The vice president’s latest address has been in the works for weeks. But aides hoped her message would land with more impact after Trump’s rally Sunday at Madison Square Garden in New York, where speakers hurled cruel and racist insults. Harris said the event “highlighted the point that I’ve been making throughout this campaign.”
“He is focused and actually fixated on his grievances, on himself and on dividing our country,” she said.
Harris was expected to use her speech to lay out a pragmatic and forward-looking plan for the country, including reminding voters about her economic proposals and pledging to staunchly work for access to reproductive care, including abortion.
“That stark contrast has real power when she’s delivering solutions and Trump is sowing division and hate,” said O’Malley Dillon.
Also central to her message: positioning herself as a “new generation” of leader after Trump and even her current boss, Biden. She’s going to be “talking about what her new generation of leadership really means and centering that around the American people and what they care about,” O’Malley Dillon said.
As for Trump, Harris said Monday, “People are literally ready to turn the page. They’re tired of it.”
Harris’ aides, many of whom also advised Biden’s campaign before he dropped out, still believe that centering the race on who Trump is and how she’s different will be their strongest message for voters.
“She’s already made her case, she’s presented the evidence. She’s offering up a summation tonight, and she has faith in the wisdom of the jury,” said campaign communications director Michael Tyler.
Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, a Democrat, said it was important for battleground voters to be reminded of the consequences of their choice this fall and for Harris “to really drive home the stakes of this election and the clear contrast in the race.”
He said Harris had the stronger argument on economic policies, reproductive freedom and the matter of chaos vs. order, adding that she “has a vision that’s going to bring more order and more hopefulness and more joy.”
Ahead of Harris’ speech, Trump used remarks to reporters at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida on Tuesday morning to accuse Harris of closing with a message that doesn’t address everyday Americans’ day-to-day struggles and kitchen table concerns.
He said Harris keeps “talking about Hitler, and Nazis, because her record’s horrible,” a reference to Harris amplifying the warnings from his former chief of staff that Trump spoke admiringly of the Nazi leader while in office.
Harris was spending the day ahead of her speech taping television interviews airing in Detroit, Milwaukee, Philadelphia, and Pittsburgh, and Spanish language radio in Pennsylvania, her campaign said.
Associated Press writer Michelle L. Price in Palm Beach, Florida contributed to this report.