Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are readying for a?pivotal new stretch of the 2024 campaign, with the two focusing on key battleground states ahead of their debate next week.
Meanwhile, Harris’ running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, spoke at an event in Milwaukee. While en route to the event, several vehicles in Walz’s motorcade were involved in a crash, and some passengers were taken to a local hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.
Trump, in an interview that aired Sunday, said he had “every right to” interfere with a presidential election, as he faces an updated indictment in the federal election interference case against him.?
Our live coverage has ended. Follow the?latest 2024 election news?here or read through the posts below.
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Here's what happened on the campaign trail on Labor Day
From CNN's Michelle Shen
Vice President Kamala Harris and President Joe Biden arrive at a campaign event in Pittsburgh, on Monday, September 2.
Jacquelyn Martin/AP
Democrats had a busy campaign schedule this Labor Day, with Vice President Kamala Harris, President Joe Biden and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz spending the day appealing to union workers in major swing states.
Former President Donald Trump, on the other hand, mostly stayed out of the spotlight as the two candidates gear up for next week’s debate.
Here’s what happened on the campaign trail today:
Harris supports a domestically owned US Steel: Harris said for the first time that US Steel should remain domestically owned, saying during a campaign stop in Pittsburgh that it is “vital for our nation to maintain strong American steel companies.” Her remarks echoed Biden’s stance against a proposed sale of US Steel to Nippon Steel, Japan’s biggest steelmaker. During an earlier event in Detroit, Harris also vowed to ensure the “PRO Act,” legislation that would ensure workers’ rights to unionize and collectively bargain for workplace changes, and to “end union busting once and for all.”
Biden goes back to his roots in Pennsylvania: Biden emerged as a powerful surrogate at a joint event with Harris in Pittsburgh, reappearing in a city that he has often visited over the course of his political career and attempting to boost Harris in the battleground state of Pennsylvania. Biden said that he “celebrated many Labor Days in Pittsburgh” and that it was “good to be back to so many great friends.”?
Walz’s motorcade gets into a crash: While en route to an event in Milwaukee, several vehicles in Walz’s motorcade were involved in a crash, and some passengers were taken to a local hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. Walz, who was not injured, made it to the event, where he touted that he was in “the pocket” of unions, pitching himself as a working-class vice presidential candidate as he tests his campaigning skills in the Midwestern “blue wall.”
Trump stays out of the spotlight: The former president and his running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, had no scheduled events Monday. Trump, in an interview that aired Sunday,?said he had “every right to”?interfere with a presidential election, as he faces an updated indictment in the federal election interference case against him.?
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Harris says US Steel should remain domestically owned during remarks at union hall in Pittsburgh
From CNN's Samantha Waldenberg in Pittsburgh
Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a campaign rally at the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 5 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on Monday, September 2.
Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images
Vice President Kamala Harris said for the first time that US Steel should remain domestically owned, saying during a campaign stop in Pittsburgh on Labor Day that it is “vital for our nation to maintain strong American steel companies.”?
Harris directly addressed the proposed sale of US Steel to Nippon Steel, Japan’s biggest steelmaker, a controversial deal the White House previously opposed, with President Joe Biden saying it is “important that we maintain strong American steel companies powered by American steel workers.”?
Biden had outlined his position during?a previous event in Pittsburgh, nicknamed “Steel City,” where he visited the headquarters of the United Steelworkers and called for higher tariffs to protect American manufacturing.
At Monday’s event, the vice president began her remarks by thanking Biden, who introduced her and stood near Harris while she spoke, encouraging the crowd to chant, “Thank you, Joe.”?
Harris also noted that ballots will “start dropping in 14 days” in Pennsylvania, one of the most important swing states this election.
“This election is as much as anything else a fight for the promise of America,” she said.
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Harris planning Wednesday speech in New Hampshire to discuss economy
From CNN's Kayla Tausche
Vice President Kamala Harris is planning to deliver a speech in New Hampshire on Wednesday to unveil the next tranche of her economic plan, according to three advisers.?
CNN previously reported that Harris would unveil her proposals in a series of rollouts, with the next expected to focus on innovation, entrepreneurship and small business.?
Harris told a small-business owner in Georgia last week that one of her top priorities would be instituting a tax credit to assist Americans starting and growing businesses.?
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Biden says he'll do "everything I can to help" elect Harris in remarks at joint event in Pittsburgh
From CNN's Samantha Waldenberg and Kayla Tausche in Pittsburgh
President Joe?Biden?speaks during a Labor Day campaign event in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on Monday, September 2.
Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters
President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris kicked off the final?sprint to the election together?on?Labor Day, using the holiday to woo working-class voters with an event at a local union hall in Pittsburgh — a symbolic show of force in a city?Biden?himself often turned to at key points in his political career.
“I’ll be on the sidelines, but I’ll do everything I can to help,” Biden said of Harris’ bid for president. “Are you ready to make Donald Trump a loser again?”
Harris is getting a boost from Biden in battleground Pennsylvania, one of the “blue wall” states that were key to Biden’s victory in 2020 and one that will be critical this year.
Labor Day marks the first time both the president and vice president appeared together for a campaign event since Biden announced he was ending his reelection bid and endorsing Harris.
While appearing as a top surrogate for Harris, Biden spoke at length about the pro-union actions he’d personally taken during his time in office: crossing a picket line with autoworkers, opposing foreign takeovers of American manufacturers, and demanding certain unions accept more women.?
“We know the simple truth: Wall Street did not build America, the middle class built America, and unions built the middle class,” the president said.?
Harris campaign unveils new plane for Walz's trip to Wisconsin
From CNN's Aaron Pellish and Veronica Stracqualursi in Milwaukee
Pool
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz’s trip to Wisconsin on Monday marked the first use of the Harris-Walz campaign’s new campaign charter plane, the campaign said.?
The plane bears an American flag on its tail, along with a “Harris-Walz” decal and another decal that reads “A New Way Forward.” Walz had previously been traveling on chartered planes without campaign insignia for his events across the country.
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Walz proudly boasts he's in "the pocket" of unions in Labor Day remarks
From CNN's Aaron Pellish in Milwaukee
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.
Pool
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz proudly boasted his ties to organized labor at a union event in Milwaukee on Monday, celebrating Labor Day by declaring himself in “the pocket” of unions.
The Democratic vice presidential nominee detailed his union membership as a former public school teacher, his record of backing unions in Congress and as Minnesota’s governor, and Vice President Kamala Harris’ support of unions.
Walz challenged Republicans to attack his support for unions while defending collective bargaining rights and fair working conditions.??
The Minnesota governor emphasized the importance of union support to rebuilding the coalition of Midwestern battleground states that represent Harris’ clearest path to victory in November.??
“We know exactly who built this country. It was labor that built this country,” Walz said. “We also know it was unions that built the ‘blue wall’ too, people, just to be very clear.”?
Some pro-Palestinian protesters were escorted out of the event after they stood on benches in silent protest. Several of Harris’ speeches have been interrupted by demonstrators, reflecting the angst within her party over the Israel-Hamas conflict in Gaza.
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Walz thanks first responders and Secret Service, visits injured staffer after motorcade crash
From CNN's Aaron Pellish in Milwaukee
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz thanked first responders and Secret Service personnel for their response after?several passengers were injured when vehicles in his motorcade crashed en route to a Milwaukee event.
Walz told supporters at the?Milwaukee Area Labor Council’s “Laborfest 2024” event that President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris called him to check in following the crash, which he said resulted in “a few minor injuries.” The Democratic vice presidential nominee reassured those in the crowd that “everybody’s going to be OK.”??
Walz also stopped by a Milwaukee-area hospital to check on a staff member being treated for injuries following his motorcade’s crash, according to reporters traveling with the governor.?He spent approximately 15 to 20 minutes at the hospital.?
A campaign official confirmed to CNN that Walz visited the staffer at the hospital.
This post has been updated with additional developments.
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Walz motorcade involved in crash en route to Milwaukee event
From CNN's Aaron Pellish in Milwaukee
This image shows damage to two of the vans in the motorcade.
Pool
Three vehicles in the motorcade escorting Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to a campaign stop in Milwaukee were involved in a crash Monday, and some passengers were taken to a local hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, according to the Secret Service.
Several press vans got into a crash on Interstate 794 en route to Walz’s appearance at the Milwaukee Area Labor Council’s “Laborfest 2024,” where the Democratic vice presidential nominee was slated to speak this afternoon.
Staff in the vehicles were “violently thrown forward” as one van?slammed into another, according to reporters traveling with Walz. The governor’s vehicle was not involved in the crash, and ambulances responded to the scene, according to reporters.
Vice President Kamala Harris was briefed on the crash, and her staff will update her throughout the day, according to a White House official. Harris spoke with her running mate to check on him and his staff, the official said.?President Joe Biden also called Walz after the collision, the Harris-Walz campaign said. A White House official confirmed the president made the call before taking off on Air Force One for Pittsburgh.
According to a press pool report, one reporter suffered a bloody nose in the crash and another has a possible concussion.
US Secret Service spokesperson Joe Biesk said the injured passengers were treated by medical personnel on-site before being taken to a local hospital.
Biesk confirmed that Walz was not injured and said the crash is being investigated by the Milwaukee County Sheriff’s Office.?
This post has been updated with additional developments.
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Elon Musk posts fake image of Harris in communist uniform
From CNN's Kit Maher
Tech billionaire Elon Musk, a supporter of former President Donald Trump, on Monday posted a fake image of what appears to be Vice President Kamala Harris dressed in a red communist uniform.
“Kamala vows to be a communist dictator on day one. Can you believe she wears that outfit!?” Musk?posted on X, the social media platform he owns, in response to the?vice president’s post?warning about Trump being a “dictator on day one.”
According to?X’s policy,?users “may not share synthetic, manipulated, or out-of-context media that may deceive or confuse people and lead to harm. … In addition, we may label posts containing misleading media to help people understand their authenticity and to provide additional context.”
Musk’s post does not have any such label on it.
Last month, Trump posted a fake, AI-generated image depicting Harris speaking in front of a?communist?symbol at the Democratic National Convention.?
Some context: Images generated by artificial intelligence have exploded on social media in the run-up to the election. The?fake posts come as technology?platforms dismantle guardrails?and moderation policies designed to reduce the spread of dangerous misinformation.
These?changes?have been most acute on X, formerly?known as?Twitter,?after Musk?purchased the company,?gutted?in-house teams that worked to stop the spread of election disinformation and?restored?the banned accounts of prominent conspiracy theorists and extremists.
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Harris emphasizes "dignity of work" and vows to strengthen union protections in Labor Day remarks?
From CNN's Ali Main in Detroit
Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign event at Northwestern High School in Detroit on Monday, September 2.
Jacquelyn Martin/AP
Vice President Kamala Harris emphasized the “dignity of work” and vowed to strengthen protections for collective bargaining in remarks to a crowd of union members and leaders in Detroit on Labor Day.
“We celebrate unions because unions helped build America, and unions helped build America’s middle class,” she told a packed high school gymnasium.
Harris praised the labor movement for worker protections, saying, “you better thank a union member” for the five-day workweek, sick leave and vacation time.
Recalling her upbringing attending marches and meetings in California with her progressive parents, Harris reiterated that she learned “when people stand together,” they can “drive extraordinary change.”
Harris also criticized Donald Trump for actions she said were harmful to workers, prompting some members in the room to chant, “Trump’s a scab,” a critique popularized by United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain, who has sparred publicly with the former president.
Harris was joined onstage by national union leaders, including Fain,?American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten and National Education Association President Becky Pringle.
As Harris talked about what she would do to fight for Americans’ future, she vowed to ensure the “PRO Act,” legislation that would ensure workers’ rights to unionize and collectively bargain for workplace changes, and to “end union busting once and for all.”
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Use CNN’s personalized presidential voter guide to find out what the voting rules are near you
From CNN staff
Can I vote early? What deadlines should I know about? Do I need to show an ID?
Voters will begin casting their votes for the 2024 presidential election starting this month. North Carolina will begin mailing out ballots Friday, while early, in-person voting starts in several other states mid-September.
There’s still time to get your voting questions answered. Check out our personalized voter guide for information on how to register to vote, mail-in and early voting, and much more in your state.
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Whitmer contrasts Harris and Trump on labor issues ahead of VP's remarks to union workers in Detroit
From CNN's Ali Main in Detroit
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer addresses union members at the annual Labor Day Parade in Detroit on Monday.
Rebecca Cook/Reuters
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer praised Vice President Kamala Harris’ record on labor while bashing the Republican ticket as disconnected from the common man ahead of Harris’ Labor Day remarks in Detroit.
“The labor movement was born here. The middle class was built here. We changed the world right here in the city of Detroit, Michigan,” Whitmer told hundreds of union members and local leaders packed into a high school gym.
“What you do is informed by the people you’re around. Kamala Harris and Tim Walz have stood with the people their entire lives. They grew up middle class,” she said.
Whitmer then turned her attention to “that guy from Ohio,” a riff on Donald Trump’s previous labeling of her as “that woman from Michigan,” and pointed to how a steel mill in Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance’s Ohio hometown has been revitalized by an investment backed by the Biden-Harris administration.
The Michigan governor also poked fun at Trump for not being able to relate to average Americans.
“Look, if your most famous line is ‘You’re fired,’ you sure as hell don’t understand workers,” Whitmer later said, referencing Trump’s catchphrase on “The Apprentice,” adding, “I want our next president to say to workers, whomever she might be, ‘I’ve got your back.’”
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Here's what the presidential advertising landscape looks like ahead of the post-Labor Day sprint
From CNN's David Wright
Since President Joe Biden exited the 2024 presidential race, there’s been a flood of ad spending.
Republicans and Democrats have evenly contested battleground airwaves, but Democrats have had an edge overall, pouring nearly $100 million into digital advertising – much of it aimed at online fundraising.?
Republicans lead slightly in battleground states, spending about $241.4 to Democrats’ $235.7 million across the seven most competitive states between July 22 and today.
Where they’re spending: Both parties appear to agree that just seven states are the most competitive – Pennsylvania, Michigan, Georgia, Wisconsin, Arizona, North Carolina and Nevada – and they’ve targeted those states with tens of millions of ad dollars.
Pennsylvania looms especially large, accounting for more ad spending than any other state. Each side is also pouring resources into Michigan and Georgia.
Looking ahead: Democrats are currently poised to have the edge in advertising over the coming months. Between tomorrow, September 3, and Election Day, Democrats have bought $323.1 million worth of ad time, while Republicans have about $136.1 million booked.
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No longer the candidate,?Biden?reemerges as top surrogate for Harris campaign
From CNN's?Arlette Saenz?and?Betsy Klein
President Joe?Biden?reemerges?on the campaign trail?this week,?entering?a new political phase?as he closes out?his time in the White House and?works?to ensure?Vice President Kamala Harris succeeds him.
Biden?and Harris will kick off the final?sprint to the election together?on?Labor Day, using the holiday to woo working-class voters with an event at a local union hall in Pittsburgh – a symbolic show of force in a city?Biden?himself often turned to at key points in his political career.
The carefully crafted return to the campaign trail comes as the president is shifting from candidate to surrogate mode after abandoning his own bid for a second term. Biden told reporters he’s looking forward to hitting the campaign trail after?a two-week vacation in California and Delaware. His advisers have spent the past few weeks sketching out what his fall plans will entail on the campaign trail as he looks to burnish his legacy, sources familiar with the situation said.
The president is emerging with an initial roadmap running through Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan over the next five days, visiting the critical “blue wall” states where he narrowly beat former President Donald Trump in 2020. It will include a mix of campaign and official events to promote?popular agenda items,?offering a blueprint for how he’ll be deployed in the coming months.
Trump?allies in Michigan slam Harris on electric vehicle policies
From CNN's Ali Main
Rep. Lisa McClain speaks at a campaign rally with former President Donald Trump at Alro Steel manufacturing plant in Potterville, Michigan, on August 29.
Brian Snyder/Reuters
Allies of former President Donald Trump in Michigan railed against Vice President Kamala Harris on the issue of auto manufacturing ahead of the Democratic presidential nominee’s Labor Day visit to Detroit, where she’ll greet union members and national and local leaders.
McClain, who represents the northern part of the metro Detroit area, as well as Rep. John James, who represents a neighboring district, both argued that Biden-Harris administration policies meant to increase the producing of electric vehicles in the US are unrealistic.
James called EV mandates “detached from reality,” arguing that the country isn’t ready for an influx of electric vehicles from a critical infrastructure, charging infrastructure or affordability perspective. “No one is against EVs themselves, but this is not a well thought out plan,” he said.
On Thursday, Trump said during an economic messaging event at a steel distributor in Potterville, Michigan that he is a “big fan of electric cars,” but said he thinks they’re “limited” in functionality and expensive to make in the US.
He accused Harris and Democrats of wanting “immediately all electric cars,” adding, “we don’t have enough electricity to supply ourselves.”
The Harris campaign distributed a fact check earlier last week that pushed back on previous claims by Trump and his running mate, Sen. JD Vance, including that Harris supported a “mandate” for all electric vehicles, saying instead, the administration’s goal is to have EVs comprise half of all new vehicle sales by 2030.
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Harris to back US ownership of US steel, in blow to takeover by Japanese company
From CNN's Kevin Liptak and Kayla Tausche
The US Steel Clairton Coke Plant on March 20 in Clairton, Pennsylvania.
Jeff Swensen/Getty Images
Vice President Kamala Harris plans to say that US steel should remain domestically owned during a campaign stop in Pittsburgh on Monday, a campaign official said, lending her voice to a dispute over prospective Japanese ownership of the iconic American brand.
Harris plans to “stress her commitment to always have the backs of American steel workers,” the official said. It would be the first time Harris has waded specifically into the proposed sale of US steel to Nippon Steel, Japan’s biggest steelmaker.
The White House has previously opposed to the controversial deal, with President Joe Biden saying it is “important that we maintain strong American steel companies powered by American steel workers.” Biden outlined his position during an event in Pittsburgh, nicknamed “Steel City,” where he visited the headquarters of the United Steelworkers and called for higher tariffs to protect American manufacturing.
For the deal to close, it needs approval from both the Justice Department, which enforces antitrust laws, and the normally low profile but powerful Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, which evaluates takeovers on national security grounds. That Committee is comprised by members of the President Joe Biden’s cabinet, including the secretaries of Treasury, Commerce, Defense, State, Homeland Security and the Attorney General.
It remains unclear to what extent Biden or Harris, in their official capacity, will work to block the deal on national security grounds in the Treasury-led review.
Representatives for US Steel and Nippon Steel declined to comment on whether the companies had briefed Vice President Harris on the deal.?
Gold Star families did not invite Biden or Harris to Arlington Cemetery last week, White House says
From CNN's Sam Fossum
Former President Donald Trump lays a wreath alongside Marine Cpl. Kelsee Lainhart (Ret.), who was injured at the Abbey Gate Bombing, during a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery on August 26 in Arlington, Virginia.
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris were not invited by Gold Star Families to Arlington National Cemetery on the anniversary of the US withdrawal from Afghanistan, according to a White House official.?
CNN previously reported?that former President Donald Trump was invited by some of the families in his personal capacity. The ceremony was organized for families and their guests, not designed for elected officials.?
Remember: Trump has faced controversy over his visit to the cemetery last Monday, after a wreath-laying ceremony to honor the 13 US service members who were killed in the Kabul airport bombing in 2021. Trump was rebuked by the Army over his campaign’s use of video and images from the visit, which critics say ran afoul of rules prohibiting political activity on the sacred grounds.
The Army has said participants in the ceremony “were made aware of federal laws” regarding political activity and an employee of the cemetery who “attempted to ensure adherence to these rules was abruptly pushed aside.”
CNN’s Samantha Waldenberg,?Kate Sullivan?and?Shania Shelton contributed to this report.
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George Clooney calls Biden’s decision to exit 2024 race “the most selfless thing"
From CNN's Colin McCullough
Actor George Clooney greets photographers as he attends the red carpet of the movie "Wolfs" presented out of competition during the 81st International Venice Film Festival at Venice Lido, on September 1.
Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty Images
Actor George Clooney applauded President Joe Biden’s decision to exit the 2024 presidential race during the premiere of his movie “Wolf” at the Venice Film Festival on Sunday.?
Biden “did the most selfless thing anyone’s done since George Washington,” Clooney told reporters at the event.
Clooney’s?July 10th?opinion piece?in the New York Times calling for Biden to leave the?race was a startling admission from a leading Democratic booster and someone who has interacted with Biden privately that, in his view, the president was unfit to serve to another term.
But Clooney?downplayed his own role in urging Biden to drop out.
“All the machinations that got?us there – none of that is going to be remembered, and it shouldn’t be,” the Oscar-winning actor said.
Clooney insisted that Biden’s “selfless act” is what should be remembered.
“It’s very hard to let go of power. We know that, we’ve seen it all around the world. And for someone to say, ‘I think there’s a better way forward’ – all the credit goes to him.”
A self-professed “lifelong Democrat,” Clooney holds significant sway in the party as a well-known celebrity and a prolific fundraiser. He hosted an event earlier in the year, before Biden exited the race, that brought in $28 million for the president’s reelection.??
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Here's what the campaigns are doing on Labor Day
From CNN staff
Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign rally in Savannah, Georgia, on August 29.
Jacquelyn Martin/AP
This is how the Harris and Trump campaigns are spending the holiday today:
Kamala Harris: The vice president is set to travel to Detroit before being joined by President Joe Biden in Pittsburgh for a Labor Day event as part of the campaign’s push to appeal to working class voters across battleground states. The event will be held at 4:45 p.m. ET, per the White House.
Second gentleman Doug Emhoff will also attend a?Labor?Day?event in Newport News, Virginia.
Tim Walz: The Democratic vice presidential nominee will deliver remarks at the Milwaukee Area Labor Council’s Laborfest 2024 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Trump allies: At 9 a.m. ET, the?Trump?campaign in Michigan will host a press video call with current and retired members of the United Auto Workers to respond to Harris’ visit to Detroit.
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Biden will return to the campaign trail today after 2-week vacation
From CNN's Michael Williams and Arlette Saenz
President Joe Biden disembarks from Air Force One at Dover Air Force Base prior to departure for Rehoboth Beach in Delaware on August 25.
Craig Hudson/Reuters
President Joe Biden is set to return to the campaign trail on Monday, joining Vice President Kamala Harris at a Labor Day event in Pittsburgh after spending most?of the past weeks out of sight.
The president has stayed out of the public eye for large stretches of the bicoastal vacation, charting out how to spend his remaining months in office after abandoning his bid for a second term in the White House. Biden is expected to return to the campaign trail on Monday to support Harris before returning to Washington.
What’s still to come: Now free from the pressures and time constraints that come with being a campaign principal, Biden has worked over the last few weeks to set his legacy — with a special focus on foreign affairs. His administration’s negotiation with Russia that led to the largest prisoner exchange in decades at the beginning of this month was a crucial achievement.
Throughout his time in California and Delaware, the president participated in a series of calls with foreign leaders as the US continues to push for a deal that would see a ceasefire in Gaza and the release of Hamas-held hostages, while trying to stop clashes between Israel and Hezbollah from devolving into a wider war that could draw in the United States and Iran.
Biden has also spoken with at least five world leaders since his speech at the Democratic National Convention last week. He spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about the continued threats from Iran and the need for a ceasefire deal last?Wednesday.
Harris campaign touts her pro-union record ahead of Labor Day events
From CNN's Aaron Pellish
Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign is touting her role in helping the Biden administration become “the most pro-labor administration in history” ahead of a slate of nationwide events showcasing support for her campaign from labor groups, punctuated by President Joe Biden and Harris hosting a joint event in Pittsburgh.?
The campaign is highlighting Harris casting the deciding vote to advance the 2021 Covid stimulus package and to pass the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, along with her support for unions as a senator and as California’s attorney general ahead of her visit to Detroit on Monday, where she’ll appear alongside union leaders and members ahead of her appearance in Pittsburgh.
The Harris campaign reiterated her promise to sign the Protecting the Right to Organize Act, a bill expanding protections for workers’ rights to collectively bargain.?
The Harris campaign is also drawing a contrast with former President Donald Trump’s record as “one of the most anti-worker and anti-union presidents in history,” and pointing to proposals outlined in the conservative policy document Project 2025 to suggest a second Trump administration will hurt workers.
Harris will be joined in Michigan by American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten, National Education Association president Becky Pringle, and United Auto Workers president Shawn Fain. Some of the largest unions in the country will have national and local leaders present at both the Michigan and Pennsylvania events as well as Gov. Tim Walz’s visit to Milwaukee, including the AFL-CIO, the International Brotherhood of Electric Workers, and the Service Employees International Union, among others.
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Trump says he had "every right to" interfere with presidential election
From CNN's Kate Sullivan
Former President Donald Trump arrives for a town hall campaign event on August 29 in La Crosse, Wisconsin.
Scott Olson/Getty Images
Former President Donald Trump, in an interview aired Sunday, said he had “every right to” interfere with a presidential election, as he faces an updated indictment in the federal election interference case against him.?
Special counsel Jack Smith filed a superseding indictment last week in his investigation into the former president’s and his allies’ alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election. The new indictment slims the allegations against the 2024 Republican presidential nominee in light of the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling, though none of the four charges have been dropped.?
Trump said of Vice President Kamala Harris:
Pence, who served as Trump’s vice president, has been critical of Trump after the deadly insurrection at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, and has said he won’t endorse Trump for president. Pence was targeted that day by a mob of pro-Trump supporters — including some chanting “Hang Mike Pence” — who were trying to stop the election results from being certified. Trump continues to falsely claim that Pence had the power to stop the certification of the results.?
Trump, who is set to debate Harris next week, referenced the viral moment where she said to Pence, “I’m speaking,” when he was interrupting her during their vice presidential debate in 2020.??
Trump was initially talking about Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, which Harris was a part of as a senator from California, and said Harris was “vicious” during the hearing.?
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The 2024 presidential race hits key new stretch as debate approaches and first ballots?are set to go out
From CNN's Eric Bradner
People prepare to cast their ballots in Royal Oak, Michigan, on August 6.?
Ryan Garza/Detroit Free Press/USA Today Network
The 2024 presidential race is set to enter a critical new juncture, with Vice President Kamala Harris?and former President?Donald Trump set to debate and the first swing state ballots hitting mailboxes shortly after the Labor Day holiday.
With the?calendar?turned to September, both campaigns are narrowing their focus on key battleground states — with Harris eyeing an expanded map and Trump digging in across the upper Midwest states that delivered him the presidency in 2016 and ousted him from it in 2020.
It all comes as voting is set to begin?this week:
The first ballots of the 2024 election will go out Friday in North Carolina, one of a handful of potentially critical Sun Belt states.
Then, two weeks later, early in-person voting starts in Minnesota, South Dakota and Virginia.
Harris last week focused on the Sun Belt,?with a bus tour in Georgia and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz,?also visiting?North Carolina.
Trump, meanwhile, turned his attention to the “blue wall” of Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, holding events in all three states late in the week and promising an economic revival.