Published 11:35 IST, December 22nd 2020
Kamala Harris campaigns with Ossoff, Warnock
Campaigning in Georgia on Monday, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris stressed to Senate runoff voters a need for Democratic colleagues to advance the Biden administration's policy agenda.
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Campaigning in Georgia on Monday, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris stressed to Senate runoff voters a need for Democratic colleagues to advance the Biden administration's policy agenda.
Telling a crowd in Columbus that "everything is at stake" in the Jan. 5 elections, Harris said that she and President-elect Joe Biden need Democrats like Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael Warnock in the Senate to advance policy priorities.
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Harris said like increased funding for schools in low-income districts, a $15,000 tax credit to first-time home buyers and policing reforms including a ban on chokeholds and creation of a national standard for the use of force by police.
"We will need the legislation to be passed," Harris said. "We will need Jon and Raphael in the United States Senate. These are the things that are at stake."
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Harris' other scheduled stop was canceled due to a scheduled Senate vote on a coronavirus relief package.
Just ahead of Harris' remarks, Ivanka Trump, the president's daughter and a senior White House advisor, stumped with U.S. Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler outside a pub in Milton, a wealthy suburb about 30 miles (48 km) north of Atlanta.
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More than 1.3 million people have already cast mail-in ballots or voted early in-person in the upcoming contests, the outcome of which will determine the balance of power in the U.S. Senate in the nascence of Biden's presidency.
Wins by both Democrats, Ossoff and Warnock, would yield a 50-50 divide, with Harris as the tie-breaking vote.
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Monday's appearances continued a cavalcade of top-shelf surrogates wading into the races.
Biden himself has already stumped in the state, and Vice President Mike Pence has made several visits.
President Donald Trump said late Saturday he would return Jan. 4 for an election-even rally, just two days before Congress meets to count votes from the Electoral College.
Speaking ahead of Harris in Columbus, Ossoff warned that Republicans would block the Biden administration's agenda if they kept Senate control, stymying a progressive platform to raise the minimum wage, expand access to health care and invest in infrastructure.
"We have too much good work to do, Columbus, to be mired in grid lock and obstruction," he said.
Warnock pushed back at his opponent's repeated digs, which he said hindered his attempts at "a substantive debate about the people of Georgia."
"My opponent is trying to reduce this race to the kind of empty school yard insults made between children who aren't thinking very carefully on a playground," he said.
"I'm trying to have a debate, and she's engaged in name calling. That's all right. As we say in the South, 'Bless her heart.'"
11:35 IST, December 22nd 2020