12-10-2024
PITTSBURGH: Former President Barack Obama made a passionate case against Donald Trump and in favor of Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday during a rally at a Pittsburgh college campus aimed in part at spurring young people to show up for the Nov. 5 election.
Obama has been a vocal supporter of Harris since she ascended to the top of the Democratic ticket after President Joe Biden stepped aside in July following a poor debate performance against Trump, the Republican former president.
Obama, whose White House term ended in 2017, is still popular with his party’s base. The rally he headlined at the University of Pittsburgh, held while Harris spent the day campaigning in Nevada and Arizona, is the first of several events he plans to do in battleground states in the coming weeks.
“I get it why people are looking to shake things up,” Obama said to a crowd of supporters. “I understand people feeling frustrated, feeling ‘we can do better.’ What I cannot understand is why anybody would think that Donald Trump will shake things up in a way that is good for you, Pennsylvania.”
Obama said Trump only cared about his own ego and money. He stressed that Harris was raised in the middle class and believed in American values, which he contrasted with Trump’s mistruths and deliberate attempts to deceive, including recently about the government’s response to hurricanes.
“When did that become okay?” Obama asked.
He declared the election to be as much about character and values as policy, while highlighting Harris’ “concrete plans” on housing and taxes. “Kamala is as prepared for the job as any nominee for president has ever been,” he said. “With Kamala you’ve got actual plans. Trump concepts of a plan.”
Obama also zeroed in on male voters. Harris’ campaign is struggling with men, and Obama said some of them were accepting Trump’s bullying behavior as a sign of strength. “I am here to tell you, that is not what real strength is,” Obama said.
Obama is not the only former president the Harris campaign intends to deploy on the campaign trail. Bill Clinton, like Obama a two-term Democratic president, as well as a former Arkansas governor, will make stops in Georgia on Sunday and Monday before traveling to North Carolina for a bus tour later in the week in an effort to reach rural voters.
Youth are among a critical part of the coalition that the Harris campaign hopes will propel her to victory. But voter registration among young people in 34 states is down compared with four years ago, according to data updated in September from the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and Engagement at Tufts University. The number of people between the ages of 18 and 29 registered to vote in Pennsylvania in September was 15% lower than it was on Election Day in 2020, the center’s data showed.
“I understand why certain younger people feel discouraged and maybe not as passionate about politics or an interest in voting,” said rally attendee AJ Herzog, 27, citing the wars in Gaza and Ukraine.
“I think people feel, like, hopeless in certain cases where no matter who they vote for, it’s a lot of the same but I do think there is more opportunity for change with Kamala Harris as president than there is going back to Donald Trump.”
Obama’s engagement could help get young people motivated in the campaign’s final stretch. The former president has sought to serve as a closer for Democratic candidates before, with events for Hillary Clinton in 2016 and for Biden in 2020, especially at the end of the election cycle when early voting had begun, as it has now. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)