Democracy is run by convincing the people about your views on governance. This is rightly demonstrated by Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz. They are looking to maintain their momentum as they prepare to hit the campaign trail again following an excitement-filled DNC last week.
Meanwhile, former President Donald Trump—bracing for more unfavorable polling news—is seeking to curb Harris’s stride while also on the trail this week with his running mate, Ohio Senator J.D. Vance, who took swings at their rivals Sunday. Trump will address the National Guard Association’s conference in Detroit on Monday. He will travel to Michigan on Thursday for a speech on the economy before participating in a Town Hall in Wisconsin that evening. He will hold a rally in Pennsylvania, then head to Washington, D.C., to speak at a summit held by the Conservative Moms for Liberty group.
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Meanwhile, Harris and Walz will kick off a bus tour in Georgia on Wednesday, concluding with a rally in the Savannah area on Thursday. The Vice President’s campaign said Sunday that it has raised $540 million since she launched her presidential bid just a month ago. The total marks a record for any campaign in history for this time span, according to Harris’s team.
According to Senator Vance, Trump would veto a federal abortion ban as president if such a bill were passed by Congress. House Speaker Mike Johnson has slammed Harris and Walz on the trail in Minnesota. Trump has received a jolt as General McMaster has given a blistering account of the Trump White House.In his new book, “At War with Ourselves: My Tour of Duty in the Trump White House,” Lt. Gen. McMaster has unleashed a blistering, insightful account of his time in the Trump White House. General McMaster describes meetings in the Oval Office as “exercises in competitive sycophancy” during which Trump’s advisors would flatter the president by saying things like, “your instincts are always right,” or “no one has ever been treated so badly by the press.” The General’s book, which focuses on Trump’s tenure as commander in chief, comes at a particularly timely moment, just as many Americans start to really consider whether Trump or VP Harris would make a better commander in chief. McMaster provides unique detail on Trump’s approach to foreign policy and—similarly to his successor in the national security advisor role, former UN Ambassador John Bolton, who wrote scathingly about the former president in a book published in 2020—his account is likely to do little to reassure U.S. allies about the prospects of a second Trump term.