Poging GOUD - Vrij
Up close and personal With Harris, the mood is convivial and the charisma factor is high
The Guardian
|October 12, 2024
The View, America's most popular daytime talkshow, was on commercial break. Kamala Harris sat writing absence notes for students who were missing class to attend the live broadcast. "Is it just today, right?" the vice president laughed.
She handed over the letters written on notepaper headed "The Vice President". One said: "Dear teacher, please excuse Dani from class today. She was hanging out with us. Best and thank you for being an educator. Kamala."
It was an unscripted moment that the studio audience loved but TV viewers wouldn't see. Harris, running the shortest presidential campaign in modern US history after being unexpectedly plunged into the contest when Joe Biden dropped out, is exploring ways to reveal herself to a wary nation.
Still a relatively unknown quantity, the former California attorney general and US senator is trying to make the electorate feel comfortable about the prospect of President Harris.
In less than three months Harris has raised a record-breaking billion dollars. She has tried to put daylight between herself and the unpopular incumbent figure of Biden, and turn the election into a referendum on her opponent, former US president Donald Trump.
The vice-president has sought to bring positive vibes to a country that seems to have anxiety in its bones. She has set out to persuade the US to do something that it has never done before in its 248-year existence: elect a woman to the White House - and a woman of color to boot.
Harris has done it while carrying the burden of the hopes of millions in the US and beyond who fear that the return of Trump to the White House would herald a new dark age for American democracy and the planet. Opinion polls suggest the race is a dead heat.
This week the Guardian joined her for three days on the campaign trail, flying hundreds of miles across the country on Air Force Two, trailing her convoy as it halted traffic in Manhattan and questioning her at two off-the-record meetings with journalists.
Dit verhaal komt uit de October 12, 2024-editie van The Guardian.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN The Guardian
The Guardian
Mitchell's calm earns easy win after Brook brings chaos
A chaotically entertaining game characterised by batting that was either sensational or - more frequently - shambolic was settled by Daryl Mitchell’s ability to find serenity amid the calamity.
3 mins
October 27, 2025
The Guardian
Andrew could face Commons debate over his conduct
Prince Andrew could face a parliamentary debate on his conduct despite the government so far refusing to allocate time in the Commons as the Liberal Democrats indicated they were exploring ways of raising the issue.
2 mins
October 27, 2025
The Guardian
'A creeping annexation'
Fears that Gaza ceasefire line will become permanent
4 mins
October 27, 2025
The Guardian
Peer discussed tobacco bill with relative 'high up' at BAT
A member of the House of Lords who is trying to derail the generational ban on tobacco sales discussed the legislation with a family member who is “very high up” at British American Tobacco (BAT).
2 mins
October 27, 2025
The Guardian
Right to buy in reverse: how Brighton is acting on its housing crisis
On a windswept housing estate by the Channel, Jacob Taylor surveyed the latest addition to his property empire: a mixture of one-, twoand three-bedroom flats, built on the playing fields of an old private school.
4 mins
October 27, 2025
The Guardian
'No life' Slow death of Kupiansk reflects fate of cities on frontline
Lyubov Lobunets, 77, left her home in the frontline Ukrainian city of Kupiansk in August when it was hit by a Russian explosive.
4 mins
October 27, 2025
The Guardian
All change? Humiliating for the big guns, but it's no revolution
Catherine Connolly's landslide victory in Ireland's presidential election is a stunning political feat that humiliates the establishment but does not signify a national swerve to the left.
3 mins
October 27, 2025
The Guardian
Comedy review
Celeb crush tale must try harder
1 mins
October 27, 2025
The Guardian
Trump tour of Asia begins with Thai-Cambodian ceasefire deal
Donald Trump has overseen the signing of a ceasefire agreement between Thailand and Cambodia on the first day of an Asia tour during which he will seal new trade agreements and hold a crucial meeting with China’s Xi Jinping.
3 mins
October 27, 2025
The Guardian
Leftwing independent Connolly wins Irish presidential election by landslide
The leftwing independent candidate Catherine Connolly has won a landslide election victory and been declared Ireland's next president.
3 mins
October 27, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

