Top 5 moments from Kamala Harris’ first interview as Dem nominee: ‘I will not ban fracking’
Vice President Kamala Harris joined her first sit-down interview with the media since ascending the Democratic presidential ticket last month.
Vice President Kamala Harris joined her first sit-down interview with the media since ascending the Democratic presidential ticket last month.
In her first interview since becoming the Democratic presidential nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday shared that she learned President Biden was ending his reelection bid when he called her personally to inform her. In her sit-down interview alongside her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Harris told CNN’s Dana Bash that on July
Vice President Kamala Harris offered a vague day one plan should she take the Oval Office next her in her first sit-down interview since becoming the Democratic nominee.
Under the plan, projects could be permitted across 11 states on certain types of federal lands less than 15 miles from transmission lines. The Biden administration has proposed opening 31 million acres of federal public lands across 11 states to solar energy development, dramatically expanding the growing industry’s footprint while streamlining permitting and regulatory requirements.
Column: Harris’s interview left more questions than answers (CNN screenshot) It was, Dana Bash said on CNN at 9 p.m. Thursday, “a watershed moment.” Not just a watershed—”a defining moment.” Why the fuss? Kamala Harris was giving an interview. Think about that. Somehow, in the whirlwind of campaign 2024, we have reached the point where
Washington — Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday insisted her “values have not changed” when explaining several shifts in her policy positions and said she would be open to appointing a Republican to her Cabinet in her first interview since becoming the Democratic nominee for president. Harris and Democratic vice presidential nominee Gov. Tim Walz
Vice President Kamala Harris distanced herself from her 2019 comments vowing to ban fracking, saying she's been "clear" she would not ban fracking since 2020.