But as the campaign reaches its final stretch, Harris – who began her run for the White House as a so-called “joyful warrior” – has increasingly gone negative, leaning into Biden’s narrative of Trump as an existential threat to democracy.
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Her campaign was given ample ammunition this week, when Trump’s former chief of staff John Kelly, a retired four-star general, described his former boss as a fascist who reportedly “wanted the kind of generals Hitler had”.
Adding that Trump’s former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Mark Milley, had raised similar alarm bells, Obama said that “these are serious people” and men who “have never in the past even talked about politics because they believe that the military should be above politics”.
Obama also made a direct pitch to men to reject Trump’s misogyny. Polls have shown a widening gender gap between the two candidates, with men turning to Trump at much higher rates, while women are turning to Harris.
“I’ve noticed this, especially with some men who seem to think Trump’s behaviour is a sign of strength,” said Obama, who is arguably the most revered person in the Democratic Party alongside his wife.
“I am here to tell you, that is not what real strength is. It never has been.”
Trump, meanwhile, campaigned in Arizona, which sits along the US-Mexico border, and Nevada, which is home to thousands of hospitality workers for whom the economy is a key issue.
In Arizona, the former president reiterated his pledge to carry out the largest mass deportation of illegal immigrants in American history, declaring that under the Biden-Harris administration: “We’re like a garbage can for the world.”
Earlier, on social media, he wrote of Kelly: “Even though I shouldn’t be wasting my time with him, I always feel it’s necessary to hit back in pursuit of THE TRUTH. John Kelly is a LOWLIFE, and a bad General, whose advice in the White House I no longer sought, and told him to MOVE ON!”
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About 20,000 people attended Harris’ rally in Georgia, according to her campaign. As the sun set in the city of Clarkston, often referred to as “the most diverse square mile in America”, Springsteen took the stage with an acoustic rendition of The Promised Land.
In support of Harris, he told the crowd: “She’s running to be the 47th president of the United States. Donald Trump is running to be an American tyrant.
“I want a president that reveres the Constitution; who does not threaten but wants to protect and guide our great democracy; who believes in the rule of law and the peaceful transfer of power; who will fight for a woman’s right to choose; and who wants to create a middle-class economy that will serve all our citizens. There is only one candidate in this election who holds those principles dear – Kamala Harris.”
The Deep South state was a Republican stronghold for years until Biden flipped it in 2020. This led to Trump pressuring Georgia’s Republican secretary of state to “find” 11,780 votes so he could overthrow Biden’s victory.
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