By Elise Hammond, Aditi Sangal, Antoinette Radford, Matt Meyer and Tori B. Powell, CNN
Updated 11:44 PM EDT, Thu August 15, 2024
What we covered here
- Together again: President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris made their first official joint appearance in their new roles as lame-duck president and Democratic nominee at an event focused ondrugcosts. The two effusively praised one another, with Biden saying Harris “will make one hell of a president.”
- Trump targets Harris: Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, surrounded by an array of grocery products, slammed Harris’ economic policies and the White House’s handling of the economy at a news conference at his golf club in New Jersey.He mademore than 20 false claimsduring the lengthy address and saidhe was “entitled” to make personal attackson Harris.
- VP debate is set: Republican vice presidential nomineeJD Vanceand his Democratic counterpart, Tim Walz, will participate in a debate hosted by CBS on October 1.
- Here’s abreakdown of all the 2024 presidential candidatesand their key stances.
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Gwen Walz shares stories of meeting her husband and teaching alongside him
From CNN's Aaron PellishMinnesota first lady Gwen Walz, right, joins her husband Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Vice President Kamala Harris and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff during a rally in Pennsylvania on August 6.
Minnesota first lady Gwen Walz shared details of how she met her husband, Gov. Tim Walz, and told stories of teaching alongside him on a call with Harris campaign supporters on Thursday.
Gwen Walz told participants in a “Utah Women for Kamala” call that she met the governor when they were both teachers at Alliance High School in Nebraska, and said at one point they shared a classroom.
Walz said their shared background as teachers gives them a shared set of values, including that “every child deserves a chance” and the “importance of respecting others” — themes her husband leans into on the campaign trail.
Walz also touched on her experience usingfertility treatmentsto have their first child, Hope, a part of her family’s background that the governor frequently references while campaigning. Walz similarly used her story to contrast the Harris campaign’s position on reproductive rights to the Trump campaign.
“If Trump had his way, I would have never become a mom. I can’t imagine that. And if Vance had his way, that would make me a second-class citizen,” she said.
Correction: This post has been updated to accurately reflect that Gwen Walz did not specify what type of fertility treatment she used in her own pregnancy.
Trump slams Harris' plans in lengthy economy-focused news conference. Here's what to know
From CNN's Aaron Pellish, Alayna Treene and Kate SullivanDonald Trump speaks at a news conference at Trump National Golf Club on Thursday in Bedminster, New Jersey.
Former president Donald Trump slammed Vice President Kamala Harris’ economic policies and the White House’s handling of the economy at a news conference at his home in Bedminster, New Jersey, on Thursday.
Trump made more than 20 false claims during the more than hour-long address.
These are highlights from his remarks:
Inflation:
Flanked by tables filled with grocery store products and prices to indicate the impacts of inflation, Trump highlighted rising costs in a wide breadth of industries, rattling off statistics on increases in rents, mortgage costs, groceries, insurance premiums, electricity and energy prices in a news conference that lasted over an hour.
He attacked Harris’ proposal for a federal ban on price gouging to lower costs on grocery items and other everyday costs as “communist price control” and predicted her proposal would lead to “food shortages, rationing, hunger, dramatically more inflation.”
Trump reiterated his promise to reduce prices by increasing domestic oil production, which he pegged as the leading driver of inflation. He also pledged to reduce “energy and electricity prices” by “at least half” in the first year of his administration.
Trump lingered on the rising cost of electricity, and reflected on his conversation with Tesla founder Elon Musk, who he said stressed the importance of cheap electricity to facilitate the growth of the artificial intelligence industry.
Service workers:
Trump insisted the Biden administration has hurt service workers by approving additional Internal Revenue Service personnel, and blamed Harris for allowing the agency to “go after people that make tips” after she endorsed the elimination of taxes on tips to service workers last week, echoing a policy he has touted previously.
“They’re lying when they say that, you know, this is what they want to do. Because their legislation, which everyone knows, and their executive orders, were extremely tough,” he said.
Union comments:
While taking questions from reporters, Trump was asked about a comment he made in the conversation with Musk where he appeared to endorse the firing of striking workers, a comment strongly condemned by union organizers.When asked if he’s comfortable with companies threatening to fire workers on strike, Trump said he wants companies to “get workers that are going to love them” without addressing the concerns from unions.
“I want companies to get workers that are going to love them and work for a wage it lets the company make a profit so they can go and expand,” he said.
When pressed about pushback from union organizers, including Teamsters’ union head Sean O’Brien, a Trump supporter who called the comment “economic terrorism,” Trump again did not address the concerns from union organizers but praised O’Brien as “a great guy” and observed workers fired by Musk when he took over Twitter were not on strike.
“They weren’t organizing against Elon. He let them go because he was having a lot of problems in California,” Trump said.
“And Sean O’Brien is a great guy from the Teamsters,” he said. “Sean is great. I think Sean would understand it better than anybody.”
Barbra Streisand applauds Harris as a "joyful warrior" while slamming Trump and Vance
From CNN's Rashard RoseLegendary singer and actress Barbra Streisandcalled Vice President Kamala Harris a “joyful warrior”while announcing her support for the Harris-Walz ticket during a“Jewish Women for Kamala”call Thursday evening.
The EGOT-winner also slammed Donald Trump and running mate JD Vance her in remarks, saying the former president “cares only about himself” and “insults any woman who questions him, calling them nasty.”
CNN’s Elizabeth Wagmeister contributed reporting.
Trump holds event with Republican mega-donor about combatting antisemitism
From CNN's Kate Sullivan in Bedminster, New JerseyRepublican presidential candidate, former President Donald Trump embraces Miriam Adelson at a fighting anti-semitism event, at the Trump National Golf Club Bedminster on Thursday, August 15, in Bedminster, New Jersey.
Former President Donald Trump on Thursday held an event at his Bedminster golf club with Republican mega-donor Miriam Adelson focused on combatting antisemitism.
Trump repeated his attacks on Jewish people who vote for Democrats, and his claim that Jewish Americans “vote by habit for Democrats.”
“The Democrats are really against you now,” Trump said.
Trump bashed Vice President Kamala Harris and accused her of pandering to the more progressive wing of her party that has been critical of Israel and its handling of its war in Gaza.
“The toxic poison of antisemitism now courses through the veins of the radical Democrat party … And instead of expunging this hatred, Kamla Harris is pandering to it,” Trump said.
Trump again bashed the protests that took place recently in Washington DC, where US flags and depictions of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wereburned. The White House condemned the protests.
Trump's financial disclosureshows he made millions from licensing deals and book royalties
From CNN's Casey Tolan,David Wright,Steve Contorno,Fredreka SchoutenandJeremy HerbDonald Trump’s latestfinancial disclosure documentsreleased Thursday show he made millions from licensing deals and book royalties capitalizing on his fame, alongside significant civil judgements against the former president in New York.
The disclosure, which totaled more than 250 pages, offers a window into the president’s extensive finances, including everything from his real estate business to his investments, income and debts. The release from the Federal Election Commission marks the first public update of his finances in a year.
The documents are a reminder of Trump’s business interests all across the globe – including dozens of registered trademarks in China as well as ones in Saudi Arabia, Iran, Ukraine and Israel, among many others. It also reveals tidbits about how the president keeps his fortune, from millions of dollars’ worth of cryptocurrency to a six-figure investment in gold bars.
Trump has consistently bucked the tradition among major party candidates of releasing his tax returns to the public, and the financial disclosure reports offer an incomplete picture because filers are only required to disclose income and assets in broad ranges.
CNN has reached out to the Trump campaign for comment.
Here's what you should know about Trump's economic proposals
From CNN's Katie LoboscoandTami LuhbyLocked in a tight race for the White House with Vice President Kamala Harris, former PresidentDonald Trumpis eager to show voters how he’ll handle the economy if elected.
Trump held two speeches this week centered on the economy and his policies, but he has yet to release a detailed economic plan.
On the campaign trail, the former president has largely focused his economic priorities on lowering taxes, increasing tariffs and lowering prices for consumers.
Trump repeatedly slams the Biden-Harris administration for high inflation and has pledged to bring down prices immediately. In reality, a president has few tools to address rising prices unilaterally. It’s the job of the Federal Reserve to set interest rates.
Here’s what we know so far about Trump’s economic plans:
- Eliminate taxes on tips: Ending federal taxes on tipshas become one of Trump’s favorite pledges at his campaign rallies. He firstfloated the ideain June in Las Vegas, Nevada, a key swing state with many hospitality and service workers, but did not provide any details. Earlier this week, he suggested that he supported eliminating both federal income and payroll taxes on tips – a more financially substantial proposal.
- End taxes on Social Security benefits: Trump has also offered tax relief to another influential voting bloc – senior citizens. He announced late last month that he wants toend taxes on Social Security benefits. Currently, seniors don’t owe taxes on their benefits if they earn less than $25,000 per individual, or $32,000 for married couples, of so-called combined income, which takes into account their adjusted gross income, half their Social Security benefits and nontaxable interest.
- Add more tariffs: Trump plans to implement new tariffs if he returns to the White House. During speeches and interviews conducted earlier this spring, Trump called for adding a tariffof at least 10% on all imports from all countries, as well as another tariff upward of 60% onall Chinese imports.
Read more about Trump’s economic proposals
Democratic National Convention unveils stage
From CNN's Samantha WaldenbergThe Democratic National Convention unveiled a picture of the stage to be used next week in Chicago.
The stage for the @DemConvention is set. Chicago is ready! pic.twitter.com/XfWhyQsRXJ
— Matt Hill (@thematthill) August 15, 2024
Trump says there should be a government response to apparent hack in his campaign
From CNN's Aaron Pellish, Kate Sullivan and Alayna TreeneFormer President Donald Trump said he wants to see a government response to the apparent hack-and-leak of campaign documents that he previously blamed on Iran.
When asked about the hack Thursday, Trump told reporters he’s “not happy with it” and that the government “shouldn’t let that happen.”
The FBI said in a statement following the hack that it is investigating the incident. The US government has not officially named a culprit behind the cyberattack.
The FBI and other investigators suspect the hackers were able to compromise the personal email account oflongtime Republican and Trump operativeRoger Stone,multiple sourcesfamiliar with the matter told CNN Tuesday.
The hacking incident, which occurred in June, set off a scramble in the Trump campaign, the FBI and Microsoft, which spotted the intrusion attempts, to contain the incident and to determine if there was a broader cyber threat from Iran.
Vance continues attacks on Walz's military record during visit to veterans' hall
From CNN's Kit MaherRepublican Vice Presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance speaks at a campaign rally at VFW Post 92 onThursday, August 15, in New Kensington, Pennsylvania.
Speaking at a Veterans of Foreign Wars post in Pennsylvania on Thursday, Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance cast Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as a liar who is unfit to be vice president.
Vance argued his attacks are not disparaging Walz’s 24 years of service, but rather his dishonesty, and said Vice President Kamala Harris demonstrated “poor judgment” in standing by her Democratic running mate.
Some context: Vance, a Marine Corps veteran, hasrepeatedly criticizedWalz over a comment he made several years ago about weapons of war, and also has accused him of ducking service in Iraq.
Walz — who was extensively trained with weapons but never deployed to a combat zone as part of his service — said in 2018 that he handled assault weapons “in war.” Harris’campaign acknowledged Saturday he “misspoke”at the time.
Walz served in the Army National Guard for 24 years before retiring in 2005. He launched a campaign for Congress in Minnesota’s 1st Congressional District that year, and retired two months before his unit received alert orders to deploy to Iraq. He was elected in November 2006.
Vance has suggested Walz “dropped out of the Army and allowed his unit to go without him.”
Vance’s attacks on Walz’s honesty came on the same day his running mate, former President Donald Trump, gave an address full of falsehoods in New Jersey.
Secret Service beefs up security for Trump, including with bulletproof glass
From CNN’s Holmes LybrandThe Secret Service has begun bolstering Donald Trump’s security detail and plans to surround the former president with bulletproof glass at campaign rallies.
A senior official told CNN that an increased number of agents and certain technological changes are also part of the bulked-up measures, though they declined to provide more details for security reasons.
The measures are being implemented in the wake of the near-assassination of Trump at a rally last month in Butler, Pennsylvania.
Ballistic glass is commonly used for the protection of current presidents and is moved into place by the Department of Defense, which has an extensive transportation operation, including planes.For Trump, the Secret Service will strategically place the glass around the country in areas where he is expected to visit, because the agency doesn’t have its own aircraft, the official told CNN.
Ballistic glass is generally used for outdoor events, whereas indoor events usually don’t require such a measure, because individuals are screened before entering. The official told CNN that the glass could be used in either setting depending on the security at each location.
ASecret Servicespokesperson told CNN the agency could not comment on specifics for security reasons.
Trump said he oversaw record-low unemployment for minority groups. Those were bested under Biden
From CNN's Alicia Wallace and Daniel DaleFormer President Donald Trump on Thursday said that Black, Asian American and Hispanic workers experienced historic employment gains and record-low unemployment levels during his presidency.
There is some truth to his claims – depending on certain economic data points – however, by and large, those achievements have been exceeded during President Joe Biden’s presidency.
The unemployment rate for Black, Hispanic and Asian workers hit their lowest rates on record in 2019 (at least since the government has been issuing data on them – the data for African Americans and Hispanics goes back to the early 1970s, while data for Asians only goes back to 2000).
Trump inherited a positive trend that continued during his tenure. The unemployment rate for all three groups had fallen substantially under President Barack Obama from the recession-era levels of 2009.
Trump did not mention Thursday that the records were bested under Biden.
Fact check: Trump’s misleading claim about "lock her up" chants
From CNN staffFormer President Donald Trump spoke Thursday about his response during the 2016 election to his supporters’ “lock her up” chants about his Democratic opponent, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
He said:“Everybody said ‘lock her up, lock her up,’ and I used to go ‘easy, just easy, easy,’ then we won.” He proceeded to explain that he decided it would be “terrible” to imprison Clinton, though “that’s what they wanna do with me.”
Facts First:Trump’s claim that he said “easy, just easy” in response to the “lock her up” chants is misleading at best. During numerous campaign rallies in 2016, Trump pausedhis remarks and went silent as his supporters chanted “lock her up,” giving the chants time to continue. On other occasions, he explicitly repeated the words “lock her up” himself.
Trump often used such rhetoric while criticizing Clinton’s email practices as secretary of state during the Obama administration, which prompted a federal investigation. She was never charged with a crime.
“For what she’s done, they should lock her up,” Trumpsaidafter the crowd chanted “lock her up” at an October 2016 rally in North Carolina.
“‘Lock her up’ is right,” hesaidat an October 2016 rally in Pennsylvania.
Trump also explicitly called for Clinton’s imprisonment using different phrasing.
“Hillary Clinton has to go to jail, OK? She has to go to jail,” hesaidin a June 2016 speech in California. “She has to go to jail,” herepeatedin an October 2016 speech in Florida.And at a presidential debate in October 2016, after Clintonsaid,“It’s just awfully good that someone with the temperament of Donald Trump is not in charge of the law in our country,” Trump responded, “Because you’d be in jail.”
Trumpsoftened his rhetoricshortly after he defeated Clinton in the election, saying he didn’t want to hurt her and didn’t feel strongly about prosecuting her. In his 2020 campaign for reelection, though, he again made calls to “lock her up.”
“You should lock her up, I’ll tell you,” hesaidat a January 2020 rally in Ohio. At an October 2020 rally in Georgia, after the crowd chanted “lock them up” in relation to the Biden family, Trumpsaid, “You should lock them up. Lock up the Bidens. Lock up Hillary.”
Trump says he did not encourage Netanyahu to agree to ceasefire during their meeting last month
From CNN's Aaron Pellish, Kate Sullivan, and Alayna TreeneIsraeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with former President Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago, on July 26.
Former President Donald Trump said on Thursday he did not encourage Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to agree to a ceasefire deal during their meeting last month.
Trump said at a press conference at his home in Bedminster, New Jersey, that he hasn’t talked to Netanyahu since then, denying reports they’ve spoken recently. He said he told the Israeli prime minister to “get your victory” and“get this over with.”
Trump has long been a strong supporter of Israel and the prime minister. He has increased his outreach to Jewish voters in recent days by touting his support of the Jewish state.
Trump has previously said Israel must “finish what they started” regarding its military operation in Gaza.
Harris will announce a 4-year plan to lower housing costs
From CNN's MJ LeeVice President Kamala Harris is set to announce what her campaign is describing as a four-year plan to lower housing costs, including $25,000 in downpayment assistance for first time homeowners and actions aimed at spurring the construction of new housing, including tax incentives for building starter homes.
Harris plans to announce the plan as part of a broader economic policy speech in North Carolina on Friday.
As CNN has previously reported, the vice president is also announcing a federal ban on price gouging aimed at lowering grocery costs.
Campaign officials also said she plans to address prescription drug prices in her policy rollout on Friday. That had been the focus of a Thursday event in Maryland, where Harris and President Joe Biden appeared together on stage for the first time since the president dropped out of the 2024 race.
High costs of housing and food have been some of the most stubborn economic challenges for the Biden-Harris administration, as Biden has received low marks on his handling of the economy more broadly.
White House officials in recent days have touted falling inflation but also acknowledged that prices for many goods remain too high, creating a disconnect between bright spots int he economy and public sentiment.
Fact check: Trump falsely characterizes trade deal with China
From CNN’s Katie LoboscoAt his news conference on Thursday, former President Donald Trump touted a trade deal he struck with China, claiming he got China to buy $50 billionworth of American products.
Facts First: The claim that China bought $50 billionworth of American product as a result of a trade deal is false. Trump is referring to what is known as the Phase One deal he struck with Beijing in December 2019. While the deal required China to buy $50 billionworth of American agricultural products by the end of 2021, Beijing did not live up to its commitment.
Trump calls out significant car insurance rate hikes
From CNN's Elisabeth BuchwaldEven as overall inflation across the US economy has cooled, car insurance remains a huge pain point for drivers in the US.
Since President Biden took office, car insurance costs have gone up by more than 50%, which Trump said. Compared to last year alone, consumers paid almost 19% more for car insurance, according to July Consumer Price Index data released Wednesday.
That marked the third-largest jump in prices over the past year across all goods and categories that CPI tracks.
Still, that’s an improvement from March, when car insurance rates were up 22.2% annually. The last time car insurance rates rose that much on an annual basis was in 1976.
Trump says Democrats don't want him to "be a little bit nasty," but want him in prison
From CNN's Tori B. PowellFormer President DonaldTrump, Republican presidential nominee, speaks during a news conference atTrumpNational Golf Club, in Bedminster, New Jersey, U.S., August 15, 2024.
In response to a question about personal attacks during the campaign, former President Donald Trump said on Thursday that Democrats “don’t want me to be a little bit nasty. They want to put me in prison.”
Trump went on to maintain that he has done “nothing wrong” in reference to his many criminal cases.
“It’s all crooked politics and really crooked judges,” he said.
Asked whether, if elected, he would order his attorney general to no longer pursue the federal cases against him, Trump said they were “nonsense cases” but did not answer the question directly.
“I don’t want to talk about it. They’re nonsense cases,” he said.
Remember: The federal classified documents case against Trump was dismissed last month, but Trump still faces charges connected to his involvement in the effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election in Washington, DC, federal court.
This post has been updated with additional comments from Trump on his legal situation.
Sen. Tammy Baldwinsays Harris should emphasize lowering prices in economic agenda
From CNN's Ali MainSen. Tammy Baldwin talks with the media after event with rural voters in New London, Wisconsin, on Thursday, August 15.
Democratic Sen. TammyBaldwin of Wisconsinsaid Thursday that a focus on lowering consumer prices in Vice President Kamala Harris’ economic agenda would be most helpful in sending a message to voters in battleground states.
“Just today, we’re announcing the first round of negotiations with big pharmaceutical companies to get them to lower the price of prescription drugs that people need to stay alive,” Baldwin said, referring to historic legislation allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices.
The senator said “that’s just one example” of efforts by Democrats to address cost-of-living issues, and that the Harris campaign will need to continue focusing on those policies.
Key senate race: Baldwin, who is taking on Republican businessman Eric Hovde in a Senate race viewed as crucial to partisan control of the chamber, was visiting a farm in New London as part of a tour across rural Wisconsin.
She met with constituents to discuss issues ranging from farming to medical care and touted her work on bipartisan farming legislation during the visit, which included a listening session in a barn and a hayride under heavy rainfall.
Attending the DNC: Baldwin — who skipped a rally for President Joe Biden in Wisconsin after his disastrous late-June debate, citing scheduling conflicts — told reporters she would be in Chicago for the Democratic National Convention on Wednesday and Thursday.
Fact check: Trump’s evidence-free claim about immigration
From CNN’s Daniel DaleAt his news conference on Thursday, former President Donald Trump repeated his claim that foreign countries are “bringing people from mental institutions and insane asylums into the United States and their population for the mentally ill is way down. They’re in the United States, they’re dumping them in the United States.”
Facts First: There is no evidence for Trump’s claim that foreign governments are “bringing” former mental health patients to the US as migrants.Last year, Trump’s campaign was unable to provide any evidence for his narrower claim at the time that South American countries in particular were emptying their mental health facilities to somehow dump patients upon the US.
Representatives for two anti-immigration organizations told CNN at the time they had not heard of anything that would corroborate Trump’s story, as did three experts at organizations favorable toward immigration. CNN’s own search did not produce any evidence. The website FactCheck.org also found nothing.
Trump has sometimes tried to support a related claim, about foreign countries supposedly releasing prisoners to come to the US as migrants, by claiming that the global prison population is down. But that’s wrong, too. The recorded global prison population increased from October 2021 to April 2024, from about 10.77 million people to about 10.99 million people, according to the World Prison Population List compiled by experts in the United Kingdom.
Trump says he thinks he is "entitled to personal attacks" on Harris
From CNN's Elise HammondFormer President Donald Trump, Republican presidential nominee, speaks at a news conference at Trump National Golf Club, Thursday, August 15, in Bedminster, New Jersey.
Former President Donald Trump said that he feels like he is “entitled” to make personal attacks against Vice President Kamala Harris.
“I’m very angry at her that she’d weaponize the justice system against me and other people, very angry at her,” Trump said at a news conference in New Jersey on Thursday. “I think I’m entitled to personal attacks.”
Trump’s answer comes as CNN reportedsome allies haveprivately expressed seriousconcernsabout the former president’s recent inability to stay on message and discuss policy.
The former president reiterated that it is important he win the presidency and shot back that Harris has lodged personal attacks against him: “She actually called me weird.”
On Wednesday, Trump’s running mate JD Vance defended Trump in response to a question about personal attacks. Vance said the former president has “earned the right” to run the campaign he desires. He said the reason why people like Trump is because he’s “unfiltered and he lets the American people see who he is.”
Harris and Walz frame their campaign as the "underdog" in new video
From CNN's Aaron PellishVice President Kamala Harris and running mate Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz released a new campaign video on Thursday, August 15.
Vice President Kamala Harris and running mate Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz sought to portray themselves as the “underdog” in the presidential race in a taped conversation released by the campaign on Thursday.
The conversation, which took place while the two were in Michigan for a campaign rally last week, featured Harris and Walz discussing their backgrounds, families, favorite food and music, while also expressing their shared vision for the campaign.
Harris and Walz leaned into his experience as a football coach to draw analogies for how they see the race.
Later in the conversation, Walz contrasted their campaign’s optimistic message with former President Donald Trump’s campaign message, which he said is “exploiting the differences” between people. He again framed their campaign as behind in the race.
A CNN polling average of five head-to-head surveys released in August found Harris and Trump locked in a close race with no clear leader in the contest.
Taco talk: Harris and Walz also shared details of their personal lives outside of politics, including a discussion on tacos that highlighted some differences between the California native and her Minnesotan running mate. The video began mid-conversation as Walz told Harris he likes “white guy tacos.”
When Walz said he does not put any flavoring on his tacos, Harris made an exclamation of surprise, before laughing along with others in the room.
“They said to be careful and let her know this, that black pepper is the top of the spice level in Minnesota,” Walz replied.
What to know about Trump and Musk’s conversation on Monday
From CNN's Kate Sullivan, Clare Duffy and Eric BradnerRepublican presidential nominee and former President DonaldTrumpspeaks as he participates in an interview with billionaire entrepreneur ElonMuskon the social media platform X, at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, on August 12, in this picture obtained from social media.
Former President Donald Trump on Thursday referenced a conversation he shared with Tesla CEO and X owner Elon Musk on Monday, streamed online on audio only.
Throughout the conversation, Musk asked Trump softball questions that allowed the former president to stick to his talking points, including on immigration and the economy. He repeated parts of his campaign stump speech and was not challenged by Musk on any of his false claims.
Their conversation covered a broad array of topics — including lengthy portions on energy policy, climate change and the threat of nuclear warfare; immigration, with Trump promising the “largest deportation in the history of this country”; federal government spending, with Musk proposing a commission to look for ways to make cuts; and more.
Fact check: Trump’s false claim on military equipment left in Afghanistan
From CNN’s Daniel DaleFormer President Donald Trump on Thursday repeated his claim, which he has made in speech after speech, that the US left $85 billion worth of military equipment to the Taliban when President Joe Biden pulled American troops out of Afghanistan in 2021.
Facts First: Trump’s $85 billion figure is false. While a significant quantity of military equipment that had been provided by the US to Afghan forces was indeed abandoned to theTalibanupon the US withdrawal, the Defense Department has estimated that this equipment had been worth about $7.1 billion – a chunk of the roughly $18.6 billion worth of equipment provided to Afghan forces between 2005 and 2021. And some of the equipment left behind was rendered inoperable before US forces withdrew.
As other fact-checkers have previously explained, the “$85 billion” is a rounded-up figure (it’s closer to $83 billion) for the total amount of money Congress appropriated during the war to a fund supporting the Afghan security forces. A minority of this funding was for equipment.
When talking about the economy, Trump shares lots of numbers but provides little context
From CNN's Elisabeth BuchwaldThe economy is one of the top voter issuers this election, so it’s no wonder why former President Donald Trump dedicated a lot of his press conference Thursday to talking about it. There’s just one problem: It’s not entirely clear where the numbers he’s citing come from or what period they refer to.
For instance, “Kamala’s price hikes,” he said, are costing the typical American household $28,000. CNN was not able to immediately verify the source of his statement that he claimed comes from “government numbers.” It’s also unclear when that $28,000, if true, was incurred by households. For example, was it over the course of the Biden-Harris administration? Just over the past year?
Trump also added to the confusion saying inflation costing “the average American family $1,100 every single month.”
Trump said again that he'll drive prices down. There's a big problem with that
From CNN's Bryan MenaMuch like in his economic pitch to Americans on Wednesday, former president and Republican nominee Donald Trump on Thursday said he would drive prices down quickly if he’s elected for a second term.
If only it were that easy.
Consumer price inflation, or the rate of change in prices, is expected of a healthy, growing economy. The Federal Reserve, which is tasked with stabilizing prices, targets inflation to be at a 2% annual rate over the long term.
That’s seen as a manageable pace of price increases that nudges people to spend their money. On the other hand, if prices are declining outright, known as deflation, then that can be disastrous because it disincentivizes people from spending, which makes up the vast majority of the US economy. If you expect prices to drop in the future, why spend now when you can spend less in the coming months?
Deflation usually occurs during a steep economic downturn, which is what happened for a few months during the Great Recession. It’s a symptom of an ailing economy.
Mortgage rates have increased since Trump left office, but not as much as he said
From CNN's Alicia WallaceRepublican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump speaks at a news conference at Trump National Golf Club, Thursday, August 15.
Former President Trump falsely claimed that mortgage rates have shot up to 10% after they were 2% when he left office.
Mortgage rates did start 2021 at a record low, with the average interest rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage falling to 2.65%, according to Freddie Mac.
Trump, however, did not provide important context around that historic number: The economy was still weakened and recovering from the Covid-19 pandemic, and the Federal
Reserve cut its benchmark federal funds rate to practically 0% to help prop up the economy.
Current 30-year mortgage rates are not at 10%, nor have they approached that in recent years. The average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage hit 7.79% in October 2023, a 23-year high. As of Thursday, that average rate was 6.49%.
RFK Jr. to testify in ballot access trials next week, cancels Chicago campaign events
From CNN's Aaron PellishRobert F. Kennedy Jr. gives a keynote speech during the Bitcoin 2024 conference at Music City Center on July 26, in Nashville, Tennessee.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is canceling his planned campaign events in Chicago during the week of the Democratic National Convention next week and instead will testify in court defending his ballot access in Pennsylvania and New York, a campaign spokesperson said in a statement to CNN.
Kennedy is currently appealing a decision in New York that blocked his ballot access in that state, following a trial in which he testified in person. Kennedy is also facing a legal challenge in Pennsylvania over his residency, an issue at the heart of the New York ballot access case.
Fact check: Trump exaggerates how many people entered US under Biden
From CNN’s Daniel DaleOn Thursday, Former President Donald Trump, speaking of migration under President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, repeated his claim that more than20 million people have entered the country and that many of them are from prisons and mental health facilities.
Facts First: Trump’s “20 million” figure is false, a major exaggeration. The total number of “encounters” nationwide from February 2021 through June 2024, at both legal ports of entry and in between those ports, was about 10 million — and an “encounter” does not mean a person was let into the country; some people encountered are promptly sent away. In addition, there is no basis for Trump’s claim that “many” of these migrants have come in from jails, prisons or mental health facilities.
Even if you added the estimated number of Biden-era “gotaways” (people who evaded the Border Patrol to enter illegally), which House Republicans said in May was nearly two million, “the totals would still be vastly smaller than 15, 16 or 18 million,” Michelle Mittelstadt, spokesperson for the Migration Policy Institute think tank, said in late June after Trump used those figures.
The “encounters” figures can’t be described as figures of people successfully entering the US. Some encounters involve people who are deemed inadmissible at legal ports and are refused permission to enter. Also, the same person can be “encountered” multiple times if they keep returning to the border to try again — which is what happened in many cases under Biden when the Title 42 rapid-expulsion authority invoked by Trump during the Covid-19 pandemic was in place into May 2023.
In 2023, Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung cited one source for Trump’s claim about prisons being emptied for migration purposes — the Breitbart article that has not been corroborated. Even if Venezuela in particular had indeed freed prisoners to allow people to try to migrate to the US, that would be insufficient proof for Trump’s claim that some substantial number of Biden-era migrants are from prisons.
Fact check: Trump falsely claims there was no inflation while he was president
From CNN’s Tami LuhbyFormer President Donald Trump claimed in his Thursday news conference that there was no inflation during his presidency.
Facts First: Trump’s claim is false. Inflation was low during his presidency, but not nothing.
The Consumer Price Index, a common measure of inflation, rose about 8% during Trump’s four years in office. In January 2021, his final partial month in office, it increased 1.4% from a year earlier, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Fact check: Trump's false claim about inflation
From CNN’s Daniel DaleFormer President Donald Trump on Thursday repeated his claim that there has been “record inflation” under President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.
Facts First: Trump’s claim is false. The current inflation rate, 2.9% in July, is nowhere near the all-time US record of 23.7%, set in 1920. Trump could fairly say that the inflation rate hit a 40-year high in June 2022, when it was 9.1%, but even that rate was nowhere near the all-time high, and it has since plummeted.
Fact check: Trump’s false claim about Harris’ immigration role
From CNN’s Daniel DaleFormer President Donald Trump claimed on Thursday that Vice President Kamala Harris was appointed as President Joe Biden’s “border czar” and that she was in charge of the border.
Facts First: This is false. Harris was never made Biden’s “border czar,” a label the White House has always emphasized is inaccurate and was never the official in charge of the border. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas is the official in charge of border security. In reality, Biden gave Harris a more limited immigration-related assignment in 2021, asking her to lead diplomacy with El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras in an attempt to address the conditions that prompted their citizens to try to migrate to the United States.
Some Republicans have scoffed at assertions that Harris was never the “border czar,” noting on social media that news articles sometimes described Harris as such. But those articles were wrong. Various news outlets, including CNN, reported as early as the first half of 2021 that the White House emphasized that Harris had not been put in charge of border security as a whole, as “border czar” strongly suggests, and had instead been handed a diplomatic task related to Central American countries.
A White House “fact sheet” in July 2021 said: “On February 2, 2021, President Biden signed an Executive Order that called for the development of a Root Causes Strategy.Since March, Vice President Kamala Harris has been leading the Administration’s diplomatic efforts to address the root causes of migration from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras.”
Biden’s own comments at a March 2021 event announcing the assignment were slightly more muddled, but he said he had asked Harris to lead “our diplomatic effort” to address factors causing migration in the three “Northern Triangle” countries (he also mentioned Mexico that day). Biden listed factors in these countries he thought had led to migration and said that “if you deal with the problems in-country, it benefits everyone.” And Harris’ comments that day were focused squarely on “root causes.”
Republicans can fairly say that even “root causes” work is a border-related task. But calling her “border czar” goes too far.
Trump is making food inflation a talking point. Here's what the situation looks like
From CNN's Elisabeth BuchwaldRepublican presidential nominee and former President Donald Trump speaks during a press conference at Trump National Golf Club, in Bedminster, New Jersey, on Thursday, August 15.
Speaking in front of a table of packaged foods, former President Donald Trump used his Thursday press conference to draw attention to food inflation.
“Grocery prices have skyrocketed,” Trump said, referring to since President Biden took office in January 2021. Compared to then, Americans paid 21% more for their groceries last month, according to Consumer Price Index data.
But price pressures are fading.
Grocery prices rose at an annual pace of 1.1% last month, according to the latest CPI data released Wednesday. That’s a huge improvement from last July, when grocery prices were rising at an annual pace of 3.6%.
But prices are growing at a very fast pace for some individual items. For instance, frozen beverages and eggs cost more than 19% in July compared to a year ago. Hot dog prices are also up nearly 10% for the year ended in July.
Trump — surrounded by groceries — says Americans are faring much worse since he left office
From CNN's Elise HammondRepublican presidential nominee and former President DonaldTrumpspeaks during a news conference atTrumpNational Golf Club, in Bedminster, New Jersey, on Thursday, August 15.
Former President Donald Trump is once again claiming that voters are now faring worse since he left office in 2020.
Trump is speaking at a news conference in New Jersey following his remarks yesterday on the economy. On both sides of the podium, various grocery items are on display behind the former president. He said the cost of items like food and car insurance has increased.
He attacked President Joe Biden’s handling of the economy and tried to connect it to Harris, pointing to her role and record as the vice president, painting her as “radical left.”
Trump claimed that Harris’ economic policies “have totally failed and caused really a catastrophe for our country.”
Edible stagecraft: The food surrounding Trump, including sausages and other perishables, has been sitting out in the mid-80-degree weather and attracting flies, which occasionally landed on the former president.
Trump seems pleased with the array, at one point remarking on “what a nice job” his campaign had done putting it together. He also said he might take some of the food “back to my cottage.”
This post has been updated with more details on the scene at Trump’s event in New Jersey.
Vance says he hopes RFK Jr. drops out and endorses Trump
From CNN's Kit MaherSen. JD Vance speaks at VFW Post 92 in New Kensington, Pennsylvania, on Thursday.
Vice presidential nominee JD Vance said Thursday he hopes Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. drops out and endorses Donald Trump, mentioning how many in the former president’s orbit believe his continued campaign is beneficial to Vice President Kamala Harris.
However, Vance said that he would not “trade important jobs in the government” for Kennedy’sendorsement, as it would be unethical.
Vance also argued Kennedy is “much closer on the issues” to Trump than to Harris, including on foreign policy and what he called “medical freedom.”
Kennedy said Thursday morning on X that he has “no plans” to endorse Harris and thathe cannot reconcile “Harris’s Democratic Party” with his values.
“I hope he gets out. I hope he endorses President Trump. I have no idea what he’ll do,” Vance said.
Harris and Biden make their first joint appearance since the president exited the race. Here's what they said
From CNN's Donald JuddPresident Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris delivered remarks from Prince George’s County, Maryland on Thursday, sharing the stage for the first joint public event since Biden withdrew from the 2024 race and threw his support behind Harris.
Introducing Biden for the first time since ascending to the top of the Democratic ticket, Harris offered effusive praise for Biden, telling a raucous crowd, “I could speak all afternoon about the person I’m standing on this stage with – our extraordinary president Joe Biden.”
Throughout Harris’ remarks, the crowd erupted in chants of “Thank you, Joe,” which continued after Biden took the stage following Harris’ introduction.
Here are highlights from the speech:
- Inflation Reduction Act: The vice president outlined provisions in the administration’s Inflation Reduction Act, passed two years ago this week, that led to today’s announcement on drug prices.
- Biden’s long road: Biden spent much of his remarks detailing the long road it took to today’s announcement, which, harkening back to his efforts as a freshman senator in 1973. But in the back end of his remarks, dozens of audience members in attendance began streaming for the exits in a real-time display of the enthusiasm gap between Biden and Harris.
- Slamming Republicans: Biden also took some time to slam Republicans, both in Congress and in the 2024 presidential race, for opposing his domestic agenda. And he blasted the much-maligned Project 2025, the conservative blueprint for a potential Donald Trump second term. “You may have heard about the MAGA Republican Project 2025 Plan – they want to repeal Medicare’s power to negotiate –- negotiate drug prices, put Big Pharma back to charge whatever they want,” he said. “Let me tell you what our Project 2025 is — beat the hell out of them.”
Harris will call for federal ban on price gouging to lower costs in first economic policy speech
From CNN's Ebony DavisDemocratic presidential candidate, Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign rally at United Auto Workers Local 900 in Wayne, Michigan on August 8.
Vice PresidentKamala Harris is expected to call for a federal ban on price gouging to lower grocery prices and everyday costs for Americans in her firsteconomic policyspeech in Raleigh, North Carolina, on Friday.
The proposal is part of Harris’ efforts to prevent corporations in the food and grocery industries from hiking prices on consumers and is one component of a larger plan she will roll out to tackle high costs and inflation, according to the Harris campaign.
As part of her first 100 days in office, the vice president’s campaign said she would implement a plan to keep costs down. This plan includes authorizing the Federal Trade Commission and state attorneys general to investigate and implement harsh penalties on companies that violate the federal ban, resources that can detect price-fixing, and more support for small businesses to potentially grow into competitors of large companies.
Harris’ policy speech comes as the economy remains a critical issue for voters. AnNPR/PBS News/Marist poll releasedlast week found that Americans trust former President Donald Trump over Harris to handle the economy – but opinions were closely split, with51% saying Trump would be better at handling the economy while 48% said Harris.
Read the full story.
Harris and Trump are neck and neck nationally, poll shows
From CNN's Ariel Edwards-LevyAnew Pew Research Center pollfinds no clear leader nationally in the presidential race between Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump, amid “clear signs that Harris has energized Democratic voters.”
In Pew’s latest poll, 46% of registered voters support Harris, 45% support Trump, and 7% support Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — a shift from Pew’s July polling, when Trump held a 4-point edge over President Joe Biden.
Similarly sized majorities of both Harris supporters and Trump supporters now say they’re strong backers of their chosen candidate (64% of Trump supporters and 62% of Harris supporters say this). In July there was more of a gap: just 43% of Biden supporters said they supported their chosen candidate strongly, compared with 63% of Trump supporters.
The poll finds most of Harris’ gains coming at the expense of Kennedy. The vast majority of Biden’s former supporters now support Harris (97%) and Trump also has retained most of his July supporters (95%). But just 39% of voters who supported Kennedy in July still say they’re backing him, Pew finds, with 39% now backing Harris, and 20% now backing Trump. The poll did not test a head-to-head version of the race without Kennedy included.
Pew finds that Harris has improved on Biden’s performance with voters in a number of key subgroups, with Trump’s support remaining largely stable since July:
- 49% of female voters support her, with 42% backing Trump (in July, 40% backed Biden and 40% Trump)
- 77% of Black voters support her, with 13% backing Trump (in July, 64% backed Biden and 13% Trump); Kennedy’s support among Black voters dropped from21% in July to 7% now
- 57% of voters younger than 30 support her, with 29% backing Trump (in July, 48% backed Biden and 28% Trump)
The Pew Research Center poll surveyed 7,569 registered voters on Aug. 5-11, using a nationally representative online panel. Results from the full sample have a margin of sampling error of +/- 1.4 percentage points.
Harris and Trump economic policy positions converge ahead of the vice president's rollout tomorrow
From CNN's Kayla TauscheAs the economic policy positions of the Harris-Walz ticket start to come into view, they’re increasingly converging with those of her Republican opponents: Donald Trump and JD Vance.
Over the weekend, Vance told CBS News he would support expanding the Child Tax Credit to $5,000 per child, while acknowledging a difficult road to secure support on Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans earlier this month blocked an expansion of the child tax credit.
Harris’ allies say she continues to support a larger child tax credit, which earlier this year she suggested should return to the amount temporary established under the American Rescue Plan of up to $3,600 per child under 6 and $3,000 for children between 6 and 17. The Harris campaign declined to say where her position on the CTC would eventually land.
Two sources close to Harris suggested that, while she would lay out a set of new economic proposals during her remarks on Friday, they would be “additive” to what the Biden administration has done thus far, not wholesale revisions of those policies. But with Harris holding more centrist views than the party’s left flank that drove much of the early Biden agenda, the sources suggested that seemingly proposals to lower costs through government programs could be coupled with tax cuts elsewhere.
To be sure, Harris over the weekend proposed eliminating tips on wages during a rally in Las Vegas, where one-third of workers are employed by the leisure and hospitality industry. That policy was first floated by Trump during a rally in the same location back in June, marking the second time in a week that the opposing political parties have found themselves on common policy footing.
Trump posts TikTok mispronouncing Harris' first name as he bashes her on the economy
From CNN's Kate SullivanFormer President Donald Trump posted a new TikTok, also shared on Truth Social, in which he mispronounced Vice President Kamala Harris’ first name as “Camila” while bashing her on the economy.
The Trump campaign has sought to push their economic message this week and contrasts Trump’s economic policies with Harris’.
Trump claimed in the TikTok that “credit card debt is at an all-time high and that basically the prices of things have never been like this ever before.”
“If you want to bring the prices down, if you want to have a good life, vote for Trump,” Trump said in the video, which was recorded on his plane.
Trump announces Corey Lewandowski is joining his campaign as a senior advisor
From CNN's Kate SullivanFormer President Donald Trump on Thursday said Corey Lewandowski, who was Trump’s campaign manager in 2016 before leaving in June 2016, would be joining his campaign as a senior adviser.
Trump added that, “Others, likewise, are joining us. They’ll be announced soon!”
CNN previously reported Lewandowski would be joining Trump’s campaign.
Trump also praised his two campaign managers Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles.
“The Enthusiasm is GREAT, and the Management Team, headed up by Susie Wiles and Chris LaCivita, is THE BEST. Again, these 82 days will go down as the Most Important in Campaign History, and November 5th will be the Most Important Day in the History of our Country. We are a Nation in Decline, but we will soon be a Great Nation again! MAGA2024,” Trump posted.
Vance unsure if National Guard would be necessary to conduct mass deportations
From CNN's Kit Maher in New Kensington, PennsylvaniaRepublican vice presidential nominee JD Vance said Thursday that a Trump-Vance administration would use “every law enforcement tool” at its disposal to “get illegal immigration under control” — but he doesn’t know if the National Guard would be necessary to conduct the mass deportations former President Donald Trump has promised.
Vance said he likens questions about how the Trump administration would deport millions of undocumented immigrants in the United States to taking bites out of a large sandwich.In the analogy, Vance said the administration would tackle the problem one step at a time.
The first approach before deportations, Vance said, is to get “illegal immigration as close to zero as physically possible.”
“I don’t know that you need to use the National Guard, but we are going to use every law enforcement tool at our disposal to get illegal immigration under control,” Vance said.
Last weekend, Vance told ABC that mass deportations should take a “sequential approach” with “what’s achievable,” suggesting 1 million people and moving from there.
Democrats are also investing in key congressional races in Arizona, committee announces
From CNN's Veronica StracqualursiThe Democratic Party committee dedicated to state legislative races on Thursday announced an additional six-figure investment in the key battleground state of Arizona, feeling that they’re closer than ever to having a Democratic trifecta in the Grand Canyon State.
Arizona Democrats need to flip two seats in both the state House and Senate to have a majority and pass their priorities, which they say are ensuring abortion rights, tackling housing affordability, investing in public education, and addressing the state’s water shortage crisis.
On a virtual call Thursday, the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee highlighted eight House and four Senate candidates in Arizona that they argued “today represent the strongest opportunities to flip both chambers in one of the toughest battleground states” and announced that it would be investing more than $200,000 to support the slate of candidates.
The DLCC said it has already invested $131,000 in Arizona for this election cycle ahead of today’s announcement.
Biden says Medicare legislation came after decades of work on trying to lower drug prices
From CNN's Matt MeyerPresident Joe Biden delivers remarks, during an event on Medicare drug price negotiations, in Prince George's County, Maryland, on Thursday, August 15.
President Joe Biden has stepped up to the microphones at the event in Maryland about his administration’s historic effort to allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices.
Biden started by reflecting on the fact that he’s been trying to accomplish legislation on the issue since he was a freshman US senator in 1973.
“I’ve been waiting for this moment for a long, long time,” the president told the crowd.
Biden said the fight against big pharmaceutical companies is critical because Americans pay more for their medications than “any advanced nation in the world.”
Despite the long-running effort to change the policy, drug companies successfully blocked efforts to allow Medicare to negotiate prices for years, the president said.
The president said that while a month’s supply of a drug like insulin for a diabetes patient could cost hundreds of dollars a month, now that price will be capped at $35 for Medicare recipients.
Biden said “every American” should qualify for that lowered price, and said he’ll work to ensure that during his remaining time in office. “Kamala, when she’s president, is going to make sure, if we don’t get it done,” he added.
Biden noted that Democrats passed the existing legislation without support from Republicans in Congress, and suggested the presidential election could determine whether it will remain law.
“The guy we’re running against … they’re fighting to get rid of what we just passed,” the president said.
This post has been updated with additional comments from Biden’s speech.
Biden greeted with cheers and chants from crowd at first joint event with Harris since exiting race
From CNN's Elise HammondPresident Joe Biden got a warm welcome during today’s remarks at a community college in Maryland, his first joint event with Vice President Kamala Harris since he announced he was not seeking reelection.
The president and vice president walked out on the stage together.
“There’s a lot of love in this room for our president,” she said.
Harris praised Biden, saying “few leaders in our nation have done more” on many issues including health care and prescription drug costs, which is an accomplishment that Biden has touted throughout this term.
“Thank you Joe!” the crowd chanted.
Later on in her remarks, Harris said it was her “great honor” to serve with Biden, who she called an “extraordinary human being.”
Biden at the beginning of his remarks said that Harris is “going to make one hell of a president.”
NOW: Biden and Harris hold first joint event since he left race
From CNN staffPresident Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris in Maryland on Thursday.
President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris are holding their first joint event since Biden left the 2024 presidential race last month.
During their remarks in Maryland, they are expected to tout the results of their historic Medicare drug price negotiations, as Harris prepares to pitch her vision to voters at the Democratic National Convention next week.
Harris campaign declines proposals for additional September debates
From CNN's Aaron Pellish and Jeff ZelenyVice President Kamala Harris’ campaign declined invitations to additional September debates with Donald Trump and JD Vance in a statement on Thursday.
Harris campaign spokesperson Michael Tyler said in the statement that “the debate about debates is over.” He confirmed Harris will participate in a debate with Trump hosted by ABC on September 10 and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz will participate in a debate with Vance hosted by CBS on October 1.
Harris is open to an additional debate with Trump in October, a senior campaign adviser said, but the details will not be settled until the first debate is in the books.
The statement comes after Vance said on Wednesday he accepted invitations from CBS to participate in its debate and from CNN for an additional debate in September.
At a news conference last week, Trump agreed to participate in the ABC debate with Harris and said he’d also accepted debate invitations from Fox News and NBC for additional debates in September.
CBS News will allow other networks to simulcast Vance-Walz VP debate on October 1
From CNN's Liam ReillyCBS News will allow other networks to simulcast its October 1 vice presidential debate between GOP Sen. JD Vance and Democratic Gov.Tim Walz, a network spokesperson told CNN.
The decision follows previous agreements this year from CNN and ABC to allow other networks to simulcast their respective presidential debates after the candidates bypassed the nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates.
“CBS Evening News” anchor Norah O’Donnell and Margaret Brennan of “Face the Nation” will moderate the October 1 debate between Vance and Walz, the network said.
The vice presidential candidates have also been invited to a debate on CNN, which Vance has already accepted.
CNN’s 90-minute debatebetween President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump in June was watched by 51.3 million television viewers across 22 networks, in what was the most-watched CNN program in history.
Harris campaign says Trump news conference this afternoon will be "another public meltdown"
From CNN's Ebony DavisVice President Kamala Harris’ campaign is trying out a new attack strategy ahead of former President Donald Trump’s news conference in Bedminster, New Jersey, later today, which the campaign referred to as “another public meltdown.”
The campaign blasted out a mock media advisory arguing Trump “intends to deliver another self-obsessed rant full of his own personal grievances to distract from his toxic Project 2025 agenda, unpopular running mate, and increasing detachment from the reality of the voters who will decide this election.”
Trump’s remarks, Harris’ campaign said, “will not be artificial intelligence, but they certainly will lack intelligence.” That’s a dig at the former president after he spread afalse conspiracytheoryaboutHarris’ Detroit crowd size and claimed a photo was created with artificial intelligence.
They also hit Trump for not campaigning in battleground states, even though he hit the trail in North Carolina on Wednesday. Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, held a five-day campaign blitz through key states last week.
Trump is expected to hold the news conference in Bedminster at 4:30 p.m. ET.
Analysis: Trump has inklings of a plan to take on Harris, but he seems unable to implement it
From CNN'sStephen CollinsonRepublican presidential nominee, former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally in Asheville, North Carolina, on August 14.
Donald Trumpshowed up in battleground North Carolina for a big speech on the economy – and one of his unhinged rallies broke out.
But amid the insults, trash talk, rage and lies, the former president blundered into the thing he’d been seeking for days: a strategy to take onVice President Kamala Harris.
The former president took the stage Wednesday with Republican commentators pining for signs that he’d stabilized after more than three weeks of fury and disorientation after President Joe Biden pulled out of the 2024 race.
Anyone hoping for an elusive Trump pivot would have been disappointed, as they almost always are, as he branded Harris “crazy” and “not smart,” while lampooning her laugh with sexist attacks and turning up the heat of his immigration demagoguery.
Trump’s still uncontrolled bitterness that he’s no longer running against Biden stole the headlines from a speech that his campaign billed as a serious exercise devoted to the economy – the issue that voters care about most.
But his remarks, at least the scripted version of them, offered the first signs that the Trump campaign is beginning to settle on a coherent, albeit extreme and divisive, plan to react to a new general election foe. The event, therefore, offered a preview of how the race to Election Day will unfold after the Democratic National Convention next week.
The new approach, if Trump ever musters the discipline to implement it in a concentrated way, is deeply personal and designed to destroy the idea that Harris, just the second woman to head a major party presidential ticket, is competent to serve. It involves blaming her for the scourge of inflation and high grocery prices that haunted Biden’s administration, under the new title of “Kamalanomics.”
Read the full analysis.
JD Vance agrees to October 1 VP debate on CBS and accepts invitation for September CNN debate
From CNN's Kit MaherRepublican vice presidential nominee JD Vance and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.
Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance said Thursday that he has agreed to the October 1 vice presidential debate on CBS that Minnesota Gov. Tim Walzaccepted on Wednesday.
Vance also said he accepted CNN’s debate invitation on September 18.
CNN has reached out to the Harris-Walz campaign for comment.
When it comes to the rules of the vice presidential debates, Vance said his team didn’t“really didn’t ask or require much” and that he told his staff to “agree to whatever” they have to.
He said he first heard about both the CBS and CNN debates on Wednesday and that he and his team “just wanted to make sure that we had an opportunity to do a real exchange of views.”
Vance added that he believes the Harris campaign is “trying to produce a movie” rather than run a political campaign.
This post has been updated with additional details from Vance.
What Harris is trying to do that Biden and Clinton could not
From CNN's John GeneralVice President Kamala Harris is attempting to do something Democratic presidential hopefuls haven’t done in 16 years: win North Carolina.
CNN’s Jeff Zeleny explains why the state has seen an influx of campaign focus from both parties.
Trump will meet with GOP megadonor Miriam Adelson today
From CNN's Kristen HolmesIn this 2018 photo, then-President Donald Trump awards the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Doctor Miriam Adelson at the White House in Washington, DC.
Former President Donald Trump is meeting with GOP megadonor Miriam Adelson today at his Bedminster Golf Club ahead of speaking at a “fightingantisemitism” event, according to a source familiar with the plans.
The meeting comes after the New York Times reported Trump “stunned” Adelson when he sent a tirade of text messages through an aide that accused her “of having RINOs, or Republicans in Name Only, running the group and saying her late husband wouldn’t have tolerated it,” according to the Times.
Some background: Miriam’s late husband Sheldon Adelson, the chairman and CEO of Las Vegas Sands and a major donor to Republican politicians, died in January 2021 following complications related to his cancer treatment, his company said. He was 87.
Adelson spent his fortune – pegged at $35 billion by Forbes – to become an influential behind-the-scenes-player in Washington, working to shape US policy toward Israel, help guide Republican Party strategy and lobby against threats posed to his business interests.
CNN’s Jordan Valinsky and Fredreka Schouten contributed reporting to this post.
Corey Lewandowski is returning to the Trump campaign
From CNN's Kristen Holmes and Dana BashPolitical consultant Corey Lewandowski is interviewed by media at the Fiserv Forum as preparations are underway for the Republican National Convention on July 14, in Milwaukee.
Former President Donald Trump is expected to make new additions to his campaign imminently, two sources familiar with the matter tell CNN, including the addition of his first 2016 campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski. It was not immediately clear what his role would be.
Lewandowski served as Trump’s campaign manager from June of 2015 until he was fired a year later amid a series of negative stories and replaced with Paul Manafort.
Sources stressed the campaign team, co-managed by Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles, would not be replaced, but that Lewandowski would be brought on to help navigate the changed political landscape.
“As we head into the home stretch of this election, we are continuing to add to our impressive campaign team,” Susie Wiles and Chris LaCivita said in a statement to CNN. “Corey Lewandowski, Taylor Budowich, Alex Pfeiffer, Alex Bruesewitz, and Tim Murtaugh are all veterans of prior Trump campaigns and their unmatched experience will help President Trump prosecute the case against Kamala Harris and Tim Walz, the most radical ticket in American history.”
Some context: The additions come after a change at the top of the Democratic ticket has brought a burst of enthusiasm and a boost in the polls for his new rival, Vice President Kamala Harris. Earlier this month, the campaign brought on another long time Trump ally, Taylor Budowich, as a senior adviser to the campaign. Budowich has been the head of the super PAC, MAGA, Inc., for the last two years.
Trump’s campaign has downplayed Harris’s significance, arguing that despite the change in the dynamics of the race, the “fundamentals” of the campaign have remained the same.
But allies of the former President have grown increasingly agitated in recent weeks, as they’ve watched Trump unleash a torrent of mean-spirited missives, race-baiting insults and conspiratorial broadsides that even they acknowledge have been unproductive. Some have privately expressed serious concern that the former president’s recent inability to stay on message has wasted an early opportunity to blunt the momentum of his new opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris.
Privately, they’ve complained at the state of the campaign—arguing that things need to change.
Tim Walz’s 2006 campaign falsely described details about his 1995 DWI arrest
From CNN's Andrew KaczynskiWhen Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz first ran for Congress in 2006, his campaign repeatedly made false statements about the details of his 1995 arrest for drunk and reckless driving.
According tocourtandpolicerecordsconnected to the incident, Walz admitted in court that he had been drinking when he was pulled over for driving 96 mph in a 55 mph zone in Nebraska. Walz was then transported by a state trooper to a local hospital for a blood test, showing he had a blood alcohol level of .128, well above the state’s legal limit of 0.1at the time.
But in 2006, his campaign repeatedly told the press that he had not been drinking that night, claiming that his failed field sobriety test was due to a misunderstanding related to hearing loss from his time in the National Guard. The campaign also claimed that Walz was allowed to drive himself to jail that night.
None of that was true.
A CNN KFile review of statements made by the Walz campaign at the time reveals numerous discrepancies between how the campaign described the events and the facts of what actually took place that night.
Read more about Walz’s DWI arrest.
North Carolina is back on battleground map as Trump-Harris race renews energy
From CNN's Jeff ZelenyandArit JohnOne month ago, battleground North Carolina was slipping away from Democrats. Now, with Vice PresidentKamala Harrisat the top of the ticket, the state is competitive once again.
“Folks were feeling so downtrodden and they just didn’t feel like we could win again,” said Gena Singleton, a longtime party activist and leader of the Burke County Democrats. “All of a sudden, we were on the upswing and people want to be a part of it.”
Few states have offered Democratic presidential hopefuls the number of disappointments the Tar Heel state has in recent cycles. It has been 16 years since Barack Obama delivered a North Carolina surprise in 2008 – the first and only time a Democratic candidate for the White House has carried the state in nearly five decades.
The question now is whether Harris will be able to drive up turnout in urban and fast-growing suburban areas in the state, particularly around Wake County’s Raleigh and Mecklenburg County’s Charlotte. Of the 836,000 voters the state has added since 2012, more than a third are in those two counties, which continue to add new residents every day. Biden took both four years ago by about a 2-to-1 margin.
Even before Biden dropped out, Democrats viewed North Carolina as their best offensive opportunity. In 2020, Trump beat Biden by about 74,000 votes out of 5.4 million cast. The margin of victory of 1.3 points – less than half his spread four years earlier – was the narrowest of any state Trump won.
“I think a lot of people are tired of him,” Barrette, who grew up in a family of Republicans but has become a loyal Democrat, said of Trump. “They really want somebody else and the Democrats are offering that this year. People are noticing and they’re willing to give Kamala Harris a chance.”
Trump asks for sentencing in hush money case to be postponed until after election, according to letter
From CNN’s Paula Reid and Casey GannonFormer President Donald Trump arrives for a campaign event at Harrah's Cherokee Center in Asheville, North Carolina, on Wednesday, August 14.
Former president Donald Trump’s attorneys are asking the judge in his New York hush money case to postpone his sentencing until after the presidential election in November, according to a letter obtained by CNN.
Trump was convicted in May of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to cover up a payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels before the 2016 election.
Trump’s sentencing is currently scheduled for September 18.
Harris and Trump locked in close race for the presidency, CNN Poll of Polls average shows
From CNN's Ariel Edwards-LevyACNNPollofPolls average of general electionpolling continues to find no clear leader between Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump, with Harris holding 50% support and Trump 49% support in an average of recentpolls testing the head-to-head matchup.
The latestPollofPolls incorporates five head-to-head surveys released in August, all of which show a race within the margin of error. This marks the first time aPollofPolls this year shows a numeric advantage for the Democratic candidate, but both the average and the individualpolls comprising it continue to indicate a very close race.
The latest update to the average incorporates aFox Newspollreleased Wednesday evening that finds the state of the race little changed from July, with the Trump ticket taking 50% to the Harris ticket’s 49%. Echoing other recentpolling, Fox does find a shift in enthusiasm metrics, with an equal 68% of both Harris and Trump supporters now saying they’re extremely motivated to vote. Last month, 66% of Trump backers and 61% of Biden backers called themselves extremely motivated.
In the Foxpoll, 63% of Harris supporters and 77% of Trump supporters say their choice is primarily motivated by support for their chosen candidate, rather than as a vote against their opponent.
RFK Jr. says he has no plans to endorse Harris
From CNN's Aaron PellishRobert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks at the Libertarian National Convention on May 24 in Washington, DC.
Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said he has no plans to endorse Vice President Kamala Harris in response to reports his campaign approached the Harris campaign about a role in her administration in exchange for an endorsement.
In a lengthy social media post on X, Kennedy attacked Harris and the Democratic Party, whom he has frequently criticized since leaving the party to run as an independent last year.
The post comes after multiple outlets, including CNN, reported that Harris’ campaign did not take up the Kennedy campaign’s offer to meet to discuss the possibility of Kennedy serving in a potential Harris administration should she win, in exchange for him endorsing her.
Kennedy and former President Donald Trump met in person in Milwaukee, where they discussed Kennedy potentially endorsing Trump in exchange for a role in his administration.
New report details how voting landscape has shifted in key states since 2020 election
From CNN's Tierney SneedVoters in some battleground states will find it easier to cast ballotsthis yearthan in previous presidential elections — while in other pivotal states, voters will face new obstacles, according to a report released Thursday by theliberal-leaning Brennan Center for Justice at New York University’s law school.
Many of the changes to states’ election rules are focused on the protocols formail ballots, with some states creating new limitson access to ballot drop boxes and tightening various deadlines in the process. Other states have sought to lower barriers to mail voting.
Among the closely watched states that have made voting harder since 2020, according to the Brennan Center’s analysis, are North Carolina and Florida.
North Carolina: A 2023 law moving up the state’s deadline for when mail ballots must be received by election officials would have affected 11,600 ballots, the Brennan Center said, had the law been in place in 2020. Previously, mail ballots received up to three days after the election could be accepted, but the new law — enacted by the GOP legislature over the veto of Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper — makes 7:30 p.m. on Election Day the receipt deadline. Additionally, a requirement that photo ID be shown in order to vote in North Carolina will be in effect for the first time in a presidential election.
Florida: Voters will face new obstacles for casting mail ballots due to a 2021 law that constrained the use of ballot drop boxes and limited the assistance voters can receive from others, among other new regulations.
Read more details from the report on voting in battleground states.
Clyburn says he spoke to Biden as he exited the presidential race but hasn’t had a one-on-one conversation
From CNN's Shania SheltonDemocratic Rep. Jim Clyburn of South Carolina on Thursday said he and President Joe Biden talked as the president was leaving the race and that he is in a“goodplace.”
CNN reported on Thursday that Biden isstill smarting from the pushto end his reelection bid and has not spoken with former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who played a key role in the effort to convince Biden to step aside, since his decision to abandon his candidacy. The president has made clear to those close to him that he was particularly unhappy with her.
Sources stopped short of using the word“grudge”– but said Biden would not soon forget those who appeared to be most active in pushing him aside.
Discussing his understanding of Biden’s mood right now, Clyburn told CNN’s John Berman,“he’sin a good mood. I’d suspect that he is not happy with some of the public statements and public actions that were taken in this whole issue, but I noticed on yesterday that he joked about inviting people to the White House because he’s looking for a job.”
He added,“Ithink he is in a real good place because Joe Biden knows that he’s book ending a tremendous record here that no president of the United States could ever match.”
When asked about former President Donald Trump’s comments at the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) conference that Vice President Kamala Harris “happened to turn Black,” Clyburn said Trump is a “slow learner.”
Clyburn also praised Harris, saying “this lady has a great record” and “I do believe she is going to be successful in this campaign.”
Harris is caught in a political bind: Supporting the president, but not carrying the "Bidenomics" banner
From CNN's Kevin LiptakVice President Kamala Harris speaks about the impact of "Bidenomics" at Sycamore and Oak retail village in the Congress Heights neighborhood of Washington, DC, on August 4, 2023.
Vice President Kamala Harris’ appearance with President Joe Biden on Thursday to tout efforts to lower the cost of prescription drugs offers an early preview of how she plans to navigate his unpopular economic record, according to people familiar with her plans.
Harris is caught in something of a political bind. While individual parts of Biden’s record are popular, he is broadly seen by voters as performing poorly on the economy.
For that reason, aides don’t expect Harris to carry the banner of “Bidenomics,” lumping everything together in a manner that has proven unsuccessful from a messaging perspective.
Instead, her approach will be more focused on individuals and their economic needs.
She is expected to highlight areas of Biden’s record that enjoy broad support among voters, while advocating for a raft of additional policies that would lower the costs of healthcare, food and housing.
That includes lowering the cost of medicines, the main focus of Thursday’s event in Maryland. Polls have shown steps like capping the price of insulin and cutting the cost of Medicare drugs are popular.
Advisers say Harris’ vision for the economy doesn’t deviate in major ways from Biden’s, and the economic speech she plans to deliver Friday will track closely with many of the priorities of the current administration.
The difference, people familiar with her plans say, will be in emphasis. For example, she plans to hone in on price gouging during her speech Friday, calling for a federal ban on the practice. She’ll also aggressively call out companies for setting excessing prices.
She is expected to also lay out plans for housing and drug prices — with an emphasis on how they would affect middle class Americans, and Americans with children.
Clyburn calls Trump's criticism of Harris "desperate"
From CNN's Owen DahlkampRep. Jim Clyburn speaks before Vice President Kamala Harris at South Carolina State University during a campaign event in Orangeburg, South Carolina, on February 2.
A day after former President Donald Trump launched attacks insulting Vice President Kamala Harris’ laugh and intelligence, South Carolina Rep. James Clyburn — a staunch Harris ally — rebuked Trump’s rhetoric, calling it “the sounds of a desperate man.”
Clyburn told CNN that Harris has a “great record,” adding that “sheisstudiouslypreparedforthisjob.”
Clyburn described Harris’ campaign as “taking off like a rocket ship since becoming the presumptive nominee,” attributing the growing support behind her candidacy to her record as vice president.
He said that vice presidents “develop a record for the public to see, and they let the public know that if given the opportunity, what you have seen in my record is the kind of approach you will see me give to governing.”
The South Carolina Democrat also addressed Trump’s recent controversial comments that Harris “happened to turn Black” at a conference of the National Association of Black Journalists.
“IfhedidnotknowthatshewasBlack,heisaslowlearner,” Clyburn said, adding that she attended an historically Black university and was a member of an historically Black sorority.
Biden, reflecting on his 2024 exit, shifts focus to Harris and his legacy
From CNN's Betsy Klein,MJ Lee,Kevin LiptakandKayla TauscheVice President Kamala Harris introduces President Joe Biden during an event about their administration's work to regulate artificial intelligence in the East Room of the White House on October 30, 2023 in Washington, DC.
President Joe Bidenis still smarting from having been forced to abandon his reelection campaign more than three weeks ago and has made clear to those close to him that he was particularly unhappy withformer House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, with whom he has not spoken since his decision to abandon his candidacy.
Sources stopped short of using the word “grudge” – but said Biden would not soon forget those who appeared to be most active in pushing him aside. While he has appreciated the warm embrace of Democrats following his decision, there have also been moments of eye-rolling after public tributes from certain party members who most actively tried to push him from the race.
The process that led him to exit the campaign left the president alternately embittered and relieved, according to people familiar with his mindset, who say Biden is still processing the events that led to his ouster as the Democratic standard bearer even as he firmly believes that he made the right choice.Another source familiar with the matter said that Biden was unhappy at the time, but “is not spending time ruminating” about it.
White House spokesman Andrew Bates disputed the characterization that Biden was still dwelling on his unhappiness with Pelosi, saying it was “not accurate” and that the president’s attention is “on the future, not the past.”
While the 81-year-old president holds some regrets about how it unfolded, Biden is now also enlivened by the opportunity to burnish his legacy without having to run a bruising campaign against former President Donald Trump.
Read more about Biden’s focus on his legacy here.
Today's presidential campaign schedule: When and where to expect the candidates
From CNN's Christian Sierra, Christina Asencio, and JosephBonheimIf you’re wondering where the presidential candidates will be on Thursday, here’s where you can expect to hear from them.
- Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris will speak in Upper Marlboro, Maryland at 1:30 p.m. ET on lowering costs forAmerican families with President Joe Biden. It will be their first official joint appearance since Biden withdrew from the race and Harris became the Democratic standard bearer.
- Former President Donald Trump will hold a news conference in Bedminster, New Jersey at 4:30 p.m. ET.
The vice-presidential candidates will also make appearances at various events throughout the day.
- GOP vice-presidential candidate JD Vance will speak at 10 a.m. ET in New Kensington, Pennsylvania.
- And, at 1.20 p.m. ET Democratic vice-presidential candidate Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz will speak at a campaign reception in Newport, Rhode Island before speaking again later in the day at a campaign reception in Southampton, New York.
Our reporters will bring you the latest right here.
RFK Jr. reached out to Harris about administration role in exchange for endorsement, officials say
From CNN's Aaron Pellish and Jim AcostaRobert F. Kennedy Jr. appears in Brooklyn, New York on May 1.
Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s campaign reached out to Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign to arrange a meeting about a possible role in her administration if he drops out of the race and endorses her, a Kennedy campaign official and a Democratic official told CNN.
The Washington Post first reported the outreach.
The approach from Kennedy’s team occurred last week, and no meeting between the two candidates materialized, the Kennedy campaign official told CNN.
The effort to meet comes weeks after Kennedy and Trump met in person during the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, where the two discussed a potential role for Kennedy in the Trump’s administration in exchange for an endorsement.
Kennedy campaign staff also attempted to reach out to intermediaries for Ron Klain, former White House chief of staff for President Biden, but those efforts were fruitless, the Kennedy campaign official said.
While Kennedy continues to make progress on ballot access, arrange campaign events and make media appearances, the Kennedy campaign official told CNN he remains open to dropping out of the race if he believes he can serve the country another way.
Kennedy campaign spokesperson Stefanie Spear said in a statement to CNN that Kennedy “is willing to meet with leaders of both parties to discuss the possibility of a unity government.”
CNN has reached out to the Harris campaign for comment.
Democrats have strongly combatted Kennedy’s campaign since the beginning of the year through ads labeling Kennedy a “spoiler” and highlighting his ties to GOP megadonor Timothy Mellon, who has contributed to an outside group backing Kennedy and a separate group backing Trump. The Democratic National Committee and a super PAC ran by Democratic allies have filed objections to Kennedy’s ballot access in several states.
“No one has any intention of negotiating with a MAGA-funded fringe candidate who has sought out a job with Donald Trump in exchange for an endorsement,” DNC spokesperson Matt Corridoni said in a statement to CNN.
Biden and Harris will deliver remarks today on lowering costs for Americans, White House says
From CNN's Donald JuddPresident Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris will deliver remarks today “on the progress they are making to lower costs for the American people,” according to the White House.
The event, atPrince George’s County Community College in Maryland, will be their first public joint appearance since Biden withdrew from the presidential race last month.
Trump campaign latches on to Harris' complicated history with Medicare for All
From CNN's Gregory KriegandTami LuhbyKamala Harrismay be done with Medicare for All, but Medicare for All — with a new nudge from former PresidentDonald Trump— isn’t done with her.
The Trump campaign on Wednesday attacked Harris over her past support of a single-payer, government-run health caresystemlongchampioned by Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.Medicare for Allgained broad support among progressive Democrats, especially those with eyes on the White House, before and during the early stages of the party’s 2020 presidential primary.
Harris’ team said recently that she no longer backs the plan, which fell out of vogue with Democrats as Joe Biden surged to the nomination four years ago as one of the few candidates to vocally oppose it.Instead, he campaigned on improving and expanding the Affordable Care Act, which he has focused on during his term and Harris has supported as his vice president.
But Harris has not addressed the question herself, touting the Biden administration’s record while trying to avoid any relitigation of the years-old fight, and putting out word now only through campaign aides.Now, Trump is reviving the debate as he seeks to paint Harris as both a radical liberal and a flip flopper.
The Trump camp’s focus on Medicare for All is emerging as the centerpiece of a wider strategy to use Harris’ 2020 primary positions against her now, less than 90 days before the general election.
Read more about Harris’ previous stance on Medicare for All.
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