies will drive up inflation
02:05 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

• Focus on foreign policy: Vice President Kamala Harris pledged continued support for Ukraine during remarks at the White House Thursday alongside President Volodymyr Zelensky. Donald Trump and Zelensky will meet in person Friday morning, the former president said.

• Trump news conference: Trump gathered media at Trump Tower, where he said he disagreed with Zelensky’s assessment of the war, was unaware of the scandal surrounding North Carolina Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson, discussed the NYC mayor’s recent indictment and slammed Harris’ upcoming visit to the US-Mexico border.

• A tight race: New polls in three critical battleground states in the Sun Belt — Arizona, Georgia and North Carolina — find no clear leader in the presidential race. Harris is set to campaign in Arizona tomorrow and visit the US-Mexico border, while Trump travels to Michigan.

• With voting already underway in several states, visit CNN’s voter handbook and read up on the 2024 candidates.

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RFK Jr. tells Michigan supporters to vote for Trump while acknowledging "likelihood" he'll be on state's ballot

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. urged Michigan voters to support former President Donald Trump while acknowledging “the likelihood is” his name will appear on the state’s ballot after a hard-fought legal effort to have his name removed fell short.

Kennedy, who endorsed Trump after suspending his campaign in August, spoke at a town hall hosted by “Real America’s Voice” in Lansing, Michigan.

As an independent candidate, Kennedy gained ballot access in Michigan after accepting the nomination of the Natural Law Party, a minor party with ballot access in the state. When he left the presidential race last month, he sought to withdraw his name from competitive and traditionally Republican states’ ballots. But courts in Michigan, a key battleground state, denied Kennedy’s request to be removed from the ballot, and a federal judge rejected his last-ditch effort to be removed from the ballot last week.

Kennedy, who repeatedly accused the political system of being rigged against him while he ran for president, laid the groundwork for questioning the integrity of Michigan’s elections when he was asked by one voter about a plan to prevent “widespread systemic election fraud,” which there is no evidence of and federal, state and local officials have said did not occur in Michigan.

Kennedy expressed the need for paper ballots in every state, and he warned “we need to be very, very careful using mail-in ballots.”

“We need to make sure that people who are illegal, undocumented immigrants, cannot vote in our elections,” he said, claiming “the anemic safeguards that we have against that right now are completely ineffective to guarantee that result.”

Michigan, where voters began receiving absentee ballots in the mail this week, uses paper ballots and it is illegal for noncitizens to vote. Election officials have described in detail how they safeguard these processes and how people who violate the law will be prosecuted.

Emhoff calls Trump "shameful" for not condemning Mark Robinson

North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, who is running for governor, delivers remarks prior to Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump speaking at a campaign event at Harrah's Cherokee Center on August 14, 2024 in Asheville, North Carolina.

Second gentleman Doug Emhoff said former President Donald Trump not yet condemning North Carolina Republican gubernatorial nominee Mark Robinson is “shameful” and proves Trump is “unfit for any job” in a clip of an interview with MSNBC released on Thursday.

Emhoff said Trump and other Republicans ignoring the controversy around Robinson after CNN reported he made antisemitic, racist and homophobic remarks in a porn forum years ago represents “pure cowardice” as he sought to label Trump’s silence on Robinson as an implicit endorsement.

Emhoff’s comments come after Trump avoided mentioning Robinson during a Wilmington, North Carolina, rally last week. When asked about Robinson during a press conference in New York on Thursday, Trump said, “I don’t know the situation.”

Emhoff, who is Jewish, also criticized Trump for suggesting Jewish voters would bear some blame if he loses the presidential election during an event ostensibly organized to combat antisemitism.

Harris slams Trump ahead of Michigan town hall

Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday slammed former President Donald Trump ahead of his trip to Michigan, accusing him of making empty promises to American workers.

“As President, he cut taxes for corporations, encouraged outsourcing, and lost nearly 200,000 manufacturing jobs, including auto jobs. He has joked about firing workers, supported state anti-union laws, and suggested companies move jobs out of Michigan,” she added.

The vice president’s statement comes as Trump is expected to host a town hall in Warren, Michigan, on Friday focused on the auto industry. She argued Trump’s previous trade deal with Mexico and Canada facilitated the loss of American auto jobs and pledged to bring autoworker jobs back to the US.

Both Harris and Trump have been campaigning in battleground states to make their pitch to voters on the economy, a top issue this campaign cycle. A recent CNN poll conducted by SSRS found likely voters overall say they trust Trump over Harris to handle the economy (50% Trump to 39% Harris). Even among those who say Trump’s views and policies are too extreme, 15% say they trust him over Harris to handle the economy.

Harris launches new straight-to-camera ad pushing back on Trump attacks

Vice President Kamala Harris launched a new campaign ad Thursday evening pushing back on a wave of sharp attacks coming from the Trump campaign and its allies, as the election’s advertising wars have intensified in the closing weeks of the 2024 race.

With pointed reference to Harris’ law enforcement background and her efforts to combat illegal drugs and crime, the ad is aimed at rebutting some of the stark attacks that the Trump campaign and allied outside groups have leveled in their ads.

Some context: Data from the ad tracking firm AdImpact shows that Republicans have waged an overwhelmingly negative advertising campaign in the presidential race, focused heavily on immigration and crime. In the last week, out of $20 million that Republicans spent on broadcast TV ads, $14.7 million had a negative tone, according to AdImpact data, and more than $10 million included references to immigration, crime or law enforcement.

Many of the pro-Trump ads highlight stark accounts of violent crimes allegedly committed by illegal immigrants, and several feature the victims of attacks, some explicitly blaming Harris.

This week, the Harris campaign has about $28 million worth of ad time reserved, with its largest bookings in the top battlegrounds.

GOP Senate candidate Mike Rogers defends his position on abortion

Mike Rogers spoke on Thursday, September 26, at an event with Black pastors and community leaders in Detroit hosted by the Trump campaign and the RNC.

Mike Rogers, the GOP Senate candidate in Michigan, vowed Thursday to abide by the will of the people in the state if elected, as his Democratic rival Rep. Elissa Slotkin frames him as a “staunch opponent” of reproductive rights.

Asked at an event with Black pastors and community leaders in Detroit about an ad that Slotkin’s campaign is running that highlights Rogers’ previous support, when he was a congressman, for an abortion ban without exceptions for rape and incest, the Michigan Republican said he has “always been for exceptions” in cases of rape, incest and threats to the life of the mother.

Slotkin has launched a multimillion-dollar TV and digital advertising campaign highlighting Rogers’ voting record on abortion legislation and featuring Michigan voters who say they’re worried about his positions.

The majority of Michigan voters supported a ballot measure in 2022 to amend the state constitution to guarantee the right to an abortion. Democrats in the state warn voters that if Donald Trump and Republican lawmakers regain power in Washington, they could still enact a national abortion ban.

Trump slams Harris ahead of her border trip

Donald Trump slammed Vice President Kamala Harris ahead of her trip to the US-Mexico border, blaming her for undoing policies that he enacted during his four years and spawning an “invasion” of undocumented immigrants.

“She’ll be out there tomorrow, standing probably in front of the wall that I built, trying to say what a wonderful job she did,” the former president said Thursday at a news conference at Trump Tower.

Trump also said migrants are “infecting our country” and “destroying our country.”

Praising his own administration’s efforts to secure the southern border, Trump said it “took a lot of talent” to negotiate “Remain in Mexico” policy that President Joe Biden reversed.

“He assigned her the job. And whether you call her a ‘border czar’ or just say that she was put in charge of the border doesn’t make any difference. Same thing, done a horrible job,” Trump said.

As CNN’s Daniel Dale has reported, Biden gave Harris a more limited immigration-related assignment in 2021, asking her to lead diplomacy with El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras in an attempt to address the conditions that prompted their citizens to try to migrate to the United States.

Harris campaign slams Trump's claim he's unfamiliar with Robinson "situation"

The Harris campaign released a statement saying that it’s “impossible to believe” that former President Donald Trump is unfamiliar with the Mark Robinson scandal in North Carolina after Trump told reporters “I don’t know the situation” earlier on Thursday.

Trump, who endorsed Robinson earlier this year, has previously praised the lieutenant governor on several occasions.

CNN Poll of Polls in Georgia finds no clear leader in presidential race

A new CNN Poll of Polls of recent surveys in Georgia finds no clear leader in the state, with former President Donald Trump averaging 49% support among likely voters compared with 48% for Vice President Kamala Harris.

The average includes four surveys of likely voters conducted in mid-September, including a Fox News poll released Thursday evening. Each of the polls finds the candidates separated by a margin of 3 percentage points or less, within each survey’s margin of error.

Fox also released a poll of Arizona on Thursday, where it similarly finds no clear leader, with Trump taking 50% to Harris’ 47% among likely voters.

Harris assumes spotlight on Biden administration’s foreign policy

Vice President Kamala Harris alongside Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building at the White House compound, on Thursday, September 26.

When Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visited the White House one year ago to plead for more weapons and shore up deteriorating support for his war, it was President Joe Biden who appeared alongside Zelensky in the East Room of the White House to pledge his unwavering support. And it was Biden who occupied that same role when Zelensky returned three months later as a critical aid packaged stalled in Congress.

Today, Vice President Kamala Harris — the newly minted standard-bearer for the Democratic Party — stepped into that spotlight as the chief messenger for the Biden administration’s foreign policy.

Standing side-by-side with Zelensky against a stately backdrop of Ukrainian and American flags, Harris offered a staunch defense of Ukraine.

Harris similarly embraced the stagecraft of the office, with Biden’s permission, following the visit of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, just days after Biden exited the race.

“You’ll see her stepping out more” in these moments, a Harris adviser told CNN, noting that Biden is “bringing her to the table more” for critical engagements than before. While the result may be more favorable optics for voters, another goal is to reinforce her personal relationships with world leaders to engender continuity in US policy if she wins.

While Harris has been putting her own stamp on economic and domestic policies, the adviser said “there will be no daylight” between Harris and Biden on foreign policy as she seeks to project stability.

But a senior administration official said Harris is becoming more deeply involved in the policies the Biden administration is pursuing outside its borders, asking probing questions and making her voice be heard.

Trump suggests NYC mayor was indicted because he voiced concerns about the influx of migrants

Former President Donald Trump speaks at Trump Tower in New York, on Thursday, September 26.

Former President Donald Trump said Thursday he doesn’t know if New York City Mayor Eric Adams should resign and suggested the indictment was prompted by Adams voicing concern over the influx of migrants in the city.

Trump said he didn’t know if Adams will get a fair trial in New York City and continued to claim the Justice Department and FBI have been weaponized.

Adams was indicted on five federal charges related to bribery, wire fraud, conspiracy and soliciting campaign contributions from foreign nationals brought by the Southern District of New York.

Trump disagrees with Zelensky saying he doesn't know how to end Ukraine war, plan is "not a surrender"

Former president Donald Trump said he disagreed with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky’s assessment that he doesn’t know how to end Russia’s war on Ukraine.

Zelensky told the New Yorker: “My feeling is that Trump doesn’t really know how to stop the war even if he might think he knows how. With this war, oftentimes, the deeper you look at it the less you understand.”

Trump left things open-ended when asked he believes Ukraine should cede territory to Russia as a means of ending the war.

“We’ll see what happens,” Trump told reporters at Trump Tower.

While he declined to delve into the specifics of his plan to end the war, Trump said he doesn’t think it amounts to “surrender,” as Harris said earlier today alongside Zelensky.

“It’s not a surrender,” Trump said. “I want to save lives. Millions of people are dead.”

“It’s not my fight, but it is a fight to save humanity,” he added.

Trump said his message to Zelensky tomorrow is “let’s get some peace. We need peace.”

Trump meeting with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer tonight

Former President Donald Trump said he is meeting with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer in New York this evening.

“Yes, he’s coming tonight,” Trump told reporters at a news conference at Trump Tower.

Starmer, along with President Joe Biden, have flocked to New York city this week for the 79th United Nations General Assembly to discuss global issues and highlight their countries’ priorities.

“Yeah, I actually think he’s very nice. I think he ran a great race. He did very well. It’s very early, but he’s popular, and I’ll be seeing him,” Trump said.

Starmer guided the UK’s Labour Party to a historic victory in July, an end to 14 years of Conservative rule.

Trump says he’s unfamiliar with Robinson “situation”

Former President Donald Trump speaks to the press at Trump Tower in New York, on Thursday, September 26.

Former President Donald Trump said Thursday he’s unfamiliar with the scandal surrounding North Carolina Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson when asked if he would pull his endorsement.

Trump’s comment comes as other Republicans running for office have distanced themselves from the current North Carolina lieutenant governor since CNN reported on dozens of inflammatory comments he made on a pornography website’s message board more than a decade ago, including referring to himself as a “black NAZI,” expressing support for slavery and making other lewd and sexually explicit remarks.

CNN previously reported the Trump campaign did not invite Robinson to his rally Saturday in Wilmington, North Carolina. Trump also did not mention Robinson in his remarks.

Meanwhile, the Harris Campaign has tried to tie the former president to Robinson, launching a new television advertisement a day after CNN’s report that shows Trump’s past praise for Robinson alongside the gubernatorial candidate’s anti-abortion comments.

At a campaign stop earlier this week, Trump’s running mate, JD Vance, refused to say whether the Trump campaign still endorsed Robinson.

“I think it’s up to Mark Robinson to make his case to the people of North Carolina that those weren’t his statements, and I’m going to let him make that case,” Vance said.

Biden criticizes Trump and Vance for past comments after school shootings

President Joe Biden delivers remarks on gun violence in the East Room of the White House on Thursday, September 26.

President Joe Biden on Thursday criticized his predecessor and Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance for past comments both candidates have made in the wake of school shootings.

“Last year, after another school shooting, my predecessor just said, like some members of Congress say, ‘Just get over it,’” Biden said. He was referencing remarks Trump made following a school shooting in Iowa earlier year.

“I’m going to be very blunt — Secretary Vance of Ohio has called these shootings facts of life,” the president added, misstating the senator’s title.

Vance drew criticism earlier this month following the school shooting in Winder, Georgia, after he said: “I don’t like this. I don’t like to admit this. I don’t like that this is a fact of life.”

Biden warned the progress under his administration to stem the flow of violence could be reversed if Trump wins in November or Republicans gain control of congress.

The remarks came before Biden signed an executive order to improve active shooter drills in schools while addressing emerging firearm technologies, such as ghost and 3D-printed guns.

Trump says he’s meeting with Zelensky tomorrow morning in New York

Former President Donald Trump delivers remarks at Trump Tower in New York on Thursday, September 26.

Former President Donald Trump said he is meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday morning.

Harris pushes for tougher gun laws at White House event

Vice President Kamala Harris delivers remarks on gun violence in America at the White House in Washington, DC, on Thursday, September 26.

Vice President Kamala Harris — who has revealed while campaigning that she is a gun owner — pushed for strengthened gun laws during a White House event on gun violence Thursday.

Harris touted work the Biden administration had done, including 2022’s Bipartisan Safer Communities Act and the hiring of mental health officials, but she added “for as much as we have accomplished, more must be done.”

“We need more leaders, like the leaders in this room, in Congress who have the courage to take action, to stand up to the gun lobby and to put the lives of our children first,” Harris said.

Special counsel files evidence against Trump under seal in election subversion case

Filings from special counsel Jack Smith laying out never-before-seen evidence in the election subversion case against Donald Trump are now in the hands of a federal court — including interview transcripts and notes from an investigation that counted among its witnesses former Vice President Mike Pence, Ivanka Trump and former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows.

It will now be up to district Judge Tanya Chutkan to determine how much of that evidence the public gets to see and when they will be able to see it.

The prosecutors have complied with Chutkan’s order for briefing on the case’s immunity issues as of 4:40 p.m., according to Peter Carr, the special counsel office’s spokesperson.

The court submissions, filed under seal Thursday, could provide Americans with the most comprehensive view they’ll ever get of Smith’s case alleging that Trump conspired to defraud the United States in his efforts to overturn his 2020 electoral loss.

The filings are expected to include grand jury transcripts, the FBI’s formal notes from witness interviews, and documentary evidence, as part of an effort by prosecutors to argue that their reworked indictment can survive under the Supreme Court’s recent presidential immunity ruling.

Read more on the several legal challenges Trump is facing as he runs again for president.

Biden officially signs government funding bill

President Joe Biden meets with Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky at the White House on Thursday.

President Joe Biden has signed the bill to fund the federal government until December 20, the White House announced Thursday.

The move formally averts a shutdown after the legislation on a short-term spending bill, known as a continuing resolution, was passed by Congress on Wednesday.

Biden previously praised Congress for avoiding a shutdown, saying in a statement that the bill “gives lawmakers “more time to pass full-year funding bills by the end of this year.”

Trump and Zelensky making plans for potential meeting Friday, source says

Former President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Zelensky are now working on plans to meet in person on Friday, a source familiar with the planning told CNN and noted the details are still coming together.

Trump on Truth Social Thursday cryptically posted what appeared to be a private communication between the deputy ambassador and an aide to Trump asking to pass along a message to the former president from Zelensky, asking to meet with Trump. Trump did not indicate in the post whether he would meet with the Ukrainian president.

Zelensky had been expected to depart the United States but is prepared to stay an extra day to facilitate a meeting, a source familiar with his plans said.

Trump on Wednesday criticized Zelensky and claimed the Ukrainian president “refuses to make a deal” amid Russia’s war in Ukraine, marking Trump’s most explicit criticism of Zelensky’s handling of the war to date. He also accused Zelensky of “making nasty little aspersions” about him.

Trump’s campaign had been blasting Zelensky over an interview with the New Yorker published Sunday, in which Zelensky called GOP Vice Presidential nominee JD Vance “too radical.”

“His message seems to be that Ukraine must make a sacrifice. This brings us back to the question of the cost and who shoulders it. The idea that the world should end this war at Ukraine’s expense is unacceptable,” Zelensky said in the interview. “For us, these are dangerous signals, coming as they do from a potential vice president.”

Zelensky met with Vice President Kamala Harris at the White House earlier today, where she pledged continued support for Ukraine and offered a veiled swipe at Trump without naming the Republican nominee.