PHILADELPHIA — Vice President Kamala Harris, under pressure to broaden her appeal to Republicans and conservatives with Election Day fast approaching, is sitting for a high-stakes interview with Fox News on Wednesday and holding an event with GOP leaders in Philadelphiaâ€
The interview with Fox chief political anchor Bret Baier represents a calculated gamble for Harris, given Foxâ€
The Harris campaign argues that the vice president has an opportunity to win over a portion of Republicans and GOP-leaning independents who are alarmed by former president Donald Trumpâ€
The campaign has been reaching out to voters who supported former Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley. In an effort to signal that Harris merits Republicansâ€
This week, Harris has stepped up her efforts to portray Trump as an unstable and dangerous leader who would damage the Constitution and democratic institutions for his personal gain. She plans to amplify that message Wednesday at an afternoon rally in Bucks County, Pa., where she will appear with more than 100 Republicans who have endorsed her campaign.
Speakers at the rally will include former congressman Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.), who like Cheney was a member of the House committee that investigated the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. Harris is expected to speak about Trumpâ€
Other Republicans planning to attend the Buck County event include former New Jersey governor Christine Todd Whitman, former Georgia lieutenant governor Geoff Duncan and former members of Congress such as Barbara Comstock of Virginia, Jim Greenwood of Pennsylvania, Mickey Edwards of Oklahoma, Denver Riggleman of Virginia, Chris Shays of Connecticut and David Trott of Michigan.
Trump, as the GOP presidential nominee, is expected to win Republican voters by large margins in every state. But if Harris can improve her standing among these voters even slightly in hard-fought battlegrounds such as Pennsylvania, it could make the difference between winning and losing, according to analysts on both sides.
Harris adviser David Plouffe told New York magazine this week that there are signs Harris is making inroads with GOP voters.
“We see both registered Republicans — and a bigger group of people who are not affiliated with a party but largely consider themselves Republicans — who weâ€
Harris and Trump have been essentially tied in Pennsylvania, a state that is a critical piece of the Democratsâ€
The Harris campaign is touting its turnout operation in the Philadelphia suburbs, where it has 10 offices, including three in Bucks County. Hillary Clinton, the 2016 Democratic nominee, defeated Trump in Bucks County by about 2,700 votes, and Biden won it by about 17,000 votes.