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Kamala Harris

Trump team said to be worried about 'unfixable glitch' that could doom him against Harris

Axios reporters Mike Allen and Jim VandeHei bring word that Trump campaign officials worry that the former president has what is being described by the publication as an "unfixable glitch" that could doom his 2024 presidential campaign.

Essentially, they write, Trump is completely incapable of not taking the bait whenever Vice President Kamala Harris mocks things such as the size of his campaign rally crowds and it completely throws him off message during crucial portions of debates.

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GOP insider predicts major Republican figure to endorse Kamala Harris in 2 to 4 weeks

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Way Too Early," GOP campaign consultant Susan Del Percio suggested Vice President Kamala Harris will be on the receiving end of additional endorsements from members of the Republican Party.

In particular, she suggested that a major endorsement could be in the works within two to four weeks that would be a major blow to Donald Trump.

Speaking with host Jonathan Lemire, Del Percio pointed out that she is well aware how precarious it is for any Republican to jump across the aisle considering the former president's rabid base, but that defections could be coming nonetheless.

ALSO READ: 'Hugely offensive': Dems blast 'crazy' Trump's new J6 debate claims

"It's not enough to say we don't support Trump, but take the next step and say, I'm voting for Harris. Looking at, perhaps, former President George Bush among them. What do you think?" host Lemire prompted his guest.

"I think former President Bush is a great example," she immediately replied. "Even though he said he won't be endorsing, I'm not so sure, come only two to four weeks, that maybe he changes his mind."

"But Republicans, I understand why some choose not to," she conceded. "As far as elected officials who can afford a security detail, that makes sense. But when you do that and you go after former president Trump, there is a security issue for your family that is very serious."

Watch below or at the link.

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‘Three to one’: Republicans protest presidential debate fact checking as unfair to Trump

WASHINGTON — Former President Donald Trump and other Republicans complained Wednesday that the previous night’s ABC News presidential debate was unfair toward the GOP nominee.

But the campaigns of Trump and the Democratic presidential nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, also engaged via the news media about the possibility of a second debate before the Nov. 5 election.

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'But I saw it on the internet': Republican mocked after CNN anchor's brutal fact-check

A Republican senator received a real-time fact-check from a CNN anchor as he tried to breathe oxygen into a racist conspiracy theory promoted by former President Donald Trump at the debate Tuesday night.

"In Springfield, they're eating the dogs, they're eating the cats," Trump said, repeating a theory previously floated by running mate, Sen. J.D. Vance, that Haitian immigrants are abducting pets and eating them in the Ohio city. "They're eating the pets of the people that live there. And this is what's happening in our country."

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'Clean sweep': Focus group of swing state voters who watched debate names their top choice

Republican political strategist Sarah Longwell — publisher of conservative media outlet The Bulwark — recently conducted a focus group of voters in battleground states who watched the debate between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris. The results showed the group identified a clear winner.

In a series of tweets, Longwell revealed that her focus group agreed "across the board" that "Harris won the debate." She didn't identify the states participants in the focus group lived in or their party registration, but that they were "swing voters from swing states," suggesting it included people who voted both for and against Trump over the last two election cycles in closely divided states that flipped from red to blue in recent elections (Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin all meet those criteria).

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Trump running mate J.D. Vance: Americans won't be influenced by a 'billionaire celebrity'

Sen. J.D. Vance knows Americans can't be influenced by a billionaire celebrity with little interest in the day-to-day problems they face.

Vance (R-OH) made a bold claim about billionaires to Fox News host Martha MacCallum on Wednesday afternoon. But he wasn't denouncing former President Donald Trump, a former reality television worth about $3.8 billion, but rather singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, who on Tuesday night threw her support behind Vice President Kamala Harris.

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'She emasculated him': Ex-senior Republican says Harris left Trump 'embarrassed'

Following former President Donald Trump's widely panned performance in Tuesday night's debate in Philadelphia, a former California Republican Party official bluntly assessed how Vice President Kamala Harris cleaned his clock in a new analysis for his "Great Transformation" Substack.

Mike Madrid, co-founder of the anti-Trump group The Lincoln Project and who has long been bullish on Harris' chances, said that feeling was only validated further when she swung at Trump from the podium.

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'You know that's not how it happens': Annoyed CNN anchor cuts off Republican mid-rant

A Republican lawmaker who tried to dismiss former President Donald Trump's questionable responses at the debate was repeatedly cut off and checked by a CNN anchor who said he purposefully misrepresented the facts.

Rep. Mike Waltz (R-FL) grew increasingly testy as he fielded questions from Brianna Keilar that he tried to dismiss as mere hypotheticals — but which the CNN host insisted American voters had a right to know.

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'This needs to be noticed': Former GOP strategist flags alarming Trump debate comment

A former Republican political strategist Wednesday urged an investigation into a less-reported remark former President Donald Trump made during a tumultuous debate against Vice President Kamala Harris.

Trygve Olson, a senior adviser for the never-Trump conservative group Lincoln Project, raised concerns after Trump told Americans Tuesday night that he'd seen a controversial figure since leaving the White House: Russian President Vladimir Putin.

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'We also don’t eat cats and dogs': Trump taunted for debate fumble by unexpected jokester

Donald Trump's debate performance Tuesday night against Vice President Kamala Harris earned him a taunting insult from an unexpected source — the city of Berlin.

Germany's foreign ministry Wednesday morning took a jab at the former president and Republican nominee after he claimed Berlin regretted its renewable energy infrastructure.

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Trump-backing conservative melts down on 'incoherent' ex-president after debate fiasco

Joining a chorus of critics on both the left and the right who viewed Donald Trump's debate performance opposing Vice President Kamala Harris as a "trainwreck," longtime National Review columnist Andrew McCarthy pitched a fit on Wednesday morning claiming the former president had "one job" to do Tuesday night and he failed miserably.

Noting that he has gone out on a limb supporting Trump, despite all of his faults both politically and personally, while admitting that he saw this election as an uphill climb for the Republican nominee, McCarthy began his column by slapping aside conservative complaints about biased ABC moderators and stating the author of the debacle was Trump and Trump alone.

Getting right to the point, he griped, "If you’re obsessing over how bad, how in the tank for Kamala Harris, the two ABC news moderators were, it’s because you don’t want to come to grips with the brute fact that Donald Trump was a disaster last night."

ALSO READ: Something broke Trump’s brain

Continuing in that vein, he added, "He was unhinged, often incoherent, incapable of completing thoughts and sentences when he had points to make, and led into self-absorbed rabbit-holes — claims that he won the 2020 election, the size of his rallies, whether 'migrants' are eating stolen pets — that diverted him from opportunity after opportunity to expose Harris as a radical leftist now pretending to be a pragmatic centrist who suddenly loves her some guns."

Noting that the former president failed to turn Harris and her policies into a "punchline", he added "Trump couldn’t do it" and then proceeded to point to the former president's fatal flaw as a candidate this go-around.

"Trump also couldn’t stick to deconstructing Harris’s 'values' bunk because his own values are always negotiable. Because he’s an opportunist with some conservative leanings, rather than a conservative in search of opportunities to advance the cause, Trump often can’t decide whether to deride Harris’s cynical policy shifts or try to get to her left," he wrote before pointing out the warning signs were there when he debated President Joe Biden.

"Trump fans, naturally, spout their man’s delusional version of the first debate, to wit: Trump was a force of nature who annihilated Biden through his dazzling debating skills. The truth of the matter is that Trump was terrible that night," he recalled before adding, "There have always been Trump’s incorrigible problems: his hard ceiling, his unpopularity with suburban voters that Republicans need, his penchant to play to his base rather than build out his support, his bad breakups with former advisers who authoritatively brand him as unfit, and his schtick — more exhausting than ever in Trump Era year nine."

"Can we imagine Kamala Harris — until recently, unpopular but little known or cared about — as president of the United States?" he asked before concluding, "Last night, Donald Trump helped them answer, 'Yes.'"

You can read more here.

Trump defender admonished on CNN for lying about ex-president's debate answers

A former communications official in Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign was warned multiple times by CNN's Jim Acosta to stick to the truth during a contentious exchange on Wednesday morning.

Appearing on CNN for a postmortem on the Tuesday night debate between the former president and Vice President Kamala Harris, Bryan Lanza attempted to clean up claims Trump made about abortion which in turn led the CNN host to admonish him that he was not going to be allowed to lie on-air.

After Acosta noted Trump refused Tuesday night to say he would veto a national abortion ban bill if he was re-elected, Lanza replied, "I think he said in the past that he would not sign a national abortion ban. I think J.D. Vance has also stated that. I think what he said last night —."

ALSO READ: Is Trump's dementia the real reason behind his flip-flopping?

"He did not say he would veto it if it got passed and got to his desk, he didn't say he would veto it," Acosta reminded him.

"I was answering the question, Jim, thank you for giving me the opportunity," Lanza shot back before continuing and saying, "I think what he was saying —."

"Well, if you are not going to answer, I'm going to jump in Bryan, so..." Acosta interjected again.

"I'm about to answer the question," Lanza repeated. "That is the time you let me answer the question. As I was saying and trying to answer your deeply thoughted (sic) question, I think what he was trying to say last night and I think what he has said is, the country does not support late-term abortion. I think 91 percent of the country feels late-term abortion is a horrific thing."

"No, he said that in some states they are executing the babies after they are born, which is false," Acosta stated.

"Let me finish my answer, Jim. understand you don't want to hear it because it is inconvenient, but I'm still going to answer," the conservative parried.

"But Bryan, if you are not going to tell the truth I've got to jump in. I'm sorry," the CNN host cut in.

"Do you want the truth? Do you want me to answer your question?" Lanza shot back to which Acosta replied, "We want the truth. Yeah, go ahead."

"I'm trying to give you the truth with an explanation but you constantly keep interrupting which leads me to believe you don't want to hear the answer because it is inconvenient for you," Lanza attempted. "So for the fourth time, I'm going to try to answer this question. What he said about abortion, what his position has always been is he has always been proud of repealing abortion. He said it early on he gave a list from the Federalist Society who are going to return it to the states. That is what has happened."

Watch below or click here.

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'What’s wrong with Trump?' Onlookers stunned as ex-president smiles at 9/11 memorial event

Former President Donald Trump's smiles and winks during the Sept. 11 memorial in New York City Wednesday outraged attendees and onlookers who blasted the Republican presidential nominee for a demeanor they dubbed disrespectful.

Trump drew much criticism after attending the commemorative ceremony for the 23rd anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks at Ground Zero, and while he was there as well, according to a video clip shared by C-SPAN communications director Howard Mortman.

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