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Home » FULL TRANSCRIPT: VP Kamala Harris Town Hall in Pennsylvania with Liz Cheney

FULL TRANSCRIPT: VP Kamala Harris Town Hall in Pennsylvania with Liz Cheney

Read the full transcript of VP Kamala Harris’ Town Hall in Pennsylvania with Liz Cheney moderated by Sarah Longwell on October 21, 2024.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

SARAH LONGWELL: Welcome. I’m Sarah Longwell. I’m the publisher of The Bulwark, which if you haven’t heard about it, please go check it out. But yeah, maybe some people have heard about it.

[Audience applause]

SARAH LONGWELL: I am also a lifelong Republican. I currently run a group called Republican Voters Against Trump. You may see our ads. We’re running a lot of them in Pennsylvania. I also grew up right here in Pennsylvania. I grew up in Perry County. I don’t know if you guys – you guys were kind of far away from there, but I grew up in the central part of the state.

My first job was on the Pride of the Susquehanna. You guys know what that is? Yeah, it’s that little tourism paddle boat that goes up and down the Susquehanna River. First job, did it for like five years. But my job now is actually that I conduct focus groups with voters across the political spectrum. I travel all over the country because you may have noticed we live in a complicated time. The thing that helps me understand politics today is talking to voters, right? That is the only way to understand what’s happening in this country is by asking them how they think things are going.

Introduction of Special Guests

SARAH LONGWELL: So I know you guys are here today because you know that America is about to make a really important decision. And I want you to learn and you want to learn more about Vice President Harris and hear answers to some of those important questions. And you might be curious about why conservatives like Liz Cheney and Dick Cheney, for that matter, have not only endorsed Vice President Harris, but have come here today to make the case directly to you about why she thinks this moment transcends regular partisan politics.

So I’ve got questions, you’ve got questions, and to answer those questions, please welcome to the stage, and actually I have a bio to read because I was just going to say her name because I know you all know who they are, but I was given a bio, so I’m going to read the bio.

So Congresswoman Liz Cheney, many of you may have heard of her. I think we could give her a round of applause right now just to start. She’s a personal hero of mine in this moment.

Liz Cheney served as the U.S. Representative for Wyoming’s at-large congressional district from 2017 to 2023. She chaired the House Republican Conference, the third highest position in the House Republican leadership from 2019 to 2021, and served as the vice chair of the select committee to investigate the January 6th attack on the United States Capitol. She is a lifelong Republican. Please welcome to the stage Congresswoman Liz Cheney.

[Introduces Kamala Harris]

SARAH LONGWELL: Kamala Harris, she always fights for the people, whether it was fighting the big banks on behalf of homeowners or going after cartels smuggling humans and drugs into our country or standing up to big pharma to cast the deciding vote as vice president to lower the cost of insulin to $35 a month for our seniors. She is the Democratic nominee for president of the United States. Please welcome to the stage Vice President Kamala Harris.

The Discussion Begins

[Birthday acknowledgment]

SARAH LONGWELL: So I’ve got to start with the thing that brings us here today because I’ve got to say it is unusual for somebody who is as high up in the Republican leadership as Liz Cheney was to be out here campaigning with the Democratic nominee for president. And so maybe why don’t both of you tell us, but you start. You’ve actually marshaled unprecedented support from Republicans in this election. Why do you think that is?

KAMALA HARRIS: Sarah, thank you for being here and for your work. And the Congresswoman, thank you. I have said before, and it must be repeated each time, there are moments in the history of our country which challenge us, each of us, to really decide do we stand for those things that we talk about, including a particular country over party. And you have been extraordinarily courageous in the way that you have done that, and I thank you for that.

On Public Service and Constitutional Duty

KAMALA HARRIS: I have in my career now, whether it was as the elected District Attorney, elected Attorney General, and then elected United States Senator, and of course now Vice President, I have counted that I have taken the oath of office six times. And for the elected leaders here, we know it is an oath that one must take sincerely and unequivocally, which is an oath, among other things, to support and defend the Constitution of the United States and to understand what those principles represent and what they require of the individual who holds the office in the public trust.

And let’s not undervalue that point as well. It is not about the individual. It is not about what is in their personal interest. It is about what is for and in the spirit of the public good. And this is a moment in this election that presents a real contrast among how I, as one of the two nominees, and my opponent, the former President, think of that duty.

And it is a duty, by the way. There are certain things in our lives that we have the choice, if we feel like it. And then there are certain things that are just fundamentally a duty, like to raise our children, things of that nature. It is a duty to take seriously that oath and do it for the sake of the public good and in the public trust.

On the Historic Nature of the Election

KAMALA HARRIS: I think that this moment, with the choice that the American people have in this election, in two weeks and one day, this election is presenting, for the first time probably in certainly recent history, a very clear choice and difference between the two nominees. And I think that is what, as much as anything, is bringing us as Americans together, who are understanding that we cannot, with such fundamental stakes being presented, afford to be mired in ideological differences without really staking our claim to the most fundamental ideals upon which our country stands.

SARAH LONGWELL: And, you know, Congresswoman Cheney, it’s sort of the same question to you, but I’ve got to ask.