Harris’ response featured in the misleading video was taken from a different part of the same interview with CNN host Dana Bash
Voter feelings about the economy could be the deciding factor in who wins the White House in November. NBC News' Hallie Jackson traveled to eastern North Carolina to ask voters there how they feel the economy is,
An NBC/CNBC/Telemundo survey shows Harris with the Democrats' slimmest margin among Latino voters in four election cycles. The top issues motivating this voting bloc were the cost of living, inflation and jobs.
When asked which presidential candidate they trusted to do a better job on the cost of living, 48 percent backed Harris against 45 percent for Trump. On jobs and the economy, Harris was also ahead 47 percent to Trump's 45 percent.
What if when voters say “It’s the economy!” they’re just expressing a partisan viewpoint? That’s what a look at polling data suggests.
Rep. Jason Smith, House Ways & Means Chairman, joined The Brian Kilmeade Show & addressed Harris gaining traction with voters on the economy and how Donald Trump being on the ticket will help the GOP
There may not be much she can do on immigration, given the baked-in median-voter perception that Republicans are the “tougher” of the two parties and therefore the most capable of handling anything that involves security or “law and order.” The economy, though, is a different matter.
Trump is famously popular among high-net-worth individuals for his proposition to extend and expand his 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
After being ridiculed for not having a policy platform, the Kamala Harris campaign released an 82-page document outlining the vice president’s ideas on the economy. No longer suffering from lack of detail,
Former President Donald Trump appears to be making inroads with Latino voters, performing better with the demographic from his two previous presidential runs.