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Kamala Harris and Tim Walz: More from their 60 Minutes interviews
This week on 60 Minutes, correspondent Bill Whitaker followed the Democratic ticket for president and vice president, both in Washington DC and on the campaign trail in Wisconsin.
With only four weeks to go until election day and mail-in ballots already being marked, 60 Minutes watched as Vice President Kamala Harris and Gov. Tim Walz campaigned in the battleground state, making their appeal to voters Harris otherwise could have met months ago during a more traditional election cycle.
Here is more of Whitaker’s interviews with Harris and Walz.
Was democracy best served without a Democratic primary?
When President Joe Biden stepped out of the race for reelection in July, he immediately endorsed Harris, who assumed the role of presidential hopeful a year later than candidates ordinarily do in modern American elections. In addition to a truncated timeline for campaigning, Harris won the nomination without having to fight fellow Democrats in a primary.
Whitaker wanted to know: Was democracy best served by side-stepping the traditional primary process?
“I am proud to have earned the support of the vast majority of delegates, and to have been elected the Democratic nominee,” Harris answered. “I am honored to have received the endorsement of leaders around this country from every background and walk of life, to fight in this election over the next month for our democracy.”
Ordinarily, a lengthy primary process gives candidates enough time to get to know voters — and be known by them. Because she did not spend months speaking to reporters and debating other candidates, Harris has had to make up for lost time with undecided voters who say they simply do not know who she is.
“It is, without any question, a short period of time,” Harris acknowledged. “There’s no question about that. Which is why I’m traveling around our country from one state to the next, to the next. It is my responsibility to earn the vote, and I’m going to work to do that.”
The fear of election-related violence
Amid a deeply polarizing election that has seen two assassination attempts against former President Donald Trump, three-quarters of likely American voters say they are concerned about the possibility of election violence. What role does Harris think she should play in lowering the temperature?
The vice president told Whitaker she was “deeply disturbed, shocked, and shaken” by the potential assassinations and said she called Trump for a quick conversation after the second attempt in August.
“It is really important that all of us speak loudly, regardless of who we’re voting for, to say, ‘Our differences have to be settled at the ballot box and not through violence,'” Harris said. “We cannot lose our soul in terms of who we are as Americans by resorting to violence to settle our differences, much less to make a decision about who’s going to be the next President of the United States.”
On Iran and China
Whoever wins in November will have a full slate of foreign policy issues to tackle. Whitaker asked Harris which foreign country she considers America’s greatest adversary.
Iran, Harris responded, is an obvious one.
“Iran has American blood on their hands,” she said. “And what we saw in terms of just this attack on Israel, 200 ballistic missiles, what we need to do to ensure that Iran never achieves the ability to be a nuclear power, that is one of my highest priorities.”
Harris stopped short of answering whether the U.S. would take military action if the administration found proof that Iran is building a nuclear weapon.
On China, Harris said the U.S. “should not seek conflict,” but instead protect American business interests. She would not answer whether the U.S. would use military force to support Taiwan.
“I’m not going to get into hypotheticals,” Harris said. “But listen, we need to make sure that we maintain a ‘One China’ policy, but that includes supporting Taiwan’s ability to defend itself, including what we need to do to ensure the freedom of the Taiwan Strait.”
The role Tim Walz would play as vice president
Whether the issue is foreign policy, the economy, immigration, or any of the other critical decisions that will come from the Oval Office, Whitaker asked Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz what role he might play, should he and Harris get elected.
Walz said he views his role as an advisor, noting that Harris understands he has different lived experiences that he can draw on, including serving as governor of Minnesota and spending 24 years in the National Guard.
“My job is to give that experience,” Walz said.
When asked how he might handle times that he and Harris disagree, Walz said he would draw on his experience as an enlisted soldier.
“Many times the officers who were higher ranking had much less time. My job was to be their lead advisor, and I would give my best advice to them, and they would make their decision,” he explained. “If it was not the advice I gave, I turned around to our troops, and I said, ‘Here’s what we’re going to do. Here’s the mission. Here’s how it’s going be executed.’ The commander’s plan was clear.”
Walz went on to offer that Harris would be a leader who seeks that input.
“She doesn’t believe she has all the answers,” Walz said. “That’s what the president should do.”
The video above was produced by Brit McCandless Farmer and edited by Scott Rosann.
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Google Maps helps solve murder mystery by capturing moment a person put suspected corpse into car in Spain
Google Maps has guided Spanish investigators to resolve a year-long murder mystery by capturing the moment a person stowed a suspected corpse into a car.
Police in the northern region of Castile and Leon began their probe in November 2023 when someone reported the disappearance of a male relative.
Officers arrested a woman who was the missing male’s partner and another man who was her ex-partner in Soria province on November 12, police said in a statement on Wednesday.
Investigators then raided the suspects’ homes and inspected their vehicles but also stumbled on an unexpected lead in the search for further clues.
These were “images in a location application” where they “detected a vehicle that may have been used during the course of the crime,” the statement said.
Spanish media circulated pictures of a screenshot of Google Maps’ Street View from October 2024 showing a person dumping an object covered in a white shroud into a car trunk in the village of Tajueco. It was the first time in 15 years that the car had been to the town of Tajueco, the BBC reported.
The images contributed to resolving the case, though they were not “decisive,” police said.
Officials said another photo sequence shows the blurred silhouette of someone transporting a large white bundle in a wheelbarrow, the BBC reported.
The central government’s representative in Soria, Miguel Latorre, told public broadcaster RTVE the person “can presumably be” considered the culprit.
Police said a severely decomposed human torso believed to belong to the victim had been found this month in a cemetery in Soria province. El Pais daily reported that he was a 33-year-old Cuban.
A judge has ordered the suspects into custody and the investigation remains open.
This marks at least the second time that Google technology has helped crack a cold case. In 2019, the remains of a man missing for 22 years were finally found thanks to someone who zoomed in on his former Florida neighborhood with Google satellite images and noticed a car submerged in a lake.
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2 soldiers killed by landmine blast in Mexico day after 2 troops killed by booby trap in same region
A blast killed two Mexican soldiers in the second deadly incident this week involving an improvised landmine in a crime-plagued western state, authorities said Wednesday.
According to the El Universal newspaper, the soldiers were trying to deactivate the device when it exploded.
The blast happened late on Tuesday in Buenavista in Michoacan, the state prosecutor’s office said.
A military source who did not want to be named said that troops were looking for similar devices believed to have been planted in the area.
On Monday, a blast caused by another improvised landmine killed two Mexican soldiers and wounded five others in the same region. Before the explosion, the soldiers had discovered the dismembered bodies of three people, officials said.
The device was suspected to have been planted by members of a local criminal group waging a turf war with a bigger drug cartel, Defense Minister Ricardo Trevilla said Tuesday.
Six other soldiers had been killed by similar improvised devices since late 2018, he said.
Mexico is plagued by widespread drug-related violence that has seen more than 450,000 people killed since the government deployed the army to combat trafficking in 2006, according to official figures.
In the only previous detailed report on cartel bomb attacks in August 2023, the defense department said at that time that a total of 42 soldiers, police and suspects were wounded by IEDs in the first seven and a half months of 2023, up from 16 in all of 2022.
Overall, 556 improvised explosive devices of all types – roadside, drone-carried and car bombs – were found in 2023, the army said in a news release last year.
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Oklahoma set to execute man who killed girl, 10, during cannibalistic fantasy
Oklahoma is preparing to execute a man who killed a 10-year-old girl in what would be the nation’s 25th and final execution of the year.
Kevin Ray Underwood is scheduled to die by lethal injection on Thursday, his 45th birthday, at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester. Underwood, a former grocery store worker, was sentenced to die for killing Jamie Rose Bolin in 2006 as part of a cannibalistic fantasy.
Underwood admitted to luring Jamie into his apartment and beating her over the head with a cutting board before suffocating and sexually assaulting her. He told investigators that he nearly beheaded the girl in his bathtub before abandoning his plans to eat her.
Oklahoma uses a three-drug lethal injection process that begins with the sedative midazolam followed by a second drug that paralyzes the inmate to halt their breathing and a third that stops their heart.
During a hearing last week before the state’s Pardon and Parole Board, Underwood told the girl’s family he was sorry.
“I would like to apologize to the victim’s family, to my own family and to everyone in that room today that had to hear the horrible details of what I did,” Underwood said to the board via a video feed from the Oklahoma State Penitentiary.
The three board members in attendance at last week’s meeting all voted against recommending clemency.
Underwood’s attorneys had argued that he deserved to be spared from death because of his long history of abuse and serious mental health issues that included autism, obsessive-compulsive disorder, bipolar and panic disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder, schizotypal personality disorder and various deviant sexual paraphilias.
His mother, Connie Underwood, tearfully asked the board to grant her son mercy.
“I can’t imagine the heartache the family of that precious girl is living with every single day,” Connie Underwood said. “I wish we understood his pain before it led to this tragedy.”
But several members of Bolin’s family asked the board to reject Underwood’s clemency bid. The girl’s father, Curtis Bolin, was scheduled to testify to the board but became choked up as he held his head in his hand.
“I’m sorry, I can’t,” he said.
Prosecutors wrote in opposing Underwood’s clemency request that, “Whatever deviance of the mind led Underwood to abduct, beat, suffocate, sexually abuse and nearly decapitate Jamie cannot be laid at the feet of depression, anxiety or (autism).
“Underwood is dangerous because he is smart, organized and driven by deviant sexual desires rooted in the harm and abuse of others.”
In a last-minute request seeking a stay of execution from the U.S. Supreme Court, Underwood’s attorneys argued that he deserves a hearing before the full five-member parole board and that the panel violated state law and Underwood’s rights by rescheduling its hearing at the last minute after two members of the board resigned.