In an 11-minute sit-down with a Pennsylvania ABC affiliate that has drawn over 5 million views on X, the vice president lapsed into recycled sound bites and snippets from past speeches. Reporter Brian Taff asked direct questions about policies, but never got direct answers. Harris filibustered with tales about her childhood, with the inane kicker being that "folks were very proud of their lawn." This reveals her tendency to avoid substantial discussion and focus on non-sequiturs.
As for the "opportunity economy" she promises, Harris offered no new insights, instead repeating pledges to give away money to small businesses, parents, and homebuyers. When asked how she differentiates herself from Joe Biden, she simply stated, "I am a different person. . . . I'm obviously not Joe Biden," which raises questions about her actual policy differences or innovations.
Harris attempted to appeal to Donald Trump's voters by saying, "People want a leader who brings us together" and citing the support of Liz and Dick Cheney as proof. This statement illustrates her challenge in bridging political divides while relying on tenuous connections to figures from the opposing party to validate her claims.
The network denies claims it gave Harris the questions beforehand, but the case isn't closed. The ABC moderators so blatantly tipped the scales in Harris' favor with a rigged "fact-checking" scheme they employed only against Trump. This suggests an ongoing narrative of media bias affecting political discourse.
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