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Historic Trump cases in Supreme Court, New York: What to know – CBS News


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Former President Donald Trump’s lawyers are in for a long day with the Supreme Court hearing Trump’s immunity claim in Washington, D.C., and testimony resuming in his “hush money” case in New York. CBS News’ Rob Legare and Errol Barnett have the latest on the two cases. And CBS News legal analyst Rikki Klieman has a breakdown of the New York case.

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Kamala Harris says her first priority as president is to “stop this pain” resulting from abortion bans

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The Beyoncé song “Freedom” has become Kamala Harris’ anthem – and it was a message the vice president took to the campaign trail, as CBS News traveled with Harris over two days for a behind-the-scenes look during the final stretch of the 2024 election. 

Asked by “CBS Evening News” anchor and managing editor Norah O’Donnell why she chose to campaign that night in Texas (a reliably red state), Harris replied, “Texas is ground zero on this most extraordinary issue, which is that we are fighting for a woman’s right to make decisions about her own body.”

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CBS News’ Norah O’Donnell with Vice President Kamala Harris in Houston. 

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On Friday, at Houston’s Shell Energy Stadium – the vice president’s largest rally yet – 30,000 people endured 90-degree heat to hear her scorching new attack on Texas’ strict abortion ban, which has become a lightning rod for women’s rights.

In an attack on Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s lawsuit aimed at accessing women’s medical records if they cross state lines to seek an abortion where it is legal, Harris said, “On the one hand, Donald Trump won’t let anyone see his medical records. And on the other hand, they want to get their hands on your medical records. Simply put: They are out of their minds.”

It was a message underscored by Beyoncé, who told the crowd, “I’m not here as a celebrity; I’m not here as a politician. I’m here as a mother, a mother who cares deeply about the world my children and all of our children live in, a world where we have the freedom to control our bodies, a world where we’re not divided.”

Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Vice President Harris campaigns in Houston
Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, embraces the singer Beyoncé as they attend a campaign rally for Harris, in Houston, October 25, 2024.

Marco Bello/REUTERS


On Saturday, in the battleground state of Michigan, former first lady Michelle Obama campaigned with Harris for the first time, challenging men to see women’s health care as a life-or-death matter. “If we don’t get this election right,” Obama said, “your wife, your daughter, your mother, we as women, will become collateral damage to your rage.”

Harris then told the audience, “I pledge to you, when Congress passes a bill to restore reproductive freedom nationwide, as President of the United States, I will proudly sign it into law.”

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Former first lady Michelle Obama joins Vice President Kamala Harris at the Wings Event Center in Kalamazoo, Michigan, October 26, 2024.

JEFF KOWALSKY/AFP via Getty Images


When questioned about the process of restoring the right to an abortion that the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision overturned in 2022, Harris said, “Let’s put back in place Roe vs. Wade. …

“When Roe v. Wade was intact, for 50 years, half a century, women, together with their physicians, we’re here in a medical office talking with physicians. Women, in consultation, if they chose, with their priest, their pastor, their rabbi, their imam were able to make those [decisions].”

Asked if she also supported abortion restrictions after viability, Harris replied, “I support Roe v. Wade being put back into law by Congress, and to restore the fundamental right of women to make decisions about their own body. It is that basic.”

O’Donnell said, “But you know there were, there are restrictions – with Roe v. Wade there were restrictions after viability.”

“We would not be debating this if Donald Trump had not hand-selected three members of the United States Supreme Court with the intention they would undo the protections of Roe v. Wade,” Harris continued. “And what we have seen, as demonstrated last night [when women at the Houston rally spoke of the effects of the Texas abortion ban], and every day these last two years, is extraordinary harm that has occurred in America, where women have died because of Trump abortion bans; where women who have survived rape and girls incest, and no exception for someone whose body has been violated, to make a decision about what happens to their body next.

“We have seen women who are experiencing a miscarriage around a pregnancy they prayed for, and being denied healthcare because doctors are afraid they’re gonna go to prison, and those women developing sepsis. We have seen extraordinary harm and pain and suffering happen because of what Donald Trump did in intending and effectuating and overturning of Roe v. Wade. Yes, my first priority is to put back in place those protections and to stop this pain, and to stop this injustice that is happening around our country.”

O’Donnell asked, “So then, why not say what restrictions you would support as part of that?”

“I’ve told you: Let’s put back in place Roe v. Wade,” Harris replied.

“And when you argue that Donald Trump, if elected, would put forward a national abortion ban?”

“Just read Project 2025,” Harris said. [Project 2025 includes dozens of proposals for further restricting abortion, including outlawing abortion drugs and criminalizing shipping them through the mail.]

“The former president said that’s not true, he would veto [it],” O’Donnell said.

“He says everything – come on, are we really taking his word for it?” Harris replied. “He said that women should be punished. He has been all over the place on this. But I’m too busy watching what he’s doing to see what he has said.”

Harris is on the trail in Pennsylvania today, and plans to make a major address this coming Tuesday – one week ahead of Election Day. Her speech will be not in a battleground state, but in Washington, D.C., at the same place where Trump spoke to his supporters before they attacked the Capitol on January 6, 2021.

“I would, and do, think about that place more in the context of what will be behind me, which is the White House,” Harris said. “And I’m doing it there because I think it is very important for the American people to see and think about who will be occupying that space on January 20th. And the reality of it is that most Americans can visualize the Oval Office; we’ve seen it on television. And this is a real scenario. It’s either gonna be Donald Trump, or it’s gonna be me sitting behind the Resolute Desk in the Oval Office.”

With nine days left to go before Election Day, the vice president said there’s no doubt about what her closing arguments will be: Drawing a distinction between her plans, and those of her opponent.

She says that Trump’s first priority will be “people like him – not people like the people who are watching this right now, people who work hard, seniors, for example, who are depending on that Social Security check as the only source of their income, when Donald Trump is saying we should raise the age of Social Security to 70 before you’re eligible.”

O’Donnell said, “He says he’s going to cut taxes on their benefits.”

“He has been consistent [on that issue],” Harris said. “Again, Google Project 2025 about what he thinks about Social Security, and why he thinks it is nothing that should be supported. His intention’s to cut Medicare and Medicare benefits. His intention [is] – look, again, at Project 2025 – to repeal the $35 a month cap on insulin that we have put in place.”

“Donald Trump has disavowed Project 2025,” said O’Donnell. “He says that is not his campaign plan.”

Harris replied, “As you know, I am a former prosecutor. His DNA is all over it. All over it. His running mate wrote the foreword to the book of the author of Project 2025. I believe Donald Trump’s name appears at least 300 times in Project 2025. And it is a blueprint, a detailed blueprint, that is about the danger and the detail of what Donald Trump and his allies plan if he is in the White House again.”


Additional excerpts from Norah O’Donnell’s interview with Kamala Harris will appear Sunday on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan”; on Monday on “CBS Mornings” and the “CBS Evening News”; and on the CBS News 24/7 Streaming Network.


Story produced by Ed Forgotson and Julie Morse. Editor: George Pozderec.

      
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CBS News Harris-Trump poll has closer look inside gender gap as Trump, Harris draw even

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Amid an election-defining gender gap that is now tied for the largest this year, the already close presidential race between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump has become closer still.

But vote differences in the 2024 election between men and women are not just crosstabs on a poll memo. They reflect divergent attitudes about larger social matters, such as gender equality in the U.S. More immediately, they mark differences in how candidates are seen, with more women saying only Harris has the cognitive health to serve and more men thinking Trump would be a “strong leader.” 

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Here’s one example. Men are more likely to say efforts in the U.S. to promote gender equality have gone too far of late. When they do, they’re voting overwhelmingly for Trump.

Women are more apt to say those efforts haven’t gone far enough. Voters who say this are overwhelmingly for Harris

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And on this candidate assessment: women are a full 10 points more likely than men to say that only Kamala Harris has the mental and cognitive health to serve as president, and Trump does not. 

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Men are less likely than women to think Harris will be a strong leader. 

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But a sizable majority of men think Trump will be a strong leader. 

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For both men and women who think Harris would be a strong leader, a quarter say it is because she is a woman. For those who think Harris won’t be a strong leader, nearly 1 in 5 say it’s at least partly because she is a woman. 

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In all, it nets out to even — and to an even-tighter contest. It’s tied across the composite battleground states collectively, and Harris is down to just a +1 in national vote preference. (Harris had once been at +3 in the battlegrounds in September and it narrowed to +1 two weeks ago. Trump has incrementally erased a 4-point national edge Harris had after their debate.) 

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In individual CBS estimates from the specific battlegrounds, it’s also effectively tied. For context, in recent history, Democrats have needed a larger national polling lead to imply competitive Electoral College chances across the battlegrounds because so many of their national votes have come from larger, safely blue coastal states. But this year, at least so far, we see a different pattern in which the battlegrounds track more closely to the national.

Addressing the concerns of men and women

On balance, voters say women face more discrimination than men do today, and women are especially apt to say so. But men who think men face at least some discrimination (and half of them do) are voting for Trump. Women who think women face discrimination are overwhelming for Harris.

There’s also a gender gap on who thinks they’re getting attention from the campaign.

Most men think Trump is paying the right amount of attention to the concerns of men, but many think Harris is paying too little.

Women, by contrast, say Harris is paying enough attention to women’s concerns, but don’t think Trump is. 

A sizable 4 in 10 women think Trump’s campaign is paying too much attention to men.

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But the percentage who say the U.S. is “ready to elect a Black woman as president” has risen, and this majority includes people who are voting for Harris and many who are not.

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Approaches to governance

There’s plenty of talk in this campaign about how the candidates might lead as president, not just about policies. And on that we see differences by age, and some by gender too, but plenty by party.

Asked how best to solve the U.S.’ problems, voters mainly call for cooperation between the parties. Some — often the more ideological partisans — think one party running government would be best.

Trump voters are twice as apt as Harris voters to call for “one strong leader to do what they think best.”

Younger voters — and in particular younger men — are comparably more likely to say the country needs that.

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Trump continues to win the votes of people who think the U.S. political system needs to be completely rebuilt. 

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The economy — and how it still underpins Trump

Some potentially good news for Harris is that people say they’re judging her more on her own economic plans than on the economic record of the Biden administration. 

She’s cut a bit into his edge on who’d make people financially better off. 

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But that edge remains nonetheless, and she has stalled in cutting into Trump’s edge with voters who say the economy is a major factor for them. 

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A big majority continue to say they recall the Trump economy as good, so Harris has not gotten voters to reconsider or rethink that memory. 

People are split over whether Trump’s policies helped them financially during the pandemic specifically, and that cuts to vote. 

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A few notes on what’s changed since Harris last month had more of an edge:

Perhaps one of the biggest indicators of why this race remains so close: Harris does well when people rate abortion as a top issue, especially among women who think so. And it is a major issue for half, but she has not succeeded over the course of the campaign in getting many more voters to rate it as a top issue. It’s hovered in the low 50s range for those who call it a major factor.

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This CBS News/YouGov survey was conducted with a representative sample of 2,161 registered voters nationwide interviewed between October 23-25, 2024. The sample was weighted according to gender, age, race, and education based on the U.S. Census American Community Survey and the U.S. Census Current Population Survey, as well as past vote. Respondents were selected to be representative of registered voters nationwide. The margin of error for registered voters is ±2.6 points. Battlegrounds are AZ, GA, MI, NC, NV, PA, and WI.



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Transcript: Sen. JD Vance on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” Oct. 27, 2024

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The following is a transcript of an interview with GOP vice-presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance, Republican of Ohio, on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” that aired on Oct. 27, 2024.


MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, thank you for making time for us. The last time we spoke, Iran had just launched a ballistic missile attack on Israel, and this Friday, Israel did retaliate against Iran. At the debate, I asked you about your position, and you said it’s up to Israel to do whatever it is they think they need to do. The thing is is that doesn’t address the question of the safety of U.S. military personnel in the region, right now about 43,000 of them. It doesn’t address the question of whether the United States, as the largest weapons supplier, should have a say, as they do under U.S. law, as to how those weapons are used. In a Trump-Vance administration, would you keep the troops we have in the Middle East, or would you pull them out, as President Trump tried to do in his first administration? 

SEN. JD VANCE: Well, obviously we have a lot of troops in a lot of different parts of the Middle East. I think it’s reasonable to support Israel as it deals with this extremely unprovoked attack from Iran. And let’s step back a little bit here, because the reason that Iran has all of these weapons to fire at Israel is because they have a lot of money. And where do they get that money from? From the easing of oil sanctions and from the- the release of a lot of money that the Biden-Harris administration had effectively locked up. They released it, and the promise of releasing it is that somehow it would make the Iranians a better partner, would maybe get them a little bit more on the trajectory to being a reasonable country. That’s not happening. They’re just using that money to buy weapons that they launch against American–

MARGARET BRENNAN: They’re tightening up some of the sanctions. 

SEN. VANCE: They’re- they’re- they’re tightening them up. They’re going in the other direction after making a big mistake, and that big mistake was to empower Iran financially to afford a lot of weapons that they’re now firing, not just at the Israelis, but also at us. And they’re also arming the Houthis, and that’s obviously affecting global trade. So I think the first and biggest mistake, the thing that we need to change, is we need to stop giving the Iranians money that they use to make ourselves and our allies weaker in the region. When we talk- when it comes to Israel specifically, look I don’t think that we should be taking assets out of the Middle East at a time when our most important ally in the region is coming under significant attack, I don’t think that would send the right message and most importantly, it’s not just Israel, it’s us. We have interests that are important in the Middle East. We obviously have to deal with- deal with the Houthis somehow, because we want to reopen the lines of global trade. Very hard to do that if we do a full scale withdrawal, but if there’s certain countries where maybe we shouldn’t have troops, I’m willing to have that conversation, but you know, you’re talking about 14 different theaters, 14 different troop deployments, it’s hard to make a broad stroke- broad stroke conclusion about the whole thing.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Well it would be a specific question on Iraq, since the Biden administration said 2026, the year you have to make a decision on troops, do you have a view on that at this point?

SEN. VANCE: On Iraq specifically? 

MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. 

SEN. VANCE: No, I mean, look, I think we need to look at the situation. We obviously need to have a conversation with our- our allies in Iraq, and obviously recognize where- what is the direction of Iraq? Are they becoming more and more allies of Iran? Are they becoming a little bit more of a good partner in the Middle East? So it’s- it’s hard to say what we’re going to do two years down the road, because we’re not- we don’t know what the world is going to look like two years down the road.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Staying on national security, as you know, the FBI and the director of national intelligence on Friday said Russia is behind a fake video that is circulating of someone tearing up ballots in Pennsylvania, the state we’re sitting in right now. They assess Russia will release more media like this in the coming weeks. What price should Moscow pay for trying to manipulate American voters? 

SEN. VANCE: Well, look, I think a lot of countries are going to try to manipulate our voters. They’re going to try to manipulate our elections. That’st what they do. I think the bigger question is, what is in our best interest vis-à-vis Russia, not what price Russia should pay for putting out social media videos. And I think what’s in our best interest vis-à-vis Russia is in particular for them to stop supporting the Iranians as the Iranians engage in acts of aggression. And I think when it comes to Europe, it’s important for the killing to stop in Russia and Ukraine. I don’t think that we should set American foreign policy based on a foreign country spreading videos on social media. I think we should set American foreign policy based on what’s in our best interest as a United States.

MARGARET BRENNAN: You don’t consider that election interference and crossing a red line?

SEN. VANCE: I think it’s bad. I think it’s bad. But social media posts and social media videos, Margaret, you want us to go to war because the Russians made a ridiculous video or paid for it? 

[CROSSTALK STARTS]

MARGARET BRENNAN: There are options other than war, as you know, sanctions, other measures I mean, that doesn’t– 

SEN. VANCE: Well, but- but this- this raises a difficult question, Margaret, because every- everything-

MARGARET BREANNAN: Manipulating voters as part of our democracy–

[CROSSTALK ENDS]

SEN. VANCE: Everything that we’ve tried, a lot of the sanctions that we’ve tried, they’ve gone off like a wet firecracker. We promised at the beginning of the Russia-Ukraine war that we would engage in financial nuclear war against the Russians. Biden administration, Harris administration officials talked about how our sanctions would cripple their economy. They didn’t. And so we have to be realistic about what America can accomplish, compare it against our national interests and just be smart about this. I don’t think that we should overreact to anything. What we should do is encourage our fellow Americans to be careful. Don’t trust everything that you see on social media. And of course, we should push back where appropriate. But that’s the big question is, what is an appropriate response to a country making social media videos? I’m not going to make a commitment to that sitting right here.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Do you have full confidence that the state of Pennsylvania and the election officials here are administering this election fairly? Do you foresee litigation in this state?

SEN. VANCE: Look, I think that they’re doing a good job. I think they’re doing a better job than they were in 2020 and most importantly, I think most Americans are seeing whether it’s voter ID in places like Wisconsin or Georgia, or a little bit of tightening of the regulations around signature verification in places like Pennsylvania, that I think our elections are in a pretty good spot in 2024. Obviously, if something comes up, we don’t know what the future is going to hold. If we see evidence, for example, of an illegal alien casting a ballot. Yeah, we’re going to challenge that in court. But seeing what I- what I see right now, 10 days out from the election, Margaret, I think Pennsylvania is in a really good spot. I think we’re going to win the state, and I think Pennsylvanians, Republicans, Democrats, independents, should have confidence in the elections here.

MARGARET BRENNAN: At a minimum, would you call on Moscow to knock it off, to not post videos like this in the coming weeks?

[CROSSTALK]

SEN. VANCE: Well of course. I’d call them to knock it off, but this is not a school yard. I call on Moscow to knock it off, are they actually going to do it? We need to have a real serious conversation with the Russians, but also with ourselves, about what tools of diplomacy and statecraft we have to dissuade the Russians. So yeah, I condemn the Russians for funding fake social media views, but I don’t think that my job as a statesman, as a person who wants to be the next vice president of the United States, is to go engage in saber-rattling. My job is to figure out how we can best respond to these threats, and unfortunately, thanks to Kamala Harris’s leadership, we’re in a much weaker space, vis-à-vis Russia than we were three and a half years ago.

MARGARET BRENNAN: I want to ask you about polling and where we are in this campaign. 

JD VANCE: Sure.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Former Republican Congresswoman Liz Cheney called you and Donald Trump “misogynistic pigs.” She urged voters to look at what you have said in the past. And she said of you personally, quote, you’ve got a real women problem. Do you think your ticket has “a women problem?”

JD VANCE: No, I don’t think that we do, but we have to make our best case to women and to men as well as we can. And of course, women and men are going to decide where the chips ultimately fall. I think it’s a more interesting reflection of Kamala Harris’s campaign, that at this late stage, she’s not talking about how she can lower the price of groceries because she raised the price of groceries. She’s not talking about how she can lower the price of housing because her policy saw a 40% increase in the cost of housing. She’s going to Michigan with Liz Cheney, the person whose father is responsible for the deaths of millions of innocent Arabs and tens of thousands of innocent American troops, and saying, effectively, that if you elect me, I’m going to have the foreign policy of Dick and Liz Cheney. I don’t think that message is going to fly in Michigan. I don’t think it flies in Pennsylvania either.

MARGARET BRENNAN: They’ve actually not been talking about foreign policy. They’ve been talking about things you’ve been saying. They’ve been talking about the threats to our democracy, but on the– 

[CROSSTALK]

JD VANCE: Oh, Liz Cheney has definitely been talking about foreign policy, Margaret. She loves to talk about how she would like to start wars with effectively every country all over the world. Donald Trump is the candidate of peace, but I think they are talking a lot about foreign policy. 

MARGARET BRENNAN: On the- on the topic, though, of- of how the campaign is doing. Our CBS polling shows a significant gender gap here. 40% of women say the Trump campaign is paying too much attention to men’s concerns. 56% of women say the Trump campaign is paying too little attention to women’s concerns. You say one of your top advisers is your wife, Usha. 

JD VANCE: Yeah. The top adviser. 

MARGARET BRENNAN: What is she- So what is she telling you? Because the data says you do have a women problem. 

JD VANCE: Well, what she’s telling me is we gotta make the case to women as well as we can, and ultimately, trust in the wisdom of those women to make a determination about what’s in the best interest of their family. All I can say to women voters, and frankly, to men voters too, but to all Americans, is I think that Donald Trump is the person who’s going to lower the cost of groceries. I know that Donald Trump is the person who is going to secure the southern border. Donald Trump has a plan to open up American energy, to lower the cost of goods and to make our neighborhoods and communities safer. I know a lot of women care a lot about the safety of their communities. What does it say about Kamala Harris’s leadership that violent crime has gone up? What does it say about the fact that fentanyl overdose deaths have increased under her leadership? I think that we can make a good case to women, but I’m not going to tell them who they have to vote for. I’m going to try to persuade them. The voters are ultimately going to decide.

MARGARET BRENNAN: You took a vow, first as a Marine and then as a United States Senator, to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States of America. Can you assure the American people that you will do everything you can to stand by that, and to make sure that President Trump abides by the Constitution? 

JD VANCE: Of course, but I don’t worry about Donald Trump. I think that Donald Trump believes in the Constitution. It’s why he’s running for president a third time is because he’s worried that Kamala Harris has broken the greatest economy in the world, and Donald Trump– 

MARGARET BRENNAN: He’s talked about suspending it- the January 6 events. I don’t have to retread the territory you well know about challenging the certification of the election.

JD VANCE  I think that Donald Trump believes in the American Constitution. I know he does. I’ve seen it in his actions. I’ve talked to him about it. But you asked about me, and personally, yes, my first loyalty is to the American people and to the United States Constitution. I think the best way to serve, loyally, to those people and to that Constitution is to get us back in a place where Americans can afford to live a decent life again. That’s why we’re running the campaign focused on the affordability of goods, American manufacturing- it’s a big deal here in Erie, Pennsylvania, and certainly on securing that southern border. I think the threats to our Constitution, Margaret- and I do think they’re real. The threats to our Constitution come from Kamala Harris, who’s saying that she wants to censor Americans instead of persuade them. Whether you agree with me or Donald Trump or disagree with us, we believe in the First Amendment, we’re going to fight for your right to speak your mind and think whatever you want in the United States of America.

MARGARET BRENNAN: We are out of time, but just to put a fine point on it, do you believe Vice President Harris, who will preside over the election certification in January, that she has the power to ask for alternate electors? Because you claimed Mike Pence did.

JD VANCE: What I think Vice President Harris has the power to do is to enforce the Constitution. I’ll leave it to her what she thinks that she has to do. But Donald Trump and I are going to win this election. He’s going to be the president again, and he’s going to fix what Kamala Harris has broken. And thank God for that, because I just want Americans to live a better life.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Senator Vance, you have a busy schedule. Thank you. 

JD VANCE: Thank you. Appreciate it. 



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