While Pulp Fiction director Quentin Tarantino has urged the vice president to keep avoiding the media, Harris will sit down with running mate Tim Walz.
Kamala Harris has agreed to sit down for her first prime-time interview as a presidential candidate amid ongoing pressure to explain her policies and backflips as the race to the White House tightens.
Since Joe Biden stepped down on July 21 and endorsed Harris, her small-target campaign strategy has focused on delivering broad-brush speeches via teleprompters. “Kamala is dodging the press for a reason,” the Trump campaign said in a statement. “She doesn’t want to talk about her radical agenda.”
Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Harris agrees to first prime-time interview amid criticism she’s been ‘hiding’While Pulp Fiction director Quentin Tarantino has urged the vice president to keep avoiding the media, Harris will sit down with running mate Tim Walz.
Read more »
Harris agrees to first prime-time interview amid criticism she’s been ‘hiding’While Pulp Fiction director Quentin Tarantino has urged the vice president to keep avoiding the media, Harris will sit down with running mate Tim Walz.
Read more »
Retro tile game Rummikub has Sarah Gould Harris, co-founder of Harris Tapper, hookedEasy to understand but difficult to master, Rummikub is more than just a game for Sarah Harris Gould, co-founder of Harris Tapper.
Read more »
Macron has to stop hiding behind the Olympics – and name a prime ministerBy refusing to confirm the election-winning leftwing coalition’s candidate, the president is looking more and more autocratic, says Paris-based journalist Pauline Bock
Read more »
Trump and Harris agree to debate on US network ABC in SeptemberThe former president has unleashed a barrage of attacks on Kamala Harris in a wide-ranging press conference.
Read more »
No smiling matter: Chalmers’ inflation reprieve is hiding some economic frownsInflation figures this week have probably stopped the Reserve Bank from further interest rate rises, but the economy on Jim Chalmers’ watch is still struggling.
Read more »