Vice President Kamala Harris’s Univision town hall went about as expected. Nothing earth-shattering but with some interesting choices from Univision, and with more unanswered questions than at the beginning. The Regime Media’s coverage of the town hall will include some version of “Harris addressed Latino voters in Las Vegas.” Technically, she did both of these things. But of the nine questioners at this town hall, only ONE was from Las Vegas.
The rest came from such locations as Tampa (FL), San Diego (CA), Deltona (FL), Santa Monica (CA), Yuma (AZ), Beloit (WI) and two persons from Los Angeles. This leaves one wondering whether it is a common practice to fly town hall participants from across the country. Enrique Acevedo moderated this town hall in the truest sense, asking no questions of his own and letting the attendees’ questions set the tone.
Harris begins with an opening statement that triples down on her attempt to inject herself into Florida’s response to Hurricane Milton before rolling into her stump speech:
Kamala Harris once again politicizes the hurricanes, working them into her rambling opening statement at the Univision town hall. pic.twitter.com/B7nWLyhbOf
— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 11, 2024
The first question is from a gentleman from Tampa, with concerns that the administration’s response to Helene was insufficient. Harris goes into other elements of her stump speech:
"This is not a time for politics," says vice president who played politics with Hurricane Milton pic.twitter.com/QQjiqjcRKy
— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 11, 2024
Next, the only attendee local to Las Vegas, who asks what amounts to an immigration question -- personal story notwithstanding. Harris goes into standard immigration talking points:
First immigration question for Harris, who pitches the DOA comprehensive immigration bill and the failed border bill negotiated after Biden-Harris broke the border and allowed 10M illegal migrants to enter the country. Harris revives shelved "daughter of immigrants" identity pic.twitter.com/ZPdtxYNfln
— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 11, 2024
The next question comes from a Department of Defense employee from San Diego who had to wait two years for an MRI. This becomes a question about how to improve “access to health care,” which Harris calls a right.
Harris gets a question on healthcare, tiptoes right up to the line of reiterating Medicare for All support. If you are playing the "I come from the middle class" drinking game, take your first shot. pic.twitter.com/f8xvAkglng
— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 11, 2024
The next questioner, from Deltona, Florida: “How will you help the disabled people so that they can get insurance and Make America Great Again?”
Harris gets a question about disability applications for Social Security pic.twitter.com/U1IJDK44hv
— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 11, 2024
The next questioner, from Santa Monica, CA, asks Harris to explain how she became the Democrat nominee. Harris repeats multiple hoaxes:
Trump leaner asks Harris to explain how she is DEM POTUS nominee despite no primary, and on the intraparty coup that removed Biden as Dem nominee. Harris says she and Biden have been partners for last 4 years, cites Cheney endorsements, TL;DR: Biden got pushed out bc DEMOCRACY pic.twitter.com/S92mU53MKA
— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 11, 2024
Probably the most interesting question of the night, from Carlos from Yuma, who asks Harris to differentiate herself from Biden on immigration.
Carlos from Arizona: "What will you do differently from Joe Biden to secure the border?"
— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 11, 2024
Harris: Word salad. Promises to bring back border security bill and pathway to citizenship. False choice to do one or the other. Still offers no differentiation from Biden when asked. pic.twitter.com/tzQ6ISo5Wo
Back to immigration: Harris gets asked how she will preserve DACA. Harris pitches a comprehensive immigration bill. The questioner is from Pico Rivera, CA:
First time voter asks Harris how she will get DACA to continue. Triples down on comprehensive with pathway to citizenship: "one of the priorities for me, frankly, in terms of my motivation for what I know we must do." pic.twitter.com/OOrFlBjlOi
— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 11, 2024
Harris gets a food prices questions from a voter in Chino Hills, CA. Harris responds with word salads on price gouging, etc.
Cost of living and food prices question from a mother of 5:
— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 11, 2024
HARRIS: I know prices are too high, still. I, too, am from the working class. (DRINK!) Harris rolls out the Hispanic accent, pitches price controls and her standard stump econ plan. pic.twitter.com/ssS3AAF7cQ
Next, the obligatory abortion question, from a voter from Beloit, WI:
The obligatory abortion question: Harris's most passionate, concise, and coherent answer, in any setting, will always be on abortion. Make of that what you will. pic.twitter.com/uIs6vA8IkH
— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 11, 2024
Finally, a chief of staff from UCLA asks Harris to name three virtues possessed by former President Donald Trump. Harris can only name one.
Harris is asked to name three VIRTUES possessed by Donald Trump:
— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 11, 2024
1. He loves his family.
This concludes the town hall pic.twitter.com/OfPODP6qXY
Post-town hall, there is some question over whether Harris used a teleprompter during the town hall. I suspect that the teleprompter going viral is there for the moderator. Had Harris’s prompter shut down, she would’ve glitched out á la “32 days.”
Moderator Acevedo did a reasonably good job of keeping the questions moving. There remains the question regarding why questioners were flown in from around the country. President Donald Trump’s town hall is next week. We’ll see whether anything changes in the moderation, format, or questions asked by the audience. As far as this town hall went, I suspect it didn’t move the needle with where Hispanics are at on Harris. But it did expose her on immigration and continuity with Joe Biden. Back to the drawing board.