- The Washington Times - Wednesday, August 7, 2024

Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, spent their first full day of campaigning Wednesday battling for the “blue wall” states of Wisconsin and Michigan, while the Trump campaign launched a fresh attack on Mr. Walz’s military career.

The Democrats started a two-day introductory trip through the swing states, which, along with Pennsylvania, are traditional Democratic strongholds that form a blue wall to propel candidates to the White House. Republican nominee Donald Trump won all three states in 2016, but Democratic candidate Joseph R. Biden flipped them back in 2020.

During their rally in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, the newly minted Democratic ticket sought to connect with Midwestern values. Mr. Walz told the crowd that he grew up in a small Nebraska town where “community means everything.”

“Thank you for articulating what we know it means to live out here in the Midwest, care for your neighbors,” Mr. Walz told the crowd. He said his roots taught him “generosity to my neighbors” and “to work for a common good.”

Donald Trump sees the world differently than we see it,” he said. “He has no understanding of service because he’s too busy servicing himself again and again, and again and again. This guy weakens our country to strengthen his own hand. He mocks our laws.”

The Trump campaign quickly sought to discredit Mr. Walz’s military service, which the Republican ticket hopes will be a weakness. They pointed out that Mr. Walz ended his 24-year career in the Army National Guard to run for Congress in 2005, just before the unit he led deployed to Iraq.


SEE ALSO: Trump, Harris staff armies for battlegrounds; campaigns fight for advantage in swing-state votes


“When Tim Walz was asked by his country to go to Iraq, do you know what he did? He dropped out of the Army and allowed his unit to go without him — a fact that he’s been criticized for aggressively by a lot of the people that he served with,” said Sen. J.D. Vance of Ohio, Mr. Trump’s running mate and a Marine Corps veteran who served in Iraq.

“I think it’s shameful to prepare your unit to go to Iraq, to make a promise that you’re going to follow through, and then to drop out right before you actually have to go,” Mr. Vance said at a press conference in Michigan.

In a move underscoring how critical Wisconsin is to victory, Mr. Vance held a coinciding rally a few short miles away from the Harris-Walz event. Speaking at a factory in Eau Claire, Mr. Vance depicted Ms. Harris as a liberal elitist who looks down on their values.

“I think to lead this country, you should feel some gratitude for it and some admiration for the people who actually make this country run,” Mr. Vance said. Sometimes, I hear Kamala Harris talk about the history of the country, and she likes to put it down. I don’t know that she actually admires the people who work in this factory. I hope she does, but I don’t really see or hear that gratitude when she speaks.

“I actually care about the people standing behind me, and I think they feel like I care for them, and I think they care for me too,” he said to applause.

Mr. Vance blasted Mr. Walz’s handling of the riots in Minneapolis after the death of George Floyd in May 2020. As governor, Mr. Walz waited three days while businesses burned before calling in the National Guard.


SEE ALSO: Harris, Walz raise $36 million in first 24 hours since vice presidential pick


“‘I’m scandalized by this guy pretending he stands for working people,” Mr. Vance said. “Working people need to live in a community with public safety. Working people need to build a business and know that some hoodlum isn’t going to come and burn it to the ground because of some political issue.”

Ms. Harris acknowledged the toll inflation has taken on communities across the country and promised that bringing down prices would be a “Day One priority.” She blamed soaring consumer costs on corporations engaging in illegal price gouging.

“Strengthening our economy and building up the middle class will be the defining goal of my presidency because, you see, Coach Walz and I know that when America’s middle class is strong, America is strong,” she said. Mr. Walz was a high school football coach before running for office.

She said Project 2025, a conservative blueprint for governance proposed by The Heritage Foundation, is nothing more than a plan to weaken America’s middle class by giving tax breaks to billionaires and corporations.

Mr. Trump has distanced himself from Project 2025.

Her campaign, Ms. Harris said, is a fight to preserve the promise of America, which allows the children of working-class parents to someday run for president. She said she and Mr. Walz are proof of that promise.

“Two middle-class kids, one a daughter of Oakland, California, who was raised by a working mother and had a summer job at McDonald’s. The other, a son of the Nebraska plains who grew up working on a farm. Only in America is it possible for them together to make it all the way to the White House,” she said.

Ms. Harris and Mr. Walz traveled to Michigan for a campaign rally Wednesday night and were scheduled to hold an event Thursday morning in an effort to bring rank-and-file union members back into the Democratic fold.

They will then travel to the swing states of Arizona and Nevada. Campaign officials said they raised $36 million in the first 24 hours after Mr. Walz was announced as the running mate.

Mr. Vance will be following them for much of their travels and holding competing events.

Ms. Harris’ path to victory runs through Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin. Polling is tight in all three states, but Wisconsin is a dead heat. A survey by Redfield & Wilson shows 43% support each for Ms. Harris and Mr. Trump.

In Michigan, Mr. Trump is up by 1 percentage point, 42% to 41%, and has a lead over Ms. Harris in Pennsylvania, 46% to 44%.

Vice presidential candidates rarely alter a race, but Mr. Walz and Mr. Vance were picked to reassure Midwestern voters that a homegrown son would represent their interests in the White House. Just as Mr. Walz hails from the solidly Democratic state of Minnesota, Mr. Vance comes from the Republican haven of Ohio.

Both presidential candidates are betting that they will exude Midwestern appeal that will play well in the blue wall states, if for no other reason than geographic proximity.

The Trump campaign has sought to undercut Mr. Walz’s appeal by suggesting that his support for gun control and expensive social programs makes him a “West Coast wannabe.”

Meanwhile, the Harris campaign says Mr. Vance abandoned his Midwestern roots to become a Silicon Valley venture capitalist.

The blue wall states are increasingly diverse, complicating both campaigns’ efforts to connect with voters. Michigan is home to a large number of Arab and Muslim Americans who are furious with the Biden administration’s strong support for Israel and delay in calling for a cease-fire in its war with Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

Mr. Biden won Michigan by 154,000 votes in 2020, but the state has more than 242,000 Muslim voters, according to the U.S. Religion Census.

While Arab leaders in the state have made it clear that they won’t support Mr. Trump, they have pledged to take out their anger on Ms. Harris. She was the first member of the Biden administration to call for a cease-fire, but a group of Muslim and Arab American community leaders operating as Abandon Biden says that isn’t enough.

On Wednesday, group members said they worried that Mr. Walz would not push hard enough for a cease-fire and dismissed his selection as a facade.

“Our concern moving forward is that the party and the campaign are relying more on the appearance of change rather than any actual plan for it, specifically with regards to foreign policy, which directly impacts domestic policy as we have witnessed over 10 months,” Abandon Biden said in a statement.

• Lindsey McPherson contributed to this report.

• Jeff Mordock can be reached at jmordock@washingtontimes.com.

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