Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Kamala Harris Isn’t Giving Interviews. Any Questions?
d8a347b41db1ddee634e2d67d08798c102ef09ac
By The New York Times
Published 5 months ago on
August 10, 2024

Vice President Kamala Harris delivers remarks at a Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority gathering in Houston, July 31, 2024, in Houston. (AP File)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

The press has questions for Vice President Kamala Harris. She isn’t giving a whole lot of answers.

In the nearly three weeks since President Joe Biden withdrew his candidacy, catapulting Harris to the top of the Democratic ticket, the vice president has shown little eagerness to meet journalists in unscripted settings. She has not granted an interview or held a news conference. On Thursday, after a rally in Michigan, she held her first “gaggle” — an impromptu Q&A session — with reporters covering her campaign.

It lasted 70 seconds.

Harris replaced a Democratic nominee who has hosted fewer White House news conferences than any president since Ronald Reagan. Now she is taking a similarly cautious approach, relying on televised rallies and prepared statements amid a tightly controlled rollout of her candidacy.

Asked Thursday if she might sit for an interview anytime soon, Harris suggested that she would get through the convention first. “I want us to get an interview scheduled before the end of the month,” she said, as aides signaled to the scrum of journalists that question time was over.

Rallying Cry for the Right

Harris’ lack of engagement with the media has become a constant rallying cry on the political right, with Republican critics and Fox News stars accusing the vice president of ducking scrutiny. The Harris campaign says it is being thoughtful about how best to deploy its message, and to introduce a new candidate to crucial voters in battleground states.

David Axelrod, the architect of former President Barack Obama’s winning campaigns, said he believes that Harris — who on Thursday said she had agreed to a prime-time debate with former President Donald Trump on Sept. 10 — was trying to strike a balance.

“This has been a whirlwind few weeks, and right now, buoyant rally speeches are working really well, so she’s riding the wave,” Axelrod wrote in an email. “But I’m sure they know that, in addition, presidential races impose a series of tests, including debates and unscripted interactions with voters and media, by which people come to know you. There is time, and I’m sure she’ll get there.”

Her opponent, Trump, has a less generous view.

“She doesn’t know how to do a news conference; she’s not smart enough to do a news conference,” Trump said during a discursive news conference Thursday in Florida. “She won’t do interviews with friendly people because she can’t do better than Biden,” Trump added. “She should be doing interviews. She doesn’t want to do interviews.”

Fox News, which carried Trump’s news conference live, echoed the former president’s attacks, displaying an on-screen headline that read, “Trump Takes Questions as Harris Dodges.”

Harris has fielded some questions from journalists, but out of the public eye. On several occasions since becoming the presumptive nominee, she has held off-the-record meetings with reporters in the back of her campaign plane. Biden rarely held these sessions; this week, though, he opened himself to scrutiny in an interview with Robert Costa of CBS.

Carville: Harris Is Managing Things Nicely

Some political strategists say Harris is doing exactly what she should be doing. Her campaign rallies have been widely covered, and a kickoff event Tuesday with her running mate, Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota, was watched live on cable news by nearly 8 million people. Big interviews, early on in a candidacy, also carry big risks: witness Sarah Palin’s fiasco with Katie Couric.

“Where is it written that you have to sit down for a press interview?” said James Carville, Bill Clinton’s longtime messaging guru. “They’ve had to pick a vice president, plan a convention, move around, do this, do that, and she’s already agreed to a debate.”

Carville said that Harris was wisely managing her time, given the extraordinary task of embarking on a presidential campaign three months before Election Day. He imagined a plea from a reporter — “‘Come talk to me for 45 minutes’” — and then offered how the campaign might respond: “Oh, shut up!”

Trump has granted several interviews in recent weeks, albeit to a heap of highly sympathetic media outlets, including the livestream of an internet celebrity who presented him with a gold Rolex, and “Sid & Friends in the Morning,” a Trump-friendly New York drive-time radio show. Trump faced tougher questions when he appeared at last week’s convention of the National Association of Black Journalists, and again at Thursday’s news conference, which stretched for 65 minutes.

Harris’ record with big interviews is mixed. An appearance in 2021 with Lester Holt of NBC went poorly and raised concerns within the Biden administration. Since then, Harris has cultivated relationships with media stars like Joe Scarborough and numerous White House correspondents. In her most recent TV interview, on CNN immediately following the June debate, Harris comfortably addressed Biden’s poor performance.

Aides to Harris argue that in a fractured media landscape, where trust in traditional news outlets has fallen, their most effective voter outreach comes from alternative venues such as TikTok and their own social media platforms.

“The vice president’s top priority is earning the support of the voters who will decide this election,” Kevin Munoz, a spokesperson for Harris, said Thursday, adding that the campaign was “being strategic, creative and expeditious” in using TV ads, rallies, local organizers, “and of course interviews that reach our target voters.”

He did not say when such an interview might take place.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Michael M. Grynbaum/ Kenny Holston

c.2024 The New York Times Company

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

SEC Sues Elon Musk, Saying He Didn’t Disclose Twitter Ownership on Time Before Buying It

DON'T MISS

Fresno County Man Faces Murder Charges in Crash That Killed Four

DON'T MISS

An Important Reservoir Was Offline When California Fires Began

DON'T MISS

Freshman Congressman Adam Gray Lands on Ag, Natural Resources Committees

DON'T MISS

Biden Moves to Lift State Sponsor of Terrorism Designation for Cuba, Part of Deal to Free Prisoners

DON'T MISS

Capital One Sued by US Watchdog Alleging Bank Cheated Customers Out of $2 Billion

DON'T MISS

Millions Under Extreme Fire Weather Alert as Strong Winds Lash Southern California

DON'T MISS

How the CIA Director Helps the US Navigate a World of Spies, Threats and Geopolitical Turbulence

DON'T MISS

Gov. Newsom, Mayor Bass Targeted in Wildfire Witch Hunt

DON'T MISS

Clovis Police Officer Injured While Responding to Suspected DUI Call

UP NEXT

Fresno County Man Faces Murder Charges in Crash That Killed Four

UP NEXT

An Important Reservoir Was Offline When California Fires Began

UP NEXT

Freshman Congressman Adam Gray Lands on Ag, Natural Resources Committees

UP NEXT

Biden Moves to Lift State Sponsor of Terrorism Designation for Cuba, Part of Deal to Free Prisoners

UP NEXT

Capital One Sued by US Watchdog Alleging Bank Cheated Customers Out of $2 Billion

UP NEXT

Millions Under Extreme Fire Weather Alert as Strong Winds Lash Southern California

UP NEXT

How the CIA Director Helps the US Navigate a World of Spies, Threats and Geopolitical Turbulence

UP NEXT

Gov. Newsom, Mayor Bass Targeted in Wildfire Witch Hunt

UP NEXT

Clovis Police Officer Injured While Responding to Suspected DUI Call

UP NEXT

A Possible TikTok Ban Is Just Days Away. A List of Other Apps Available

Freshman Congressman Adam Gray Lands on Ag, Natural Resources Committees

9 hours ago

Biden Moves to Lift State Sponsor of Terrorism Designation for Cuba, Part of Deal to Free Prisoners

9 hours ago

Capital One Sued by US Watchdog Alleging Bank Cheated Customers Out of $2 Billion

9 hours ago

Millions Under Extreme Fire Weather Alert as Strong Winds Lash Southern California

9 hours ago

How the CIA Director Helps the US Navigate a World of Spies, Threats and Geopolitical Turbulence

10 hours ago

Gov. Newsom, Mayor Bass Targeted in Wildfire Witch Hunt

10 hours ago

Clovis Police Officer Injured While Responding to Suspected DUI Call

10 hours ago

A Possible TikTok Ban Is Just Days Away. A List of Other Apps Available

11 hours ago

Karen Bass Faces Growing Backlash Over Handling of LA Fires. Will She Resign?

12 hours ago

Before Taking Office, LA’s Mayor Said She Would Not Go Abroad

12 hours ago

SEC Sues Elon Musk, Saying He Didn’t Disclose Twitter Ownership on Time Before Buying It

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has sued billionaire Elon Musk, saying he failed to disclose his ownership of Twitter stock in a...

6 hours ago

6 hours ago

SEC Sues Elon Musk, Saying He Didn’t Disclose Twitter Ownership on Time Before Buying It

7 hours ago

Fresno County Man Faces Murder Charges in Crash That Killed Four

The smoldering wreckage of beachfront structures destroyed by the Palisade Fire in Malibu, Calif., on Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025. The threat of more fires propelled by blistering Santa Ana winds hung over southern California on Friday as firefighters battled to contain the raging blazes that have killed at least 10 people and destroyed thousands of structures. (Loren Elliott/The New York Times)
8 hours ago

An Important Reservoir Was Offline When California Fires Began

9 hours ago

Freshman Congressman Adam Gray Lands on Ag, Natural Resources Committees

9 hours ago

Biden Moves to Lift State Sponsor of Terrorism Designation for Cuba, Part of Deal to Free Prisoners

9 hours ago

Capital One Sued by US Watchdog Alleging Bank Cheated Customers Out of $2 Billion

9 hours ago

Millions Under Extreme Fire Weather Alert as Strong Winds Lash Southern California

10 hours ago

How the CIA Director Helps the US Navigate a World of Spies, Threats and Geopolitical Turbulence

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend