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The same strategists are simply landing more blows thanks to a younger and more comfortably online candidate at the top of the ticket.
Kamala Harris's campaign at first adopted a strategy of trying to glide past her past support for far-left policies. Now the strategists may need to reconsider.
Harris’ strategy isn’t just good politics; it’s a reminder that Democrats have learned the lessons of Hillary Clinton’s complacency in the closing weeks of the 2016 campaign. Harris ...
Harris also needs to bring down Trump’s favorability ratings, which are generally higher than in 2016 or 2020 and, in one Gallup poll, are higher than her own.
Politics Harris’ Endgame Strategy Is Becoming Clear. It Might Not Work. Her campaign clearly thinks it knows which voters it needs to win. They better hope they’re right.
In the month since the Democratic ticket changed, the Harris campaign says the Democratic map is expanding while Donald Trump’s is not. Geoff Bennett speaks with Michael Tyler, communications ...
Harris's strategy left 28% of voters in the New York Times-Siena Sept. 3-8 survey saying they “felt they needed to know more” about Harris compared to only 9% for Trump.
The Harris strategy has been to sweep them aside. Focus, as the candidate of change, on the future. "We can't afford four more years of this," running mate Gov. Tim Walz (D-Minn.) bellowed at a ...
Harris's strategy left 28% of voters in the New York Times-Siena Sept. 3-8 survey saying they "felt they needed to know more" about Harris compared to only 9% for Trump.