Trump’s town hall interview comes a week before he and Kamala Harris will appear in Philadelphia in what will be their first presidential debate against each other.
Donald Trump took aim at Kamala Harris while speaking with Fox News’s Sean Hannity in Pennsylvania.
Former President Donald Trump swooped into Pennsylvania for his town hall with Fox News where he lobbed his typical flurry of personal insults and accusations at Democratic presidential rival Kamala Harris, and at one point, confusing her with Joe Biden.
Trump’s appearance at a Fox News town hall in Harrisburg comes a few hours after the Republican nominee and Harris agreed to rules for next week’s presidential debate, in which both of their microphones will go unmuted when they are not speaking.
“I can’t imagine New Hampshire voting for him, Trump told Fox News anchor Sean Hannity.
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“Anybody in New Hampshire, cause they’re watching right now, but anybody in New Hampshire that votes for Biden and Kamala,” Trump said, referencing Harris’ Wednesday campaign rally at Portsmouth.
The awkward interview has since been branded a “senile moment” by Kamala’s Wins X account.
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In her campaign stop, Harris unveiled her proposal to expand tax incentives for small businesses, a moderate and pro-business plan that could soften her previous calls for wealthy Americans and large corporations to pay higher taxes.
Trump, on the other hand, is betting that Americans crave trillions of dollars in tax cuts, saying that economic growth will be so fantastic that it’s not worth worrying about budget deficits.
The candidates will appear in Philadelphia next week in what will be their first presidential debate against each other.
The nation’s key swing state, Pennsylvania, begins in-person absentee voting the week after. By the end of the month, early voting will be underway in at least four states with a dozen more to follow by mid-October.
Vice President Kamala Harris has accepted the rules set forth for next week’s debate with former President Donald Trump, although the Harris says the decision not to keep both candidates’ microphones live throughout the matchup will be to her disadvantage.
The development, which came Wednesday by way of a letter from Harris’ campaign to host network ABC News, seemed to mark a conclusion to the debate over microphone muting, which had for a time threatened to derail the September 10 presidential debate at the National Constitution Center.