Harris revs up boisterous crowd at Atlanta presidential campaign rally

Published: Jul. 30, 2024 at 9:19 AM EDT|Updated: Jul. 30, 2024 at 11:04 PM EDT
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ATLANTA, Ga. - Vice President Kamala Harris is in Atlanta for her sixth trip to Georgia this year, but the first as the Democrat Party’s presumptive White House nominee.

Her visit also comes three weeks before the start of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, where she would solidify her nomination, if not before.

Harris landed Tuesday afternoon ahead of the 7 p.m. rally at Georgia State University.

After landing, she was greeted by Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens and Fulton County Board of Commissioners Chairman Robb Pitts. Before heading to GSU, Harris made a surprise stop at Paschal’s Restaurant and Bar in Atlanta.

Vice President Kamala Harris at Paschal's Restaurant and Bar, Tuesday, July 30, 2024.
Vice President Kamala Harris at Paschal's Restaurant and Bar, Tuesday, July 30, 2024.(WANF/Pool)

The trip to Georgia signals new hope for the Democrats.

“So Georgia, today I ask you: Are you ready to get to work?” Harris said in remarks that began shortly after 7 p.m.

She told the cheering, boisterous, packed Atlanta arena that the next 98 days would be a fight, but they’d win come November, as she taunted Donald Trump for wavering on whether he’d show up for their debate.

“The momentum in this race is shifting,” the likely Democratic nominee said. “And there are signs Donald Trump is feeling it.”

Trump earlier said he’d debate Harris, but is now questioning the value of a meetup and saying he “probably” will debate her, but he “can also make a case for not doing it.”

Harris seized on it. “So he won’t debate me, but he and his running mate have a lot to say about me,” she said. “And by the way, don’t you find some of their stuff to just be plain weird.”

“Well Donald,” she said, addressing him head-on. “I do hope you’ll reconsider. Meet me on the debate stage ... because as the saying goes, if you’ve got something to say, say it to my face.” Trump has suggested the Sept. 10 debate on ABC News should be moved to a different network, calling ABC “fake news.”

Georgia outreach pushes to get Gen Z voters to polls

Just over three months remain until Americans decide which candidate will lead the country. And Georgia will play a big role.

Georgia young voters

Harris hasn’t yet formally seized the Democrat nomination, though she is the only person who met the qualifications to vie for it, the Democratic National Committee announced Tuesday, and will all-but-certainly clinch it come Monday when the party concludes a virtual roll call vote. Her pick of a running mate is also expected by early next week when Harris plans to begin a seven-stop tour of battleground states to hold rallies alongside her vice presidential nominee.

On Tuesday, the roughly 8,000-capacity basketball arena at Georgia State University was filled to its rafters with voters waving signs, dancing to the Harris campaign soundtrack and a performance by Megan Thee Stallion. Such an atmosphere would not have been possible just 10 days ago, with the party reeling over whether the 81-year-old Biden would remain in the race after a dismal performance magnified concerns about his age and abilities and ultimately ended his campaign.

“This is like Barack Obama 2008 on steroids for me,” said Mildred Hobson Doss, a 59-year-old who came downtown from suburban Lilburn. “I would have voted for President Biden again. But we are ready.”

Harris’ campaign argues her appeal to young people, working-age women and non-white voters has scrambled the dynamics in Georgia and other states that are demographically similar, from North Carolina to Nevada and Arizona.

In a strategy memo released after the president left the race, Harris campaign chair Jen O’Malley Dillon, who held the same role for Biden, reaffirmed the importance of winning Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, a trio of industrial states that have formed the traditional Democratic blue wall.

But she also argued that the vice president’s place atop the ticket “opens up additional persuadable voters” and described them as “disproportionately Black, Latino and under 30″ in places like Georgia.

“The energy is infectious,” said Georgia Democratic Chairwoman Nikema Williams, a congresswoman from Atlanta. “My phone has been blowing up. People want to be part of this movement.”

Harris began Tuesday with her days as a prosecutor — setting up the contrast between the law and Trump’s many legal problems and misdeeds. But she also aggressively defended the Biden istration’s record and said she would work to voting rights legislation and restore abortion rights stripped by the fall of Roe v. Wade.

“America has tried these failed policies before. And we are not going back. We’re not going back,” Harris said, shaking her head no as the crowd cheered “we’re not going back.”

Republicans, who still control Georgia’s state government, counter that Biden’s lagging popularity and concern over higher consumer prices and immigration will transfer to Harris in the historically conservative state.

Trump, Vance coming to Georgia for a rally this weekend

Former President Donald Trump and his running mate, JD Vance, are set to hold a rally on Saturday, only days after the presumptive Democrat nominee Kamala Harris was to hold a rally herself.

Donald Trump and JD Vance

But they concede that the landscape suddenly looks much closer to 2020 – when Biden won by about 0.25 percentage points — than when Trump was riding high after the Republican National Convention and surviving an assassination attempt.

“Trump was going to win Georgia. It was over,” said Republican consultant Brian Robinson. “The Democrats have a chance here for a reset.”

And Trump is not taking chances. Earlier Tuesday, the former president announced that he would come to Atlanta on Saturday for a rally in the same Georgia State arena.

Robinson said Harris still has plenty of liabilities, including the progressive positions she took in her failed 2020 primary campaign and her various rhetorical stumbles. But he said Harris so far in this campaign has been “in command,” and if that continues, “we have a new ballgame and she will be competitive in Georgia.”

Trump campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt dismissed Harris as “just as weak, failed and incompetent as Joe Biden” and said the vice president would have to explain her of Biden istration policies that “hurt working families in Georgia over the past four years.”

The campaign and Georgia Democratic officials have 24 offices across the state, including two added last weekend in metro Atlanta. Trump and the Republican National Committee opened their first Georgia offices only recently.

Republicans train poll Ga. watchers 100 days out from election

“The enthusiasm and energy on the part of Republican voters is through the roof,” Georgia GOP chief Josh McKoon said. “I mean, I’ve never really seen it like this before.”

U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene spoke to a group of volunteer poll watchers on Sunday at the...

In a call with ers after her speech, Harris thanked them for their work and noted early voting starts in some states in just 38 days.

“This is a sprint,” she said. “And we know what we need to do to cross the finish line.”

The fast-growing, diversifying Atlanta suburbs and exurbs offer the most opportunity for swings, especially from GOP-leaning moderates disenchanted with Trump.

For Harris, that means depending on voters as varied as Michael Sleister, a white suburbanite, and Allen Smith, a Black man who lives not far from downtown Atlanta.

Sleister, who considers himself an independent, has lived in Forsyth County for 35 years. “I’ve voted Republican many times in my life,” he said, but not since the GOP took a rightward turn during President Barack Obama’s istration.

“Now I see the Republican Party as representing a direct threat to my grandchildren,” he said, adding that he sees Trump “as just a horrible person.”

Smith is a 41-year-old Atlanta native who has become a first-time campaign volunteer since Harris became the likely nominee.

“I was driving when I heard the news about President Biden endorsing her, and I started pounding my fist — I decided right then I would do whatever I could to help her get elected,” Smith said.