Texas Weekly Online

Liz Cheney predicts ‘millions of Republicans’ will vote for Harris: ‘Vote your conscience’

Liz Cheney predicts ‘millions of Republicans’ will vote for Harris: ‘Vote your conscience’

Liz Cheney teamed up with Vice President Kamala Harris Monday in a last-minute effort to appeal to moderate Republicans who the former congresswoman believes might be uneasy about voting for Donald Trump but are afraid to say so publicly.  Harris and Cheney visited three counties: Chester County in Pennsylvania, Oakland County in Michigan and Waukesha County in Wisconsin. Each were won by Nikki Haley, the former South Carolina governor and U.S. ambassador to the United Nations who ran against Trump for the Republican nomination.  During a townhall in Michigan, Cheney framed the November election as a choice between “right and wrong.” TRUMP CAMPAIGN SENDS LETTER TO CBS DEMANDING UNEDITED ‘60 MINUTES’ HARRIS TRANSCRIPT, TEASES POTENTIAL LAWSUIT “I certainly have many Republicans who will say to me, I can’t be public. They do worry about a whole range of things, including violence. But they’ll do the right thing,” Cheney said.  The daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney then predicted that “millions” of moderate Republicans who are too afraid to go against Trump publicly will vote for Harris.  “And I would just remind people, if you’re at all concerned, you can vote your conscience and not ever have to say a word to anybody. And there will be millions of Republicans who do that on November 5th, vote for Vice President Harris,” Cheney said, eliciting applause from the audience.  Cheney was essentially exiled from the Republican Party for participating in a congressional investigation of Trump’s involvement in the Jan. 6, 2021, events at the U.S. Capitol.  She lost her congressional seat in a primary battle two years ago.

KJP denies that Kamala Harris has had trouble distinguishing herself from Biden: ‘I’ve not seen that’

KJP denies that Kamala Harris has had trouble distinguishing herself from Biden: ‘I’ve not seen that’

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on Monday pushed back on the idea that Vice President Kamala Harris has struggled to distinguish herself from President Biden on the campaign trail.  A reporter suggested Harris has had difficulty separating herself from Biden’s domestic and foreign policy positions in “interview after interview.” “Does she have a green light? If she wanted to express a different point of view than the administration on any topic — foreign or domestic — she could do so? Or, is she required to be a loyal vice president to President Biden.”  “I disagree,” Jean-Pierre shot back, arguing that she’s seen Harris as “incredibly strong” and “very clear-eyed” in interviews. WHITE HOUSE: BIDEN IS NOT HOLDING HARRIS BACK, HAS BEEN ‘REALLY CLEAR ABOUT PASSING THE TORCH’ “She has indeed been a partner with this president and these successes that we have seen from this administration,” Jean-Pierre said.  She said Biden has seen Harris as loyal but understands that she will be charting “her own path” forward.  Pressed again to respond to allegations that Harris has failed to distinguish policy positions from Biden, Jean-Pierre said: “I’ve not seen that.”  Jean-Pierre said she had instead seen a vice president who “has shown strength and leadership” and one who “cares about the American people.”  SECRET SERVICE TRAINED AT MOCK WHITE HOUSE THAT HOLLYWOOD PRODUCER TYLER PERRY BUILT AS STAGE “That’s what we have seen. That’s what many of the American people want to see. They want to see a fighter. And that’s who she is,” Jean-Pierre said.  Since formally garnering the nomination for vice president, Harris has received flak for what critics believe has been her failure to clearly demonstrate how a Harris administration would be different from the Biden administration.  The question was put to Harris at a campaign rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan, on Friday. Asked to name one policy she would’ve done differently over the last three-and-a-half years, Harris dismissed the question, saying it was not the tradition of vice presidents to criticize their presidents. And earlier this month, Harris told the co-hosts of “The View” she couldn’t think of anything significant she would’ve done differently than Biden.  “There is not a thing that comes to mind,” Harris said when asked the question.  When asked the same question during an interview with Stephen Colbert, Harris said: “I’m obviously not Joe Biden.”  The vice president has hinted at what a Harris administration would look like. During a border visit last month, Harris proposed toughening Biden’s border policies.  Harris has affirmed her support for legalizing marijuana saying: “I just think we have come to a point where we have to understand that we need to legalize it and stop criminalizing it.” The vice president has also proposed lowering the capital gains taxes from the levelels under President Biden. 

VA back paid hundreds of fired employees, report claims, as agency says it’ll ‘ensure’ bad actors can’t return

VA back paid hundreds of fired employees, report claims, as agency says it’ll ‘ensure’ bad actors can’t return

EXCLUSIVE: A right-leaning research group is claiming that the Department of Veterans Affairs under the Biden administration back paid more than $130 million to 1,700 people fired under a Trump-era law that allows for easier accountability for federal employees. Through Freedom of Information Act filings, the America First Policy Institute will soon release the results of its probe. Its investigation also found the VA reinstated more than 100 terminated employees who were fired for indiscretions ranging from negligence to sleeping on the job. Dozens of dismissals accounted for in documents reviewed by Fox News Digital did not have other specific offenses listed with them. Following the passage of the 2017 law, the VA reportedly failed to bargain with its public employee union and was ordered to attend arbitration. Because of this, according to a source familiar, the VA could have been required to rehire all previously terminated employees, including those fired for “grievous misconduct” like patient abuse or harassment. The agency ultimately reached a settlement with the union in 2023 and only 106 out of 1,700 employees offered financial compensation so far have been reinstated. GOP VETERAN LAWMAKER DROPS SCATHING ‘STOLEN VALOR’ LETTER TO WALZ AS TRUMP CAMP RIPS ‘FREAKISH TIMOTHY’ The investigation found that of the more than 4,000 terminated employees, more than 1,700 received back pay or compensation. At that rate, back pay to the entire group of former employees would total $300 million, a statement from AFPI read. Former Trump VA Secretary Robert Wilkie said the current administration has “let down American veterans and taxpayers” with such actions. “Those fired for mistreating American veterans should not even be allowed near the VA, much less reinstated,” said Wilkie, now a fellow at AFPI’s Center for American Security.  “Instead of litigating these baseless grievances or working with Congress to strengthen the Accountability Act, the Biden-Harris administration surrendered to the government employee union. Taxpayers and veterans who receive care from poor performers will pay the price.” ARMY VET PREDICTS FIRST RED FLIP OF ‘POOREST’ NC DISTRICT SINCE 1883, CITING BIDEN-ERA ‘MALAISE’ In 2017, under the previous administration, VA failed to bargain with AFGE on the implementation of this law — as legally required by VA’s contract. As a result, the agency was repeatedly court-ordered to reinstate fired employees, the source said. But current VA leadership is adamant that no employee previously fired for serious offenses like patient abuse has been reinstated. “VA has ensured that bad actors cannot return to work and saved taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars,” a department spokesperson told Fox News Digital.  “The [Trump] administration’s implementation of the 2017 law was repeatedly struck down by the courts, putting VA at risk of having to rehire individuals who committed patient abuse, harassment, and criminal activity — and putting taxpayers on the hook for more than $1 billion.” The spokesperson said the VA will continue to hold employees accountable who mistreat patients or commit other transgressions, and that anyone who is reinstated will be held to that high standard or be dismissed.  CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP “Veterans trust VA at the highest rate in history — and we are delivering more care and more benefits to more veterans than ever before,” they said. The law Trump signed, authored by Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., was the Department of Veterans Affairs Accountability and Whistleblower Protection Act — meant to do what its title laid out. It gave the agency new authority to terminate employees for poor performance or misconduct more quickly, and led to multiple grievances being filed by the public employee union AFGE. Some of the reinstated employees were originally terminated for sleeping on the job, unauthorized access to employee medical records and failure to follow procedures, according to FOIA documents obtained by Fox News Digital.

Fox News Politics: Secret Service’s Butler breakdown detailed in preliminary House report

Fox News Politics: Secret Service’s Butler breakdown detailed in preliminary House report

Welcome to the Fox News’ Politics newsletter, with the latest political news from Washington, D.C. and updates from the 2024 campaign trail.  Here’s what’s happening… – New report shows a clear front-runner in Harris, Trump campaign cash race –Nathan Wade admitted to multiple White House meetings during Trump Georgia probe, transcript suggests -Supreme Court rejects lawyer Michael Cohen lawsuit against Trump over alleged retaliation The deadly shooting at former President Trump’s rally in Pennsylvania on July 13 was a “preventable” incident stemming from a lack of proper planning and communication between law enforcement agencies, according to a new report. The House Task Force investigating the attempts on Trump’s life is releasing their interim findings on Monday, with a final report expected by Dec. 13. “Although the findings in this report are preliminary, the information obtained during the first phase of the Task Force’s investigation clearly shows a lack of planning and coordination between the Secret Service and its law enforcement partners before the rally,” the report said…Read more ‘BLANKET AMNESTY’: 11 million illegals would have become citizens under bill that Kamala Harris promoted…Read more ‘YOU CAN TOO’: Harris invokes Jimmy Carter in bid to get supporters to vote early…Read more ‘RIGHT CALL’: First Lady Jill Biden tells ABC that President Biden dropping out of the race was ‘right call’…Read more ‘BAD POLICY’: Harris death tax reform could impact more than just the ultra-wealthy, experts say…Read more INVESTIGATIVE REPORT: Pentagon lacks counter-drone procedure leading to incursions like at Langley, experts say…Read more ‘HISTORICALLY BAD’: Critics drag Harris for ‘cringe’ pre-recorded video aired during Catholic charity dinner…Read more SHROUD OF SECRECY: How a secret ballot could undermine a potential Trump endorsement in race to the top…Read more ‘WINDOW’ OF OPPORTUNITY: Graham says Israel has window to ‘replace Hamas forever’ after Sinwar killing: ‘Door is now open’…Read more ‘HEAD OF THE SNAKE’: Speaker Johnson says now is the time for US, Israel to go after Iran: ‘Head of the snake’…Read more WHO’S MORE ACCESSIBLE?: Trump-Vance ticket has done combined 87 interviews since August compared to 48 for Harris-Walz…Read more ‘JESUS IS KING’: Vance takes faith approach after Harris mocked pro-life protesters at rally…Read more MAKE A WISH: What Donald Trump said he’s getting Kamala Harris for her birthday…Read more MC’DONALD’ TRUMP: Trump makes fries at Pennsylvania McDonald’s: ‘I’ve now worked for 15 minutes more than Kamala’…Read more ‘BELITTING AND INSULTING’: New ‘insulting’ Harris ad target’s Black men’s love lives…Read more PARTING WAYS: Harris campaign abandons Biden in final weeks before Election Day…Read more WISCONSIN SENATE: GOP challenger ties Sen Baldwin’s remark about Trump voters to Clinton’s infamous ‘deplorables’ moment…Read more ‘SOULS TO THE POLLS’: Harris makes pitch to Black churches after telling protester praising Jesus ‘you’re at the wrong rally’…Read more ‘1M TO SOMEONE IN SWING STATES’: Here’s how Elon Musk’s $1 million a day give-away to battleground voters works…Read more NECK AND NECK: Trump, Harris neck and neck as Dems lose ground among Latino, Black voters…Read more ELECTION THREATS TASK FORCE: DOJ deploys district elections officers to handle ‘threats and intimidation’…Read more CATCH AND RELEASE: Blue state, ICE battle over releasing illegal immigrants as expert warns politicians put ideology over safety…Read more ‘VITRIOLIC HATRED’: Elon Musk to upgrade security after Der Spiegel labels him ‘Public Enemy No. 2’…Read more ‘HURRICANE HELENE FIRSTHAND’: Trump plans to tour the devastation left by Hurricane Helene in latest battleground state stop…Read more ‘DELAYING THE TRANSPARENCY’: Pressure grows on Georgia Secretary of State to release results of non-citizen voter roll audit…Read more PEACH FIGHT: Georgia casts over 1.4M ballots as critical battleground shatters early voting records…Read more GOV GRILLED: Dem battleground gov has no answer when pressed for policy difference between Harris, Biden…Read more DEMOCRACY ’24: Early In-person voting begins for Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut, Idaho, North Dakota, South Carolina, Texas…Read more Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more on FoxNews.com.

Hollywood descends on Georgia for Harris as she battles Trump for working-class vote

Hollywood descends on Georgia for Harris as she battles Trump for working-class vote

Sunday brought a stark split screen to the 2024 presidential race – Vice President Kamala Harris marking her 60th with Stevie Wonder singing “Happy Birthday” in Georgia, while former President Trump worked the drive-thru at a McDonald’s in Pennsylvania. Celebrities have been flocking to support Harris’ 2024 campaign since she entered the race over the summer, and battleground states are seeing their fair share of A-lister visits as early voting kicks off. Among the places where star power has been most pronounced is Georgia, which has seen a litany of famous faces. GEORGIA GOP CHAIR SHARES 2-PRONGED ELECTION STRATEGY AS TRUMP WORKS TO WIN BACK PEACH STATE It comes as both campaigns work to generate support in the state that President Biden won by less than 1% in 2020. The winner will likely need a significant amount of support from the state’s Black population and middle-class suburban voters outside of Atlanta. For his part to win over working voters, Trump cooked and served french fries to customers at a McDonald’s in Pennsylvania on Sunday, while accusing Harris of lying about once working at the fast-food restaurant. “I’ve now worked for 15 minutes more than Kamala at McDonald’s,” Trump said through the drive-thru window as he handed out orders.  Meanwhile, part of Harris’ strategy to win over voters appears to be reaching out to Hollywood celebrities. Before Wonder’s appearance on Sunday, Georgia also saw rally appearances by Grammy-winning artists Meghan Thee Stallion and Usher. In September, music icon John Legend appeared at a fireside chat event aimed at engaging young Georgia voters, according to Fox 5 Atlanta. Oscar-winning actress Julia Roberts also returned to her hometown of Smyrna, Georgia, to campaign for Harris.  TRUMP VS HARRIS ROUND 2? VOTERS IN KEY GA COUNTY REVEAL IF THEY WANT SECOND DEBATE Musical artist MAJOR, stars of Bravo’s “Married To Medicine,” “Orange Is The New Black” actress Uzo Aduba, and “The Walking Dead” actress Danai Gurira have all traveled to Georgia to help Harris. Georgia is not the only state where Harris received celebrity support – band Bon Iver performed for her campaign in Wisconsin, singer Lizzo appeared in Detroit and actress Jennifer Garner is holding events in Arizona. But the concentrated flow of celebrities to Georgia reflects the state’s critical status in the election. The Peach State has also already shattered previous voter turnout records, with more than 1.4 million early and absentee ballots recorded so far. TRUMP VS HARRIS ROUND 2? VOTERS IN KEY GA COUNTY REVEAL IF THEY WANT SECOND DEBATE Celebrity support is not a new phenomenon in presidential races by any stretch, but it’s worth noting Harris has seen much more high-profile public support from Hollywood than Trump. Trump’s campaign won endorsements from NASCAR driver Danica Patrick, who appeared with Trump’s running mate Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, in North Carolina; actor Dennis Quaid, who spoke in support of Trump in California; Grammy winner Kanye “Ye” West, and country singer Jason Aldean, among others. Harris’ endorsers also include Bruce Springsteen, Taylor Swift and Billie Eilish. 

US service members abroad caught in the middle of overseas ballot battle raging between House Dems, GOP

US service members abroad caught in the middle of overseas ballot battle raging between House Dems, GOP

A group of House Democrats is protesting proposed GOP-led voting restrictions cracking down on overseas ballots, arguing that the measure – the latest in a string of GOP-led efforts to strengthen election security – is overly restrictive and risks disenfranchising thousands of U.S. service members stationed abroad.  Their protest comes just weeks after six out of eight House Republicans from Pennsylvania’s congressional delegation filed a federal lawsuit earlier this month, aiming to get the Keystone State to add additional vetting processes for U.S. residents living overseas.  Republican plaintiffs argued that current law makes it possible for these residents to register and vote in elections without proper identification. They can then “receive a ballot by email and then vote a ballot without providing identification at any step in the process,” the group alleged. FLURRY OF PRE-ELECTION LEGAL CASES IS NOW ‘STANDARDIZED’ STRATEGY, EXPERTS SAY But that contention has been met with fierce resistance by the half-dozen Democrats in Congress, who argued that the level of vetting sought by Republicans would disenfranchise “tens of thousands” of overseas voters in their states – including, importantly, U.S. service men and women stationed abroad. In a letter to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, six Democrats, all of whom served in the U.S. military, voiced deep concern over the lawsuit and its potential for discounting the votes of U.S. service members in key battleground states. The letter, sent by Reps. Pat Ryan of New York, Seth Moulton of Massachusetts, Chrissy Houlahan and Chris Deluzio of Pennsylvania, and Mike Thompson and Salud Carbajal of California, and shared with Fox News, argued that the GOP-led push is an unfounded attempt to discount the votes of a once-Republican demographic, which has shifted in recent years to favor Democratic candidates.  The lawsuit, they added, threatens to disenfranchise “tens of thousands” of service members abroad.   And in a neck-and-neck election, this group of voters could play a decisive role.  More than 1.2 million overseas ballots were cast in the 2020 election, according to data from the U.S. Election Assistance Commission. In Pennsylvania alone, there are roughly 25,000 registered U.S. voters living abroad.  “Election-denying extremists, afraid they are losing this election, are actively working to disenfranchise members of our military deployed outside of the United States,” Houlahan, an Air Force veteran, told Fox News.  NEBRASKA HIGH COURT RESTORES VOTING RIGHT FOR THOUSANDS OF CONVICTED FELONS All six Republicans named in the lawsuit had also voted against certifying Pennsylvania’s electoral votes in the 2020 election, she added. But in the final sprint to Election Day in a dead-heat presidential race, these court battles aren’t confined solely to Pennsylvania.  In recent weeks, the Republican Party has filed similar lawsuits challenging the overseas registration process for voters in North Carolina and Michigan, each considered “toss-up” states in the 2024 election, and where Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Trump are tied nearly neck-and-neck. GOP plaintiffs argued in both states that the overseas voters do not meet the necessary criteria to register and vote in the election. Asked for comment, Rep. Guy Reschenthaler, one of six Pennsylvania Republican plaintiffs, told Fox News that the case “is simple.”  The Pennsylvania Department of State is “unlawfully diluting the rightful ballots of the brave men and women who serve our nation and their family members,” he said in a statement. “Unelected career bureaucrats have no right to ignore federal laws that secure our elections.” “In the Navy JAG Corps, I made daily trips into the red zone in Baghdad, this is personal to me,” he added. “I will always stand up for those in uniform who deserve to have their right to a secure election protected.” Houlahan dismissed the lawsuits in a statement of her own, however, describing them to Fox News as an “assault on the patriotism of the soldiers, sailors, airmen, and guardians who have taken an oath to defend and protect the United States,” and on their spouses and families also living overseas.  SOLDIERS WERE FIRST: HOW AND WHY THE STATES STARTED AND NOW HANDLE EARLY AND ABSENTEE VOTING “It is desperate, cynical, and unconstitutional to attempt to deprive American citizens – no matter where they live – of their right to vote and to have their votes counted,” Houlahan said.  There are also important questions of standing in each of the cases.  Though federal law defers to individual states to establish their own election rules, the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, or UOCAVA, tasks the secretary of defense with implementing the registration and voting for U.S. service members and government employees living abroad.  The UOCAVA, passed in 1986, states that the voting process for Americans living overseas should not be “overly burdensome.” It has also twice been significantly revised and modernized to improve the process of overseas voting, according to a Congressional Research Service report.  These changes were ordered in 2001, in response to controversy over the 2000 presidential election, including ballots cast by U.S. voters in Florida and overseas, and then in 2009, as a result of new efficiency standards included in the 2010 NDAA.  “While some of our colleagues are actively seeking to sow discord and misinformation, we urge you to carry out President Biden’s executive order and Federal Law to the best of your ability and ensure that all Americans have their constitutionally guaranteed right to participate in federal elections,” the lawmakers told Austin in their letter.  It’s unclear how the lawsuits will turn out, though a judge in Michigan said last week that the Republican plaintiffs waited too long to bring their claims before the court, noting that the court “shouldn’t be changing the rules for this election two-and-a-half weeks ahead of time.” North Carolina, for its part, will hear from Republicans this week.  Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.

Harris and top anti-Trump Republican Cheney team up in battleground blitz

Harris and top anti-Trump Republican Cheney team up in battleground blitz

MALVERN, PA – The most high-profile GOP politician who is supporting Vice President Kamala Harris over former President Trump in the presidential election says that there are plenty of fellow Republicans who will quietly support the Democratic nominee. “They’re going to vote the right way on Nov. 5. They might not be public about it, but they’ll do what they know is right,” former Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming said on Monday, as she teamed up with Harris at a campaign event in suburban Philadelphia in battleground Pennsylvania. While Trump retains vast sway over the GOP, even a small sliver of Republicans supporting Harris could make a consequential impact in what will likely be a race within the margins in the key swing states. As she turns up the volume on her efforts to court disgruntled Republicans in the closing stretch of the presidential campaign, Harris on Monday was teaming up with the most visible anti-Trump Republican, not only in Pennsylvania, but also in two other crucial swing states – Michigan and Wisconsin. HARRIS-TRUMP CASH DASH: NEW FILINGS SHOW WHICH CANDIDATE IS THE CLEAR FUNDRAISING FRONT-RUNNER Cheney, a one-time rising conservative star in the GOP who, in the wake of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, has vowed to do everything she can to prevent the former president from returning to power. “We have the opportunity to tell the whole world who we are, and we have the chance to say, you know, we’re going to reject cruelty. We’re going to reject the kind of vile vitriol that we’ve seen from Donald Trump. We’re going to reject, the misogyny that we’ve seen from Donald Trump and JD Vance,” Cheney argued. CRUNCH TIME: HARRIS TO TEAM UP WITH THE OBAMAS IN THESE CRUCIAL SWING STATES And she emphasized that “we have the chance in this race to elect somebody who… is going to defend the rule of law. You know, Vice President Harris is going to defend our Constitution.” Cheney said her endorsement of the vice president was “not at all a difficult choice” and she reached her decision in part as a mother. Harris is hoping Cheney’s support will help her win support from Republican women who may hesitate on backing their party’s presidential nominee. Cheney, the daughter of former Republican Vice President Dick Cheney, once rose within the ranks of House Republican leadership. But she was the most high-profile of the 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach then-President Trump in early 2021 on a charge of inciting the deadly Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol, which was waged by right-wing extremists and other Trump supporters who aimed to disrupt congressional certification of President Biden’s Electoral College victory in the 2020 election. The conservative lawmaker and defense hawk immediately came under verbal attack from Trump and his allies and was eventually ousted from her No. 3 House GOP leadership position. Cheney, who has been vocal in emphasizing the importance of defending the nation’s democratic process and of putting country before party, was one of only two Republicans who served on a special select committee organized by House Democrats that investigated the riot at the Capitol. In 2022, she lost the GOP congressional primary in Wyoming to Harriet Hageman, a candidate backed by Trump. At a speaking event in early September at Duke University in swing state North Carolina, Cheney announced that she would vote for Harris in the presidential election. Cheney’s father also endorsed Harris. And Cheney formally backed Harris as they teamed up on the campaign for the first time earlier this month, at an event in Ripon, Wisconsin. Cheney was not always a fan of Harris. The Trump campaign has repeatedly pointed to a social media post by Cheney during the 2000 election in which she said, “@KamalaHarris has a more liberal voting record than Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. Her radical leftist views-raising taxes, banning gun sales, taxpayer $ for abortion & illegal immigrant health care, eliminating private health insurance-would be devastating for America.” CHECK OUT THE LATEST FOX NEWS POWER RANKINGS IN THE 2024 ELECTION Trump, speaking with Fox News’ Bill Melugin during a rally in Michigan earlier this month, charged that Cheney was “terrible” and “a stupid war hawk. All she wants to do is shoot missiles at people.” On Cheney’s backing of Harris, Trump argued, “I think they hurt each other. I think they’re so bad, both of them.” And ahead of Monday’s event, Republican National Committee chair Michael Whatley argued in a statement that “Liz Cheney is just as unpopular as Kamala Harris is to Pennsylvania voters – bringing her to the Keystone State to try to catch up to President Trump’s lead is not a winning strategy.” WHAT THE LATEST FOX NEWS POLLS IN THE 2024 ELECTION SHOW  Cheney and her father are part of a growing list of prominent Republicans who are supporting Harris. Two other high-profile anti-Trump Republicans, former Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois and former Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, had speaking roles at the Democratic National Convention, which was held six weeks ago in Chicago. And Kinzinger and Duncan joined other prominent Republicans who are backing the vice president at an event with Harris last week in Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania, at the historic park where George Washington crossed the Delaware River on Christmas night 1776 – a turning point moment in the American Revolutionary War. The lifelong Pennsylvania Republicans who introduced Harris at last week’s event – Bob and Kristina Lange – were part of a group sitting on stage behind Harris and Cheney at Monday’s event. The Langes, who own a family farm in Chester County, Pennsylvania, have also starred in a Harris campaign commercial. The Langes say they’ve seen a barrage of hateful and derogatory messages following their appearance in the Harris ad. But in an interview last week, they noted that their Republican friends say “that they’re on the same page that we are. They’re approaching us and telling us ‘We’re