Tag: Harris

  • Not yet Madam President

    Not yet Madam President

    Like Harris, like Clinton. Eight years ago, we had thought America was set to have its first female president in Hilary Clinton. But Donald J Trump stopped her. On Tuesday, the hope of Kamala Harris, 59, breaking the record to emerge the first woman to become President of the United States of America was also checkmated by Trump. It’s unsure what lies ahead for the daughter of two immigrants in segregated California.

    Like Hillary Clinton, Harris smelled the pudding but couldn’t taste it. Like Clinton, Harris has what it takes to lead America. Her story is the sort legends are made of.

    Harris, the author of ‘The Truths We Hold’, is unconventional. She is the eldest daughter of Shyamala Gopalan Harris, a single mother, a disciplinarian, a breast cancer researcher originally from India who had her at 26 and exerted so much influence on her. Her mother came to America at the age of 19 for better education. Her parents were together until she turned five. From then on, her economist father, Donald Jasper Harris, originally from Jamaica, became a scarce figure. She believes her parents’ marriage would have survived had they been more emotionally matured. Donald was Shyamala’s first boyfriend and husband. The divorce led to a contentious custody battle, which Shyamala eventually won but Donald got the right to see them for alternating weekends for sixty days in summer, and he used the opportunity to take them to Jamaica to meet his family.

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    But, till date, Donald remains just a footnote to Kamala and he hardly features in her discussion about growing up. She is her mother’s daughter. And despite losing her mother in 2009, Shyamala remains in her daughter’s life, and Kamala is said to always share nuggets from the deceased while the one who is alive is dead to her world.

    In her official biography during her time as California’s Attorney-General, she simply described herself as “the daughter of Dr. Shyamala Gopalan, a Tamilian breast cancer specialist who travelled to the United States from Chennai, India, to pursue her graduate studies at UC Berkeley”.

    As a 29-year-old, she began a romantic relationship with Willie Brown, one-time Speaker of the California Assembly and the state’s most powerful man who proudly called himself the “Ayatollah of the Assembly”.

    With her inability to transform from the first female vice president to the first female president, it’s unlikely she will have another chance at leading the world’s greatest nation.

  • US Election: Trump leads with 227 electoral votes, Harris at 189

    US Election: Trump leads with 227 electoral votes, Harris at 189

     Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris and Republican former President Donald Trump are in a fierce battle for the White House with most polls across the United States closing early Wednesday. 

    However, a prolonged wait for final results is expected. 

    US media projections so far show Trump winning 23 states, including major victories in Texas and Ohio, the pivotal battleground state of North Carolina, and other traditionally Republican-leaning states.  

    Harris has so far captured 14 states including big electoral vote prizes California and New York — as well as the US capital Washington.

    So far, that gives Trump 227 electoral votes and Harris 189.

    Read Also: Harris vs Trump: U.S. braces for historic Election Day

    To win the presidency, a candidate needs 270 electoral votes. With the race for the White House expected to hinge on a few crucial battleground states, the following is a breakdown of the states won by each candidate and their respective electoral votes, based on projections from major US media outlets including CNN, Fox News, MSNBC/NBC News, ABC, and CBS.

    – TRUMP (227) –

     Alabama (9) 

    Arkansas (6) 

    Florida (30) 

    Idaho (4) 

    Indiana (11) 

    Iowa (6) 

    Kansas (6) 

    Kentucky (8) 

    Louisiana (8) 

    Mississippi (6) 

    Missouri (10) 

    Montana (4) 

    North Carolina (16) 

    North Dakota (3)

    Ohio (17) 

    Oklahoma (7) 

    South Carolina (9) 

    South Dakota (3) 

    Tennessee (11) 

    Texas (40) 

    Utah (6) 

    West Virginia (4) 

    Wyoming (3)

    – HARRIS (189) – 

    California (54) 

    Colorado (10) 

    Connecticut (7) 

    Delaware (3) 

    District of Columbia (3) 

    Hawaii (4) 

    Illinois (19) 

    Maryland (10) 

    Massachusetts (11) 

    New York (28) 

    Oregon (8) 

    Rhode Island (4) 

    Vermont (3) 

    Virginia (13) 

    Washington (12)

  • US poll: Alawieh affirms vote for Harris

    US poll: Alawieh affirms vote for Harris

    The co-founder of the Uncommitted National Movement, Abbas Alawieh, affirmed on Tuesday that he will be voting for Vice President Kamala Harris, the group was fondly known for their stern warnings against former President Donald Trump.

    “This is a moment where we have to look very clearly at what Donald Trump has planned for our communities and for Arab and Muslim Americans in particular,” Abbas Alawieh told MSNBC, adding that as a former congressional staffer who was at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, he is “no stranger the kind of violence and policy violence that Donald Trump intends to champion in our country.”

    Read Also: U.S. election 2024: Harris or Trump will inherit a mixed legacy

    In a video shared on the group’s X page, Alawieh stated that while he plans to vote for Harris, he hopes a “coalition” of voters, including those who support Harris, will pressure “the next administration to move away from the policy of sending unconditional weapons and funding to the Israeli military.”

    He continued: “The Arab American, Muslim American community for months have been oscillating between dealing with our grief, dealing with the fact that so many of our family members are there living under the bombs that our US government is sending Benjamin Netanhyahu, while also trying to do the politically savvy thing.”

  • U.S. election 2024: Harris or Trump will inherit a mixed legacy

    U.S. election 2024: Harris or Trump will inherit a mixed legacy

    Amid discontent and division, with opinion polls showing nearly two-third voters believe the country is headed in the wrong direction under President Joe Biden, Americans head to the polls on Tuesday.

    While the United States economy is the envy of the industrialized world, emerging from COVID shutdowns with strong job growth and wage increases, many Americans complain those gains were gobbled up by high grocery and housing prices.

    Biden’s promise of a return to a more humane immigration regime than under Republican former President Donald Trump soon collided with the reality of a spike in illegal border crossings.

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    The Supreme Court upended the legal landscape around abortion rights by overturning Roe v. Wade, inflaming one of the most divisive issues in American politics.

    And despite Biden’s pledge that America would serve as a stabilizing force in the world, overseas conflicts have overshadowed his presidency.

    Whoever triumphs in the election Trump or Vice President Kamala Harris will inherit the legacy of a Biden administration that made good on some promises, saw others swept off-course by events, and others still only partially fulfilled.

    NAN

  • Harris vs Trump: U.S. braces for historic Election Day

    Harris vs Trump: U.S. braces for historic Election Day

    The unpredictable and razor-close U.S. presidential election culminates on Tuesday with voters across the deeply divided country deciding whether Kamala Harris or Donald Trump should be sent to the White House in January.

    Harris, the sitting Democratic vice president, and Trump, the Republican former president who is seeking a second four-year term, spent the final frenetic weeks of the campaign making their case to voters in the seven critical states that are likely to decide the winner.

    Pollsters say neither of the candidates in the battleground states – Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Georgia, North Carolina, Nevada, and Arizona – has a meaningful statistical lead, amplifying the sky-high uncertainty as the race hurtles to the finish line.

    Either Trump or Harris could still comfortably win if the polls are off and several of these states are won by one or the other candidate.

    But legal and political analysts warn there is a high likelihood that it could be days, or even weeks, before the next president is known if exceedingly tight races become mired in ballot recounts and legal fights.

    Leaders around the world, not least in Europe, will be watching carefully.

    The U.S. presidential election has an immense impact globally, with the United States playing a key role when it comes to international hotspots such as Ukraine, the Middle East, and Taiwan, as well as in influential bodies such as the NATO military alliance.

    Fears of “election-related violence are not idle speculation,” wrote the International Crisis Group’s Michael Wahid Hanna in a recent briefing, citing the January 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters trying to disrupt the certification of President Joe Biden’s win in the last election.

    “It remains possible that Trump will encourage supporters to sow chaos around vote counting and certification processes, thus attempting to call the results into question and create a pretext for extraordinary procedures to resolve a disputed election in his favour,” he wrote.

    Trump himself was targeted in two failed assassination attempts.

    A shooter at a July campaign rally in Pennsylvania left Trump bloodied but not seriously injured after a bullet grazed his ear.

    Weeks later, a man was found lurking with a rifle in the bushes of Trump’s Florida golf course as the former president played a game.

    Harris, a black and Indian American, made abortion rights and cost of living concerns the centrepieces of her campaign.

    But the former prosecutor and senator also focussed on the threat she says Trump – who was found guilty in a criminal hush-money trial in May – poses to democracy.

    She called him a “petty tyrant” who is “out for unchecked power,” in a speech at the same site where Trump had rallied his supporters on the day of the Capitol riot.

    Trump’s populist pitch to voters revolved around immigration, inflation and foreign policy, with promises to carry out mass deportations, impose across-the-board tariffs, roll back green energy initiatives and end the war in Ukraine “in 24 hours.”

    His speeches were filled with personal insults to Harris, whom he described as “lazy” and “dumb as a rock.”

    In one of his most inflammatory attacks, the former president falsely said she had misled voters about her racial identity.

    “So I don’t know? Is she Indian or is she black?” he asked.

    Harris, 60, has played down her race and gender. But if she succeeds, the daughter of an Indian-born mother and Jamaican-born father would become the first female president in the history of the United States.

    Of the 45 men who have held the job, none have been of Asian descent and only one has been black.

    A Trump victory would also be history-making.

    Only one other president – Grover Cleveland in the late 19th century – has succeeded in winning non-consecutive terms.

    The U.S. Constitution would prevent Trump from seeking a third term.

    Another win for the 78-year-old real-estate tycoon, reality TV star and convicted felon would also make him the oldest person ever elected president.

    Few would have expected the showdown between Trump and Harris a year ago.

    Trump’s grave legal troubles, which include his efforts to subvert the results of the last election, had many convinced that the Republican Party would not line up again behind the twice-impeached former president.

    But he easily knocked out his opponents in the party primaries to secure the nomination.

    With President Joe Biden seeking re-election for the Democrats, a rerun of 2020 seemed locked in.

    But in an unprecedented move, the 81-year-old dropped out of the race on July 21 following a disastrous debate performance against Trump that left Democrats in a panic about their chances in November.

    Democrats quickly coalesced around the vice president, a figure who most Americans told pollsters they knew little about.

    But Harris generated enthusiasm among previously demoralised Democrats and she was able to close Biden’s poll deficit with Trump.

    As Americans readied to go to the polls on Tuesday the contest was seen as a dead heat.

    Around 240 million people are eligible to vote in the election, which will also decide the make-up of the two houses of Congress –  the House of Representatives and the Senate.

    Which party controls those will have a major impact on the policy agenda of the incoming president.

    A wave of polling station openings will begin in the morning on the East Coast before moving across central and western states and ending in Alaska and Hawaii.

    But Election Day is not what it used to be. More than 75 million Americans have already cast their ballots by post or in-person early voting.

    That includes Biden, who voted in his home state of Delaware last month.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Harris, Trump goes head-to-head in final campaign

    Harris, Trump goes head-to-head in final campaign

    Kamala Harris and Donald Trump fought it out in the swing states on the final weekend of the tensest U.S election of modern times, with the Democrat urging voters to “turn the page” on the Republican’s scorched-earth brand of politics.

    With only three days left in the campaign, 73 million people have already cast early ballots, with many more expected to go to the polls ahead of the Election Day climax tomorrow.

    The country and the world could then face a nail-biting wait to know whether Harris becomes the first US woman president or Trump secures a spectacular return to power after his unprecedented and at times violent campaign to overturn his 2020 reelection loss to Joe Biden.

    They literally crossed paths Saturday, with Harris’s official vice-presidential Air Force Two and Trump’s personal jet sharing the airport tarmac in Charlotte, North Carolina.

    Both held rallies in North Carolina, while Harris also spoke to supporters in Georgia, another of the seven swing states seen as the keys to victory in an otherwise dead-even nationwide contest. Trump also added in a stop in Virginia.

    The rounds of high-stakes speeches before thousands of people at each stop will continue Sunday when Harris holds multiple events in the swing state of Michigan and Trump rallies with supporters in Georgia, North Carolina and Pennsylvania.

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    With less than three days left before last polls close, Trump, 78, and Harris, 60, are scrapping for a tiny number of undecided voters and, crucially, trying to energize their bases to get out and vote.

    For Harris, a key electorate is women voters partly because of her own historic role, but mostly due to widespread fury over the ruling by Trump-appointed justices on the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v Wade, ending a decades-long constitutional right to abortion.

    “Donald Trump’s not done. He will ban abortion nationwide. He wants to restrict access to birth control, put IVF treatments at risk and… force states to monitor women’s pregnancies,” Harris said in Atlanta, Georgia.

    She painted Trump as “increasingly unstable, obsessed with revenge” and “out for unchecked power.”

  • Harris, Trump goes head-to-head in final campaign

    Harris, Trump goes head-to-head in final campaign

    Kamala Harris spoke yesterday for approximately 10 minutes here in Detroit where she asked the churchgoers to act on God plans.

    In remarks, she quoted the prophet Jeremiah, who she said told “hard truths”.

    “God has a plan for us,” she said. “But we must act on the plans he has in store for us.”

    Read Also: Presidency: Atiku’s alternate economic plan a cheap talk

    About halfway through her speech, she pivoted toward a more traditional campaign message, including calls for turning the page on “hate and division.”

    “What kind of country do we want our children and grandchildren to live in?” she asked.

    Frequently during her speech, members of the congregation nodded and voiced their approval.

    The band has now kicked back up, as the bishop has finished his own remarks. People are dancing in their pews.

  • The Kamala Harris I know, by Blinken

    The Kamala Harris I know, by Blinken

    United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken has described presidential hopeful Vice President Kamala Harris as an effective and deeply respected voice for America c around the world.

    Blinken spoke at a briefing on Tuesday.

    The secretary said Harris “is someone who asks time and again penetrating questions, who cuts to the chase and is intensely focused on the interests of the American people and making sure that our foreign policy is doing everything it can to advance those interests”.

    Blinken said in the last three and a half years, Harris has demonstrated her capabilities to lead.

    He said: “I’ve seen her not only around the world but I’ve seen her on the most critical foreign policy questions of our time in the Situation Room at the White House, in the Oval Office with the President, and my observation is she’s very strong, very effected – effective and deeply respected voice for our country around the world. When she speaks, she speaks on behalf of the United States, and what I’ve observed in meetings that we’ve had with world leaders – I mentioned, again, Munich Security Forum, where she really commands the room these past three years. Just a couple months ago, she of course represented the United States at the Ukraine Peace Conference that was being held in Switzerland.

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    So time and again I’ve seen her leadership in every – really every corner of the world – Africa, where she’s led major investment initiatives to strengthen our relationships and partnerships. So no, what I’ve seen is someone who is already deeply experienced and very, very effective around the world.”

    Blinken added that he has known Harris for more than a decade.

    “These last three and a half years, I’ve been able to observe her very closely in the Situation Room, in the Oval Office, around the world as a leading voice for American foreign policy and for our diplomacy. We’ve been together at the Munich Security Conference for the last three years. I’ve seen her command the room full of world leaders from not only across Europe but across the world. I think she’s made four trips to the Indo-Pacific, helping to lead our diplomacy there; deeply engaged in the Middle East, in trying to find a peaceful path forward; helping to drive investment in countries in our own hemisphere so that people have opportunity in the countries that they come from so that they don’t have to make a hazardous journey to the United States seeking a better life, because they can get in their own country – in each and every one of these areas, she’s been a leading voice in our administration.”