In CNN
Interview Excerpts, Harris Defends Ideological Shift to Center
Vice
President Kamala Harris said it would be “really important” for her
administration to reflect “different views,” according to early clips of her
interview released by CNN.
Jonathan
WeismanTim Balk
By Jonathan
Weisman and Tim Balk
Aug. 29,
2024
Updated 8:58
p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/29/us/politics/harris-cnn-interview.html
In her first
television interview as the Democratic nominee for president, Vice President
Kamala Harris on Thursday defended her ideological shift to the political
center, saying she would appoint a Republican to her cabinet but promising “my
values have not changed.”
She also
curtly rejected former President Donald J. Trump’s baseless claim that she
recently “became” Black, according to partial excerpts released by CNN. The
full interview will air at 9 p.m. Eastern time on CNN.
Ms. Harris,
taking questions Thursday afternoon from the CNN anchor Dana Bash in Savannah,
Ga., sought to stake out political ground that would appeal to swing voters
even as she assured progressive supporters she was still with them.
“The most
important and most significant aspect of my policy perspective and decisions
is: My values have not changed,” Ms. Harris said, adding that her past support
for the so-called Green New Deal was reflected in the passage of a sweeping
climate bill that Mr. Biden signed in 2022.
Ms. Harris
told Ms. Bash that it was “important to find a common place of understanding of
where we can actually solve problems,” according to CNN.
Appointing a
nominally bipartisan cabinet would be a return to tradition after eight years
of more partisan White Houses. No Republicans are serving in President Biden’s
cabinet. But President Barack Obama had a Republican secretary of
transportation and two Republican secretaries of defense. President George W.
Bush had a Democratic transportation secretary, and before that, President Bill
Clinton had a Republican defense secretary.
Ms. Harris
declined to name potential Republican picks, but two former representatives,
Adam Kinzinger of Illinois and Liz Cheney of Wyoming, have become implacable
foes of Mr. Trump. Democrats may feel in their debt if Ms. Harris wins in
November.
It would be
“really important” for her administration to represent “different views,
different experiences,” Ms. Harris said.
“It would be
to the benefit of the American public to have a member of my cabinet who was a
Republican,” she said, referring to her cabinet, according to a video clip
released by CNN.
In the
interview, Ms. Bash pressed Ms. Harris on why she had shifted some of her
positions from the past. In the 2020 Democratic presidential primary, Ms.
Harris, a former prosecutor then serving in the Senate, ran as a progressive.
She now appears to be running a more centrist campaign, though she has yet to
outline much of her platform in detail.
Ms. Harris,
who attended a historically Black university and has long embraced her Black
and South Asian identity, also continued an approach of engaging only
glancingly with Mr. Trump’s incendiary assertion last month that she was
“Indian all the way, and then all of a sudden she made a turn and she became a
Black person.”
Ms. Harris
told Ms. Bash that Mr. Trump had used his “same old, tired playbook” by
questioning her racial identity, and she promptly added, “Next question,
please,” CNN reported.
The
interview is a high-stakes moment for Ms. Harris, who had spoken with reporters
only in brief huddles or in off-the-record settings after Mr. Biden ended his
re-election campaign on July 21. She was joined by her running mate, Gov. Tim
Walz of Minnesota, in the interview on Thursday.
Republicans
have charged that Ms. Harris had been hiding from the news media. Mr. Trump
said Ms. Harris had not done interviews because “she can’t do better than
Biden,” who has held historically few news conferences during his presidency.
Her
supporters have attributed her limited press schedule to the demands of setting
up a campaign on the fly. But the lack of unscripted audiences with the news
media has prevented reporters from asking Ms. Harris about the policy program
that she might envision for her presidency.
Jonathan
Weisman is a politics writer, covering campaigns with an emphasis on economic
and labor policy. He is based in Chicago. More about Jonathan Weisman
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