Presidential debate 2024: Donald Trump and Kamala Harris to face off on ABC as new poll shows who’s leading
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By Katelyn Caralle, Senior U.S. Political Reporter
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Kamala Harris and Donald Trump will meet for the first time when they take the stage for the ABC presidential debate on Tuesday night at 9pm.
With the race on a knife edge, the candidates will face off in Philadelphia with just 55 days left in the unprecedented campaign.
Follow all the developments in DailyMail.com’s live blog.
Kamala Harris slips 7 points with independent voters – as one-third say debate will determine their vote
By Katelyn Caralle, Senior U.S. Political Reporter in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Kamala Harris is losing support among independent voters with just eight weeks until the 2024 election.
Donald Trump leads the vice president in this demographic 49 percent to 46 percent, according to a new PBS News/NPR/Marist poll released the day of their first debate.
Of all voters, the two candidates are only split by 1 percentage point.
The Tuesday results among independents show a 7-point dip for Harris from August, which was her first full month in the presidential race.
It’s likely that third party candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. suspending his campaign last month helped with Trump’s uptick in support among independent voters.
In 2020, President Joe Biden won independent voters by 15 points.
‘Those are two important groups that are likely to be the ones who the campaigns are going to be targeting very heavily throughout the campaign,’ said Cook Political Report Editor-in-Chief Amy Walter, referencing independent and Lantino voters.
Of all voters polled in the latest survey, a third say that the debate in Philadelphia on Tuesday will help determine who they will cast their ballot for in November.
Democrats make massive push for the youth vote in Pennsylvania ahead of the presidential debate
The Democratic National Committee is making a massive push for the youth vote in Philadelphia ahead of the presidential debate.
The DNC is launching its effort across Philadelphia college campuses to go after Doanld Trump and tie him to the Project 2025 agenda.
It push targets more than 100,000 Philadelphia area students with new campus kiosks at Drexel University, Lafayette College, Temple University, University of Pennsylvania and Widener University
Their message is to urge students to google Project 2025, a conservative agenda Trump has attempted to distance himself from.
They are distributing flyers across campuses about what Project 2025 means for abortion access, education funding, housing and other issues.
‘Young people in Philadelphia have the power to make a difference in this election. As students in Philadelphia return to campus, Democrats are making sure they know that their future hangs in the balance this November,’ said DNC spokesperson Addy Toevs.
Harris releases ad featuring Obama mocking Trump on crowd size
On the day of the presidential debate, Kamala Harris is out with a new ad featuring Barack Obama mocking Donald Harris about crowd size.
The ad features footage from Obama’s speech at the Democratic National Convention where he made fun of Trump’s obsession with the size of his crowds.
‘This weird obsession with crowd sizes… it just goes on, and on, and on,’ Obama says in the ad.
Harris has been trying to get under Trump’s skin ahead of tonight’s showdown. She released an ad on Monday featuring former members of his administration questioning his ability to be president.
Who are the moderators for tonight’s debate?
ABC News is tapping some of its biggest stars to moderate the presidential debate in Philadelphia Tuesday night, and they’re not ones that have been in Donald Trump’s line of fire.
David Muir, 50, is the host and managing editor of ‘ABC World News Tonight’ and co-anchor of 20/20. He has been at ABC News since 2003.
Linsey Davis, 46, is the host of ABC’s nightly streaming news broadcast ‘ABC News Live Prime’ and the anchor of the Sunday edition of ‘World News Tonight.’ She moderated two 2020 Democratic primary debates.
Former ‘Love Gov’ Andrew Cuomo to be grilled by Republicans over COVID nursing home ‘cover-up’ catastrophe and other scandals
By Jon Michael Raasch, U.S. Political Reporter for DailyMail.com
Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo will be grilled before Congress Tuesday over his handling of the COVID pandemic as he’s accused of perpetrating the number of nursing home deaths.
The ex-Empire State executive has largely flown under the radar since resigning in 2021 after being accused of sexual harassment while on the job, including but not limited to giving unwanted kisses, breast groping, sexual remarks and more.
But after sitting for a seven-hour closed-door interview with Congress’ COVID Select Committee earlier this year, the group’s Chairman Brad Wenstrup, R-Ohio, decided Cuomo needed to return to D.C. for a public session.
And the Ohio Republican can’t wait to ask the ‘Love Gov’ about his role in crafting state mandates that forced nursing homes not to accept sick patients, despite his self-congratulatory book on leadership during the pandemic.
Melania Trump demands answers to Donald’s assassination attempt
Melania Trump released a new video on Tuesday, questioning law enforcement’s role in the assassination attempt on her husband Donald Trump.
She indicated the full story wasn’t being told and hinted at a conspiracy, saying there’ s ‘more to the story’ and ‘we need to uncover the truth.’
‘The attempt to end my husband’s life was a horrible, distressing experience,’ she said in the 10 second video posted to her social media accounts.
‘Now the silence around it feels heavy. I can’t help but wonder why didn’t law enforcement officials arrest shooter before the speech. There is definitely more to this story. And we need to uncover the truth,’ she added.
The video ends with a shot of her forthcoming memoir ‘Melania.’
In the video, the former first lady, 54, is dressed in black, speaking with a black screen behind her. Ominous music plays in the background.
Debate Day: Everything to know about the first showdown between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris
By Katelyn Caralle, Senior U.S. Political Reporter in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
The time has come for Donald Trump and Kamala Harris to meet on stage for what could be one of the most consequential presidential debates in decades.
The race is on a knife’s edge with polls showing the candidates – who have never met – neck and neck with just eight weeks to go until Election Day in November.
Their performances in the primetime showdown on ABC at 9pm in Philadelphia could make or break their chances of taking the White House in what has been an already historic campaign.
Just seven weeks into her campaign, the stakes couldn’t be higher for Harris in the biggest moment of her career.
The millions expected to tune in already know Trump, but the vice president has yet to fully introduce herself as the Democratic candidate. She has only engaged in one sit-down interview and has not held a press conference as the nominee.
Trump is expected to go after Harris’ record and make her answer for it publicly on stage for the first time.
Meanwhile, some speculate that Harris will try to goad Trump into making a mistake.
Pennsylvania, where the debate takes place, is one of the seven battleground states that will determine the outcome of the 2024 presidential election.
And the stakes for Harris couldn’t be higher when it comes to winning Pennsylvania. No Democratic presidential nominee has won the White House without clinching the Keystone State since 1948.
The 2024 election is ‘freedom’ versus ‘power’: Voters reveal the words they associate with Donald Trump and Kamala Harris
The battle for the White House now comes down to a choice between freedom or power, according to a survey of likely voters.
It shows how the idea of Kamala Harris and the idea of Donald Trump has crystallised into a single word in the minds of Americans.
When 300 voters in seven swing states were asked for one word to describe what they thought Harris most wanted to achieve in office, the most popular answers were: ‘Freedom,’ ‘equality’ and the words ‘middle’ and ‘class.’
For Trump the answer was ‘power,’ alongside ‘dictator and ‘revenge. (‘Revenge’ was the most popular response when DailyMail.com and J.L. Partners asked the question at the end of last year.)
It suggests that the two campaigns have had some success in getting their messages through to voters.
Play Trump and Harris presidential debate bingo: Fill in your card for the ABC showdown
The Democrat and the Republican will participate in the second 2024 general election debate, but with some major changes since the Atlanta showdown in late June between Trump and President Joe Biden.
The biggest change – obviously – is that Biden has bowed out of the race, with Harris now topping the Democratic ticket, picking Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to be her running mate.
It was his disastrous June debate performance – and pleas from a number of top Democrats – that compelled the 81-year-old president to do so, in late July.
Also since the last debate, Trump survived a July 13 assassination attempt at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.
The rules of the ABC presidential debate… after the fight over microphones
The rules are officially set for the much anticipated presidential debate between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris after the campaigns went head-to-head over whether microphones would be muted raising questions over the showdown would even happen.
The high-stakes event hosted by ABC News is set to take place on Tuesday, September 10 in Philadelphia. It will be the first and potentially only time the ex-president and vice president ever come face-to-face.
Both candidates are facing pressure to deliver a knockout performance on the debate stage which will take less than 60 days before Election Day as some voters will already be able to cast ballots.
The 90 minute must-see event will be moderated by ABC News anchors David Muir and Linsey Davis who will be the only ones asking questions.
The weakness that could derail Kamala Harris’ debate: Experts reveal the VP’s fatal flaw that could lead to disaster
Vice President Kamala Harris will participate in the most important political debate of her career on Tuesday evening, but she has a very mixed record on the stage.
Harris participated in multiple presidential debates with a gaggle of aspirational Democrats during her failed 2020 presidential campaign, as she struggled to break free of the pack and go viral.
Tuesday’s debate with Harris marks Trump’s seventh general election debate since 2016, while this is Harris’ first with a Republican presidential candidate.
Political strategists who have prepared Republican candidates spoke to the DailyMail about her strengths and weaknesses in debates.
Harris is very good about preparing, rehearsing, and deploying prepared lines, even though her attempts to go viral do not always come off with a hit.
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Presidential debate 2024: Donald Trump and Kamala Harris to face off on ABC as new poll shows who’s leading
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