Retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg discusses Vice President Harris’ remarks on the Afghanistan withdrawal and former President Trump’s hammering the vice president over the war in Ukraine during the ABC News Presidential Debate.
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What’s the Frequency, Kamala?

Assemblyman Avi Schnall, Agudath Israel’s Director of Federal Education Affairs, reports from Washington, D.C. on the “Educational Choice for Children Act” (ECCA), a transformative multi-billion-dollar tax credit proposal which was reviewed by the House Ways and Means Committee on Capitol Hill today – and passed.
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Hours after meeting in person for the first time, Kamala Harris and Donald Trump crossed paths again as they attended commemoration events this morning marking the 23rd anniversary of the September 11 attacks.
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris went head-to-head in their first debate for the 2024 election, held on Tuesday night.
This debate, which was broadcast on ABC News, was led by David Muir, anchor of “World News Tonight,” along with Linsey Davis, who anchors “Prime.”
The candidates greeted each other with a handshake as they walked on stage, with Harris approaching Trump’s side first to initiate the gesture.
When Harris was asked whether Americans are in a better financial position than they were four years ago, she emphasized her background from a working-class family and detailed her plans for creating an “opportunity economy” to help everyday families.


During a segment on CNN, investigative reporter Andrew Kaczynski spoke with host Erin Burnett about Kamala Harris’ radical policy positions from 2019; “Kamala Harris was trying to get to the left of Bernie Sanders,” Kaczynski told Burnett.

While the clip has gone viral for many reasons, perhaps the most shocking soundbite is the following:

Burnett: Taxpayer-funded gender transition surgeries for detained migrants. She actually said she supported that?

Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump face off tonight for their first and possibly only debate before Election Day.
The state of the race as they meet in Philadelphia is starkly different than it was just more than two months ago, when Trump debated President Joe Biden in a performance that accelerated calls for Biden to leave the race. Since then, Biden ended his campaign and endorsed Harris, Trump survived an assassination attempt, and both tickets named running mates and made their cases to voters at their national party conventions.
Special coverage will begin with the PBS News Hour at 6 p.m. EDT. At 8 p.m., the digital special preshow begins, with a look back at major moments from the candidates and where they stand on key issues.

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