For instance, in the last month, the Trump-Vance ticket has conducted 37 interviews compared to one for the Harris-Walz ticket.
Vice President Kamala Harris’s ideological vacillations provoked a dig from former GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy against CNN anchor Kate Bolduan. The dig was over a new poll showing some people believed that Harris is less extreme than her opponent, former President Trump.
As Bolduan went on to demonstrate with the CNN survey, close to half of likely voters in six battleground states said Trump’s policies were “so extreme they pose a threat.” More than 40 per cent of those states had the same view of Harris’ positions.
“If voters don’t agree with the extreme narrative against [Harris], do you think team Trump should be shifting now?” she questioned.
Ramaswamy stated that he “respectfully disagreed” with this viewpoint, claiming that the media had not informed voters about Harris’s extreme leftist past.
“Voters have not yet been exposed, principally by the media, to what Kamala Harris’s past positions actually are,” Ramaswamy said. “I give the voters no credit. A new Kamala Harris has been presented to them, one who is more centrist in her views on social and economic issues. But if we can use Kamala Harris’ own words against her, as I think we should, the truth is she ran for president on “abolition,” which is her word for doing away with private health insurance, fracking, and offshore drilling prohibitions. These are the types of measures that the majority of Americans just do not support.”
Bolduan defended Harris’s evolving positions by stating that last week, she “made clear” to CNN’s Dana Bash that she no longer favours banning fracking or private health insurance.
Bolduan said, “Those are not her positions.” “If evolving on an issue… you can even call it flip-flopping on an issue, if that is now not allowed, if that should be the death knell to a campaign, Donald Trump’s got issues.”
Ramaswamy contended that Harris not only had “evolved” from her previous far-left views on a number of subjects, but she was also backpedaling from policy positions that she had adopted throughout her political career.
“Actions speak louder than words,” he said.