Vice President Kamala Harris faced Latino voters at a Univision town hall, where she was grilled with questions on the economy, immigration and her plans for the White House.
Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday took questions from Latino voters at a town hall in Nevada, where she was pressed for specifics on her proposals on immigration, the economy and more.
Harris faced about a dozen questions during the roughly hour-long event hosted by Univision, where she sought to win over this key demographic group with just 26 days to go before Election Day. The Democratic nominee pointed to her record as vice president and swung ferociously at her opponent, Republican former President Donald Trump, but she was light on specifics on her plans for the country.
Here are the highlights: Harris pushes back on Trump attacks over hurricane response
In the first question of the night, a voter from Tampa asked Harris about rumors that the Biden-Harris administration did not do enough to respond to Hurricanes Helene and Milton. Former President Trump, the Republican nominee, has fanned those rumors, claiming at a recent rally that President Biden’s response to the storms was «the worst hurricane response since Katrina», invoking the heavily criticized federal response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
Harris defended the Biden administration, accusing critics of «playing political games» and insisting claims the response was inadequate are «just not accurate.» She said she has been working with people on the ground in Georgia, North Carolina, Florida and other southeastern states to get Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA) resources to people in need.
«Another piece of work that I’ve been doing, it’s based on my years of being an attorney general in California, is telling those corporations and those companies that during crisis and emergencies jack up prices», Harris said. «I’ve seen it happen before, that we’re watching them and at a moment of desperation for these individuals and families, whether it be to be able to get temporary shelter at a hotel for gas prices, for even airline tickets, that we’ll be watching if they’re jacking up prices to make sure they’ll be serious consequence. And that’s the kind of work I will do going forward.»On immigration, Harris won’t say how she’d be different than Biden
Voters pressed Harris for specifics on her plans for immigration and how her policies would differ from President Biden’s.