Politics
Donald Trump wants Americans to hate Kamala Harris — but he’s failing
This is an adapted excerpt from the Sept. 3 episode of “Morning Joe.”
Since Vice President Kamala Harris entered the presidential race, the numbers have shifted in the Democrats’ favor. A new poll shows Harris has a slight lead over former President Donald Trump among likely voters, 52% to 46%. Harris also bests the former president on likability: 46% of those polled have a favorable impression of the vice president, while only 33% see Trump favorably.
It’s clear his campaign is just absolutely desperate.
Now, if you’re trying to sort through this race and determine what direction we’re heading come November, just look at those favorability numbers. They’re quite striking. Trump is way upside-down for likability, while Harris is on the upside. With just weeks to go until the electionthat 13-point gap is a big deal.
The Trump campaign knows that. Just look at the absolutely crazed behavior on display from their candidate. It’s really almost too much to get your arms around. In addition to Trump’s Arlington National Cemetery stunthe’s moving all over the place on issues from abortion to immigration to try to win over voters. It’s clear his campaign is just absolutely desperate.
The truth is, the Trump campaign knows that they can’t make people like the former president, so now their only goal is to make people hate Harris. They’re scared. They know that if they can’t get Americans to hate Harris,she will win.
Former Rep. Joe Scarborough, R-Fla., is co-host of BLN’s “Morning Joe” alongside Mika Brzezinski — a show that Time magazine calls “revolutionary.” In addition to his career in television, Joe is a two-time New York Times best-selling author. His most recent book is “The Right Path: From Ike to Reagan, How Republicans Once Mastered Politics — and Can Again.”
Allison Detzel
contributed
.
Politics
Virginia Supreme Court will hear redistricting challenge
Virginia’s state Supreme Court will decide whether state Democrats’ gerrymander push can proceed after an appeals court on Wednesday pushed the case to the high court.
The state Circuit Court of Appeals, in a motion, stated that the case is of “such imperative public importance as to justify the deviation from normal appellate practice and to require prompt decision in the Supreme Court.”
The move comes after a court in Tazewell County last week blocked Virginia Democrats from going forward with gerrymandering, ruling that the Democrat-led Legislature had wrongly approved a constitutional amendment that would allow for mid-decade redrawing of congressional districts ahead of the midterms this fall.
The move is a potential bright spot for Democrats, who had been stymied by the lower court ruling blocking the party’s attempt to gain upwards of four seats in the midterms through redistricting. Currently, Democrats hold six seats in the state while Republicans control five.
The Republican-backed group Virginians for Fair Maps, one of the main organizations against redistricting in the state, declined to comment.
Virginians for Fair Elections, the Democrat-affiliated group launched last month to urge voters to approve the measure, declined to comment on the record.
Last October, Democratic lawmakers began the process of redrawing maps in the state, an effort that only gained traction after voters elected Democratic Gov. Abigail Spanberger in the November election and the GOP lost 13 seats in the House of Delegates.
Virginia Democrats had been so confident prior to the Tazewell County court ruling that party leaders vowed to unveil new maps it wanted Virginia voters to approve by the end of last month, with promises of unveiling a map that goes as far as 10-1 in favor of their party.
Virginia is seen as the top prize in Democrats’ redistricting push, especially if Republican-led Florida redraws its maps under Gov. Ron DeSantis. More GOP-led states could also move to draw more red-leaning states if the Supreme Court rules to strike down portions of the Voting Rights Act.
Politics
Congress ends shutdown, approves $1.2T in funding — and sets up DHS cliff
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A spending package that would fund the vast majority of the federal government cleared a key procedural hurdle Tuesday, setting up votes later in the day to send the measure to the White House for President Donald Trump’s signature. Final passage of the measure, which also includes a funding patch for the Department of Homeland Security through Feb…
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