Harris gains ground in polls as Trump tries to brand her a ‘radical, left Marxist’
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Donald Trump still narrowly leads US Vice-President Kamala Harris in all battleground states but Wisconsin, where the two are tied.
PHOTO: AFP
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HOUSTON – Vice-President Kamala Harris took her presidential campaign blitz to the largest US teachers’ union on July 25, promising a “fight for the future”, as new opinion polls showed her narrowing the gap with her Republican rival, former president Donald Trump.
Ms Harris’ swift ascent as the successor to President Joe Biden, 81, as the Democratic presidential candidate in the Nov 5 election has shaken up a stagnant presidential race, with polls showing her narrowing Trump’s advantage.
In an address in Houston to the American Federation of Teachers, Ms Harris, 59, focused on economic policy and workers’ rights, touting plans for affordable healthcare and childcare and criticising Republicans for blocking gun limits in the wake of school shootings.
“Ours is a fight for the future,” Ms Harris told a crowd of about 3,500 people. “We are in a fight for our most fundamental freedoms. And to this room of leaders, I say: Bring it on.”
More than 100,000 predominantly white women later joined a Zoom call to raise money for Ms Harris and discuss strategy, organisers of #AnswerTheCall said. The call followed similar ones recently among black women, black men and Latinas.
A series of polls conducted since Mr Biden ended his re-election bid
A New York Times/Siena College national poll published on July 25 found Ms Harris has narrowed what had been a sizeable Trump lead.
Trump was ahead of Ms Harris 48 per cent to 46 per cent among registered voters, compared with a lead of 49 per cent to 41 per cent over Mr Biden in early July, following Mr Biden’s disastrous debate performance that led to a wave of Democratic calls for him to step aside as candidate.
While nationwide surveys give important signals of American support for political candidates, a handful of competitive states typically tilt the balance in the US Electoral College, which ultimately decides who wins a presidential election.
Ms Harris also got good news on that front as Emerson College/The Hill published a poll finding that she had begun to close the gap with Trump in five critical battleground states: Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
Trump still narrowly leads Ms Harris in all but Wisconsin, which is tied, according to the poll of registered voters in those states.
Together, the polls suggest that while Trump, 78, retains a narrow advantage, he has not seen the sort of bump in support following last week’s Republican National Convention that candidates hope to get out of the highly scripted, televised and expensive events.
Trump on July 24 laid into Ms Harris in his first rally
“We’re not ready for a Marxist president, and lyin’ Kamala Harris is a radical left Marxist, and worse!” Trump posted on his social media platform.
Trump’s campaign on July 25 cast doubt about a Sept 10 debate that had been previously scheduled against Mr Biden.
Ms Harris has said she is prepared to debate Trump that day, but the Trump campaign said in a statement that debate details cannot be finalised until the Democrats formally name a candidate, which could happen in the first week of August.
More than 40 former US Justice Department officials, primarily from Democratic administrations, signed a letter endorsing Ms Harris and calling Trump a threat to the rule of law in the US.
“Former president Trump presents a grave risk to our country, our global alliances and the future of democracy. As president, he regularly ignored the rule of law,” reads the letter, a copy of which was seen by Reuters and signed by former US attorney-general Loretta Lynch and other former officials.
Former president Barack Obama has been in regular contact with Ms Harris and plans to soon endorse her as the Democratic presidential candidate, a source familiar with his plans said on July 25.
The Harris campaign released its first video advertisement online on July 25. Ms Harris narrates the ad, framing the campaign as a battle to protect Americans’ individual liberties to the sound of Beyonce’s song Freedom.
Ms Harris also reached out to younger voters by creating an account on TikTok, amassing over 500,000 followers in a few hours.
The next highly anticipated development will be Ms Harris’ choice of a vice-presidential candidate
The list of contenders amounts to a who’s who of rising Democrats, including Senator Mark Kelly of Arizona, governors Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania, Roy Cooper of North Carolina and Andy Beshear of Kentucky, as well as Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.
Ms Harris’ rise has largely pushed Trump out of the headlines, a week after the Republican National Convention and 12 days after he narrowly survived an assassination attempt
FBI director Christopher Wray told a House panel on July 24 that investigators are not certain whether Trump’s injury was caused by a bullet or by shrapnel. Trump has said a bullet hit his ear.
A Trump campaign spokesman, Mr Jason Miller, called the idea that Trump was not hit by a bullet a “conspiracy”, adding an expletive. REUTERS

