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Thursday November 14, 2024

Kamala Harris a softer target than Biden in November: Trump

Biden ended his reelection campaign after fellow Democrats lost faith in his mental acuity and ability to beat Trump

By Reuters
July 22, 2024
US Vice President Kamala Harris (L) and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. —Reuters/File
US Vice President Kamala Harris (L) and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. —Reuters/File

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump on Sunday claimed that Vice President Kamala Harris would be an easier opponent to defeat in the November election compared to Democratic President Joe Biden, who quit as his party's candidate earlier that day.

CNN said the Republican former president made the comments to the network shortly after Biden announced his decision. Trump also later attacked Biden on social media, saying that Biden was unfit to continue serving as president.

Biden ended his reelection campaign on Sunday after fellow Democrats lost faith in his mental acuity and ability to beat Trump. Biden endorsed Harris to replace him as the party's candidate.

Biden had faced growing doubts about his reelection chances after a weak and faltering performance in a televised debate against Trump late last month.

On his Truth Social platform on Sunday, Trump said Biden "was not fit to run for President, and is certainly not fit to serve."

Other top Republicans, including House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson, also said Biden was not fit to serve as president and finish his term if he was stepping aside as the Democratic presidential candidate. Johnson explicitly called on Biden to resign.

Trump, in a post on his Truth Social platform, said: "We will suffer greatly because of his (Biden's) presidency, but we will remedy the damage he has done very quickly."

Trump and Biden had been mostly tied in polls, but after the debate, some polls showed Trump narrowly ahead of the president in a match-up for the November elections.

The Trump campaign had already begun discussions about how it would redeploy campaign resources for the possibility of Biden's dropping out, a source with direct knowledge of the matter said on Sunday.

Given that any alternative Democratic candidate would likely have different strengths and weaknesses than Biden, that person said, the president's dropping out would require rethinking where to spend ad dollars and where to deploy resources more generally.

Publicly, Trump campaign advisers and allies have been telling reporters they are not worried about facing Harris because they can simply tie her to Biden's record in office, particularly on immigration and inflation. They say they will try to portray Harris, and any of the other candidates being suggested as alternatives for the Democrats, as being to the left of Biden on various policies.

Trump's oldest son, Donald Trump Jr., said on social media after Biden dropped out that Harris "owns the entire leftwing policy record of Joe Biden."