Vice President Kamala Harris and the White House criticized Donald Trump for his attacks on the federal response to Hurricanes Helene and Milton and suggested he was wrongly trying to turn the deadly storms to his political advantage.


What You Need To Know

  • Vice Preisdent Kamala Harris on Thursday took part in a town hall sponsored by Univision in Las Vegas before holding a rally in Arizona

  • Harris criticized her GOP opponent Donald Trump for his attacks on the federal response to Hurricanes Helene and Milton, suggesting he is wrongly trying to turn the deadly storms to his political advantage

  • Later, in Arizona, Harris praised the late Republican Arizona Sen. John McCain for defying his party and voting to preserve the Obama administration's signature health care law

  • Harris also deviated from her usual campaign speech to urge Arizonans to vote in a state referendum to safeguard abortion rights and talked about preserving tribal rights and responsible water policy

Attending a town hall sponsored by Univision in Las Vegas, Harris was asked about complaints that federal officials have bungled disaster recovery efforts. She responded, "In this crisis — like in so many issues that affect the people of our country — I think it so important that leadership recognizes the dignity" to which people are entitled.

"I have to stress that this is not a time for people to play politics," Harris added.

Those comments came after the former president spoke at the Detroit Economic Club, offering sympathy to people affected by Hurricanes Helene and Milton, the latter of which came ashore in Florida Wednesday night. But Trump also suggested that the Biden administration's response had been lacking, particularly in North Carolina after Helene.

"They've let those people suffer unjustly," said Trump, who has for several days promoted falsehoods about the federal response.

Harris virtually attended a briefing, held in the White House Situation Room with President Joe Biden, on emergency efforts in Milton's wake. In subsequent comments to reporters, Biden slammed Trump and his supporters for spreading misinformation about federal assistance available to victims.

"They're being so damn un-American with the way they're talking about this stuff," Biden said, then adding directly to Trump: "Get a life, man. Help these people."

Despite the storm, Trump and Harris are both visiting key swing states strategically, trying to increase support with key voting blocs who could decide an election expected to be exceedingly close.

Harris held a rally near Phoenix after participating in the town hall for the Spanish-language network Univision. She's looking to increase support among Hispanic voters, especially men.

Her campaign began a group this week known as "Hombres con Harris" — Spanish for "Men for Harris" — that is planning to hold events at Latino-owned small businesses, union halls, barbecues and community events until Election Day.

At Univision's "Latinos Ask, Kamala Harris Responds" event, Ivett Castillo, 40 and a Las Vegas resident, told Harris that she's an American citizen born to two Mexican parents and that her mother died six weeks ago. She cried as she asked the vice president about "plans to support that subgroup of immigrants here their whole lives and who live and die in the shadows." When the town hall ended, Harris went over and clasped hands with Castillo, whose face was still streaked with tears.

In response to her question, Harris noted that Biden sent a bill to Congress on his first day in office seeking to create pathways to U.S. citizenship for many people in the country illegally that was never considered.

Unauthorized border crossings hit record highs during the Biden administration before declining this year after the president issued an executive order restricting asylum claims.

Another audience member asked Harris to explain how she replaced Biden on the Democratic ticket, prompting her to respond, "President Biden made a decision that I think history will show was probably one of the most courageous a president could make."

She said Biden "put country before personal interest" and "urged me to run."

Hispanic voters are about evenly split on whether to trust Harris or Trump to do a better job handling the economy, but they give the former president an edge on handling immigration. Hispanic women are more likely to trust Harris to better handle the economy and immigration, and Hispanic men are more likely to trust Trump on both issues, according to polling from The Associated Press and the NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

Later, in Arizona, Harris praised the late Republican Arizona Sen. John McCain for defying his party and voting to preserve the Obama administration's signature health care law. That drew extended cheers while people in the crowd made thumbs-down gestures to signify McCain's opposition to the GOP effort to repeal it.

"It was late, late, late in the night and they were trying to get rid of the Affordable Care Act again," Harris recalled of the Senate vote. "And the late, great John McCain, the great American war hero ... said: 'No you don't. No you don't. No you don't.'"

Harris also deviated from her usual campaign speech to urge Arizonans to vote in a state referendum to safeguard abortion rights and talked about preserving tribal rights and responsible water policy.

"I promise you as president I will continue to invest in drought resilience," Harris said.