Harris 2024 election thread

More Than 700 Current and Former National Security Officials Back Harris
A letter signed by former secretaries of state and defense endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris and said former President Donald J. Trump poses a threat to the nation’s defense and its democratic system

 
NEW

Three former chairs of the Maine Republican party endorsed Vice President Harris:

“As former chairs of the Maine Republican Party, we enthusiastically endorse Kamala Harris for president of the United States…Trump’s MAGA Republican Party is unrecognizable to us.”
 
CNN: More than 400 independent economists and policymakers just endorsed Kamala Harris. This is a sweeping show of support. They say this election is a choice between failed trickle-down economics under Trump or prosperity, opportunity, and stability with Harris

 
Breaking;

Vice President Harris is calling for the elimination of the Senate filibuster to codify the protections of Roe v. Wade. She made this announcement in an interview with Wisconsin Public Radio.

 
Only 1.3 million active teamsters....now the retiree's joining the endorsement

Teamsters Joint Council 75 — representing Georgia, Florida, and Alabama — just endorsed Vice President Harris.

According to the campaign, Harris has now been endorsed by local Teamsters unions representing more than 1.5 million active and retired members.

 
Only 1.3 million active teamsters....now the retiree's joining the endorsement

Teamsters Joint Council 75 — representing Georgia, Florida, and Alabama — just endorsed Vice President Harris.

According to the campaign, Harris has now been endorsed by local Teamsters unions representing more than 1.5 million active and retired members.


Just out of curiosity, how many hours a day do you spend digging this stuff up? You are responsible for 90% of the posts on 6-7 different threads. How about taking a day off?
 
Extremely odd behavior for a socialist as a couple of posters here want to claim:


Harris Makes Undercover Push to Win Over Corporate America​

The vice president has campaigned on holding big business accountable but has privately sought advice from CEOs, investors​


Like past Democratic candidates, Harris has made taking on wrongdoing by American corporations a central part of her pitch to voters, referring on the campaign trail to her record of taking on big business, blaming food manufacturers for high grocery prices and promising to increase taxes on corporations and the wealthy. But, in private at least, she is making a quiet play for Corporate America’s support, seeking out advice from leaders across sectors. She has offered few policy specifics, but many executives say they view her openness to their feedback as enough for now.

Cuban’s experience reflects that of other business leaders who say they have found an open ear and even hand in Harris. The vice president has worked to cultivate relationships with Wall Street and Silicon Valley in recent years—a different approach than the one taken by Biden, who business leaders say didn’t make a concerted effort to engage them beyond formal meetings, such as a roundtable on prescription drug costs Cuban attended at the White House in March. This past week, Harris also spoke with another top financier, JPMorgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon, according to people familiar with the matter.
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In the 10 days before Biden bowed out of the race, his campaign received around $91,000 from about 990 donors who self-identified as CEOs, according to fundraising reports filed with the Federal Election Commission. In the 10 days after, Harris’s campaign received nearly $2 million from 5,000 such donors.
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Corporate leaders have already scored a major win: The vice president recently backed a less drastic increase in the top capital-gains tax rate, breaking with a plan Biden outlined in his budget blueprint earlier this year.

Executives have also pressed Harris to ditch more of Biden’s major tax proposals in that blueprint. One plan would tax unrealized capital gains above $5 million at death. Another, which the administration calls the billionaire minimum income tax, levies taxes on some unrealized gains during life for people with a net worth over $100 million.
Harris hasn’t specifically weighed in on taxing unrealized gains but has said she supports a billionaire minimum income tax. A Harris adviser said she is open to structuring that tax differently than Biden did, though the nontaxation of unrealized gains is the core problem it attempts to solve. Other options, however, likely wouldn’t yield as much in revenue to offset her expensive policy proposals.
 

3 former Republican officials , Former Republican U.S. senator , Reagan appointed Retired Federal Judge , and Former GOP Kansas State Senator / Insurance Commissioner endorse Kamala Harris, says election is 'stark choice'


EXCLUSIVE: Three more Republicans are crossing the aisle to endorse Vice President Kamala Harris for the White House.

Former U.S. Senator Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., former Kansas state senator and Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger, and Deanell Reece Tacha, a retired federal judge, condemned the current state of the GOP in a statement shared with Fox News Digital on Thursday.


"This election presents a stark choice that is not easy for any of us. The Republican Party of Dwight D. Eisenhower, Bob Dole, Frank Carlson, Jan Meyers, and generations of Kansas leaders does not exist within the current Republican Party," the former officials wrote.

"But, it requires Republicans speaking out and putting country over party when those values are at stake."


They added that the race between Harris and former President Trump presented a "stark choice" – but not an easy one.

"No candidate is perfect, and we do not pretend that we subscribe to all the policy positions taken either by the national parties or any individual candidates," they wrote.


"However, we fervently believe that we must do our part to try to build a brighter future, which is why we will be voting for Kamala Harris and [Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz] in this election. We believe they most closely align with the aspirations of Kansans and reflect our rich history of working together ‘to the stars through difficulty.’"


Kassebaum, who now goes by Nancy Kassebaum Baker, served in the U.S. Senate from December 1978 through January 1997.

She was the first woman elected to represent Kansas in the chamber, and her career included a stint as chair of the Senate Labor Committee.


Deanell Reece Tacha was nominated to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit by former President Ronald Reagan in 1985 Getty Images

Deanell Reece Tacha was nominated to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit by former President Ronald Reagan in 1985 Getty Images© Getty Images

Tacha was nominated to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit by former President Ronald Reagan in 1985 and served as chief judge from 2001 until 2008.

Praeger served as the Kansas Insurance Commissioner from 2003 until 2015.

Harris’ campaign has made a point of courting Republicans in a bid to widen her appeal and cast Trump as an extreme and polarizing choice.



A majority of Republicans, particularly those still in elected office, do support Trump.

The vice president has scored support from several notable GOP figures, however – former Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., ex-Vice President Dick Cheney, and former Trump administration aides Stephanie Grisham and Olivia Troye have all publicly come out for Harris.

Troye is one of several people who headlined a "Republicans for Harris" event on Thursday, alongside former Reps. Barbara Comstock, R-Va., and Denver Riggleman, R-Va.

A new Marist College poll found Harris and Trump neck-and-neck in three critical states.


The two candidates are tied at 49% among likely voters in North Carolina, while Trump slightly edges Harris in Georgia and Arizona with 50% to 49% in both states.

Those statewide polls were conducted Sept. 19 to 24.

Asked for comment on the Kansas Republicans' endorsement, the Harris campaign sent Fox News Digital a broader statement on the "Republicans for Harris" initiative.


"The Vice President is bringing together voters from across the political spectrum by running a campaign about freedom, democracy, and opportunity," said Austin Weatherford, National Republican Outreach Director.

"Our Republicans for Harris program is taking that unifying, inspiring message to anti-Trump Republicans, moderates, and independents. While we’re seeing a surge in support, we aren’t taking anyone for granted."

The Trump campaign said of the Harris endorsement, "Nobody knows who these people are, and nobody cares."
 
Kamala Harris Receives Surprise Endorsement from Former Commander of All U.S. and NATO Forces in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal.
 
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