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Harris says Trump's verbal abuse 'disqualifies' him for White House

A few days before the presidential election, on November 5, and while the polls are very close, Kamala Harris and Donald Trump continue to lead their duel remotely to win.

Democratic candidate Kamala Harris believes that Donald Trump's verbal violence “disqualifies” him for the White House, in reaction to the comments of his Republican rival targeting former parliamentarian Liz Cheney.

The former president “increased his verbal violence against his political opponents and, in great detail, suggested pointing guns at former elected official Liz Cheney. This must disqualify him,” claimed Kamala Harris.

“Someone who wants to be president of the United States and uses this kind of verbal violence is clearly disqualified from being president,” said the vice-president and Democratic candidate upon her arrival in Madison, Wisconsin, a key swing state. the presidential election.

Cheney in support of Harris

The Republican candidate proposed Thursday during a public interview with conservative host Tucker Carlson in Glendale, Arizona regarding Liz Cheney: “Let's put her gun in her hand in the face of nine barrels of guns shooting at her. Let’s see what she would think, you know, with the guns pointed at her.”

The person responded to Donald Trump on vindictive, cruel and unstable who intends to be a tyrant,” she lamented.

Former pillar of the Republican Party, Liz Cheney now supports Kamala Harris. She was also part of the parliamentary commission responsible for investigating the assault on the Capitol on January 6, 2021.

A close battle

Kamala Harris and Donald Trump continue their intense remote duel for the White House this Friday, sparing no effort to mobilize voters in an extremely uncertain race.

The Democrat is at a meeting in Milwaukee, the largest city in Wisconsin, with rapper Cardi B at her side in support.

The Republican is also expected in Milwaukee after a last-minute stopover in Dearborn, Michigan, the largest American city with a majority population of Arab origin. Objective: court this electorate, part of which is turning away from Democrats because of the Biden/Harris administration's support for the war waged by Israel in Gaza and Lebanon.

A few thousand undecided voters, in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Arizona, hold the keys to an extraordinary election marked in particular by the resounding arrival in July of the vice-president in the campaign, after the withdrawal of the President Joe Biden.

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