Forty full days after Joe Biden was shoved out of the race by his party, Biden’s replacement is finally sitting down for an interview. CNN’s joint interview with Vice President Kamala Harris and Gov. Tim Walz will air at 9pm ET tonight, heading into a holiday weekend. Harris has taken fewer than a dozen questions on any subject since becoming her party’s de facto, then official, nominee. By my count, only one of them pertained to policy substance. Her minute-long response to that single inquiry employed the term “return on investment” four times, in the process of claiming her new trillion-dollar-plus spending proposal would ‘pay for itself.’ Tim Walz has answered zero questions since joining the ticket, unless you count his rhapsodizing about gutters in a TikTok “interview.”
Harris staked out a dramatically left-wing vision for the country in her presidential campaign last cycle, and her team has been slowly walking back nearly that entire agenda via press release over recent weeks. She has explained exactly none of these changes, none of which she’s even announced with her own voice. In addition to a breathtaking reversal on the Trump border wall, Harris’ team also seems to be stiff-arming her longstanding support for electric vehicle mandates, which reflects both the Biden-Harris administration’s existing policy, as well as her positions as a Senate sponsor of Green New Deal legislation:
The Harris campaign is now claiming that she doesn't support an Electric Vehicle (EV) mandate.
When she was a senator, Harris cosponsored the Zero-Emissions Vehicle Act of 2019, which contained a requirement for car manufacturers to sell only zero-emission vehicles by 2040. pic.twitter.com/nx7BhFfvQz
— Amber Duke (@ambermarieduke) August 27, 2024
She is also CO-SPONSOR OF THE GREEN NEW DEAL, which she has endorsed as a presidential candidate. https://t.co/X39sl75i2o
— Guy Benson (@guypbenson) August 27, 2024
A joint interview presents a challenge for the interviewer, given the target-rich environment and the weeks-long backlog — as there are numerous subjects that require serious scrutiny for both members of the revamped Democratic ticket. Two subjects reduces the moderator’s time to drill down and follow-up on any one answer, which I suspect is the play here. As it stands, the large majority of Dana Bash’s questions should go to the woman who wants to be president, who should really be doing a solo interview. So should her running mate, separately, but the campaign reportedly hasn’t allowed Walz to do so because, well, he doesn’t know what Harris’ positions actually are. This detail, per Politico (in fairness, nobody knows what they are, including Harris herself): […]
— Read More: townhall.com
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