The United States is experiencing yet another divisive campaign season, but there may be a place where Americans can find calm and camaraderie: a vice presidential debate.
The Oct. 5 episode of “Saturday Night Live” began with a political cold open mocking this week’s vice presidential debate. Kamala Harris (Maya Rudolph) and her husband Doug Emhoff (Andy Samberg) watching the debate from home.
Saturday Night Live ‘s Kamala Harris (Maya Rudolph) and Doug Emhoff (Andy Samberg) tuned in to the vice presidential debate to hear JD Vance implore moderators not to fact-check him. The VP and second gentleman also recoiled after Tim Walz came across as too cordial to his Republican counterpart.
Vice President Harris’s running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D), slammed Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio) at a campaign event near the senator’s hometown on Saturday, saying that former President Trump’s running mate does not reflect the “integrity” of the people in the state.
The Democrat Walz, at times stumbling over his words, laid out his defense for Harris' housing plan, which includes tax incentives to spur more home construction and a $25,000 federal down payment credit for first-time buyers. He also repeatedly took aim at investor homebuyers, blaming them for driving up the cost of housing.
Walz sent a flurry of letters to the Veterans Affairs secretary demanding answers on a number of matters. But what got Walz fired up was a report that detailed how three confidants of President Donald Trump were secretly shaping VA policies from Mar-a-Lago.
Democratic vice presidential hopeful Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN) sought to appeal to Muslim American voters on Thursday during a virtual meeting with Emgage Action.
However, two flash polls showed the Republican challenger Vance winning by a slim margin in the vice-presidential debate.
Gwen Walz, the current first lady of Minnesota and a former teacher in Alliance, Nebraska, was an Omaha rally’s key speaker alongside actress Connie Britton, best known for her starring
During a visit to a local school, the students played a game of friendly soccer with Chinese students on a dirt field — the Americans in their t-shirts and the Chinese in sports jerseys. They managed to communicate via hand gestures and kicking the ball.