Kamala Harris to face voters’ queries in crucial Pennsylvania

Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris said Tuesday that America is ‘absolutely’ ready to elect its first woman president. (AFP)
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Updated 23 October 2024
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Kamala Harris to face voters’ queries in crucial Pennsylvania

  • The race is overshadowed by extraordinary tensions and fears of violence or a refusal by Trump to recognize the results if he loses
  • Harris, 60, is also deploying two of her party’s most popular emissaries onto the campaign trail: Barack and Michelle Obama

WASHINGTON: Kamala Harris faces voters’ questions at a live forum Wednesday in must-win Pennsylvania as the vice president and her rival Donald Trump battle for undecided voters in the closing stretch of an extremely close White House race.

The pace of campaigning has been intensifying in the electoral fight that is nearing its November 5 apogee after twists, turns and a fair bit of drama.

Harris will be near Philadelphia for a CNN town hall-type meeting with voters, but there is not one planned for Trump despite the news channel’s offer to hold a separate forum for him.

Pennsylvania is a coveted prize for the candidates in the election in which more than 240 million Americans are expected to vote, and Harris and Trump have made repeated appearances there and across swing states.

The 78-year-old Republican will hold his own town hall event in the southern battleground state of Georgia, which Trump narrowly lost to Biden in 2020 but won in 2016.

Trump used a Tuesday rally in North Carolina to attack Harris, repeatedly calling her stupid and arguing she doesn’t have the “smarts or the strength” to lead the United States.

About 18 million Americans have already voted by mail or in person — representing more than 10 percent of the total in 2020.

Harris, 60, said Tuesday that America is “absolutely” ready to elect its first woman president.

“People are exhausted with Donald Trump and his approach, because it’s all about himself,” she said.

Harris’s arrival in the campaign shook up the country, which was expecting a rematch between President Joe Biden and his predecessor Trump.

Since Biden’s shock withdrawal after a disastrous debate performance, the race between Trump and Harris has been one of the tightest in American history.

It’s hard to know the degree to which opinion polls are accurate, as they have in the past underestimated support for Trump but also failed to predict the level of support for Democrats.

While the ex-president hammers on his promises of a migrant crackdown and economic good times after a period of high inflation, his rivals raise concerns about his willingness to honor American democracy.

The Harris campaign has also begun to hammer at his mental and physical fitness to occupy the Oval Office while trying to woo moderate Republican voters.

One of Trump’s top aides as president, former Marine general John Kelly, confirmed Tuesday to The New York Times previous reports that he considered the Republican to be a fascist.

“Certainly the former president is in the far-right area, he’s certainly an authoritarian, admires people who are dictators — he has said that. So he certainly falls into the general definition of fascist, for sure.”

Biden, who has been an infrequent presence in Harris’s campaign, took a shot at Trump on Tuesday by re-wording the ex-president’s notorious anti-Hillary Clinton chant of “Lock her up.”

On a visit to New Hampshire, Biden told a small crowd that “we got to lock” Trump up — adding quickly, “politically lock him up.”

With Trump facing multiple pending criminal charges as he competes against Harris to succeed Biden, the White House has been very careful not to weigh in on the Republican’s legal problems.


Dozens missing after boat carrying more than 200 migrants capsized off the coast of Gambia

Updated 03 January 2026
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Dozens missing after boat carrying more than 200 migrants capsized off the coast of Gambia

  • At least 102 survivors have been rescued and seven bodies recovered from the boat that capsized on New Year’s Eve in northwest Gambia’s North Bank region

BANJUL: Dozens are missing after a boat carrying more than 200 migrants on their way to Europe capsized off the coast of Gambia, the West African nation’s leader said late Friday, setting off a frantic search and rescue operation.
At least 102 survivors have been rescued and seven bodies recovered from the boat that capsized on New Year’s Eve in northwest Gambia’s North Bank region, Gambian President Adama Barrow said in a state broadcast.
The emergency services were joined by local fishermen and other volunteers in searching for the victims, days after Wednesday’s incident near the village of Jinack, he said.
Thousands of Africans desperate for better opportunities in Europe risk their lives traveling on boats along the Atlantic coast, one of the world’s deadliest migrant routes that connects the West African coast across Gambia, Senegal and Mauritania.
Many migrants seeking to reach Spain via the Canary Islands never make it due to high risks of boats capsizing. In August 2025, around 150 people were either dead or missing after their boat that came from Gambia capsized off the coast of Mauritania. A similar incident in July 2024 killed more than a dozen migrants with 150 others declared missing.
It was not clear what led to the latest tragedy. Gambia’s Ministry of Defense said the boat was found “grounded on a sandbank.”
“The national emergency response plan has been activated and the government has deployed adequate resources to intensify efforts and provide assistance to the survivors,” Barrow said.
Some of the 102 survivors were undergoing urgent medical care, the Gambian leader said.
As he condoled with families, Barrow vowed a full investigation and called the accident a “painful reminder of the dangerous and life-threatening nature of irregular migration.”
“The government will strengthen efforts to prevent irregular migration and remains determined to create safer and more dignified opportunities for young people to fulfil their dreams,” he added.