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Harris and Trump duked it out in Michigan on Friday. Here’s what they said. CnN NEWS

 

Harris and Trump duked it out in Michigan on Friday. Here’s what they said. CnN NEWS

Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump collided Friday in Michigan, both barnstorming the state as they wage a tight battle for its potentially decisive 15 Electoral College votes.

The two converged on vote-rich Oakland County, northwest of Detroit – where an increasingly educated, diverse population and the suburban revolt against Trump has shifted the political landscape in Democrats’ favor in recent years.

Harris told a crowd in Waterford Township that Trump was “full of big promises, but always fails to deliver” and called him “one of the biggest losers of manufacturing jobs in American history.”

She touted her support for labor unions and said she’d push the federal government and private businesses to hire more workers without college degrees.

It was a blue-collar pitch that Harris also made Friday in Grand Rapids, a Western Michigan city in Kent County, which swung from Trump in 2016 to Joe Biden in 2020, and Lansing, where she panned Trump’s record on manufacturing and told union members that the former president is “no friend of labor.”

“I think it’s more beautiful than love, the word tariff,” Trump said.

Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin make up the “blue wall” – three Great Lakes battlegrounds that tipped the 2016 election to Trump and flipped back to hand Biden the White House four years later.

Although Michigan went for Biden by about 154,000 votes, it also delivered Trump a historic win in 2016, when he defeated Hillary Clinton by fewer than 11,000 votes, breaking a streak of Democratic wins there since 1992.

Already, more than 944,000 early ballots have been cast in Michigan — 13% of the state’s active registered voters, according to the secretary of state’s office.

Both campaigns are targeting specific pockets of prospective voters in Michigan, including union workers, Black voters, suburban moderates and Arab Americans who are unhappy with the Biden administration’s handling of Israel’s war in Gaza.

Harris and Trump duked it out in Michigan on Friday. Here’s what they said. CnN NEWS

Battle for Arab American voters
Trump on Friday visited a campaign office in Hamtramck, which has a large Muslim and Arab American population. He stood with the city’s mayor, Amer Ghalib, who recently endorsed the former president.

Trump, who has vowed to conduct mass deportations of undocumented immigrants if reelected, at one point was asked by the mayor: “One thing that the Democrats keep sending to our community to scare them that you will come and deport them, although some of them are second- and third-generation immigrants. So I want you to respond to these accusations and hear delivering to our community. What would you say to them?”

“Fake news,” the former president responded.

Earlier in the day, Trump had told reporters he planned to speak soon to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who he said is doing a “good job.” He said Biden is “trying to hold him back, and he probably should be doing the opposite.”

Harris, hours later in Waterford Township, acknowledged the “very difficult” year for members of the Arab American community.

She touted the support of “Arab American leaders” and named Wayne County deputy executive Assad Turfe but said she recognized that Israel’s military campaigns in Gaza and in Lebanon have troubled members of the sizable Arab American and Muslim communities, who she said have “deep and proud roots in the Detroit metro area.”

Harris also reiterated her belief that the death of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar could create an opportunity to renew negotiations for a ceasefire and hostage release deal between Israel and Hamas.

“Sinwar’s death can and must be a turning point. Everyone must seize this opportunity to finally end the war in Gaza, bring the hostages home and end the suffering once and for all,” she said. “And I continue to believe diplomacy is the answer to bringing lasting stability across the Israel-Lebanon border.”

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