The Harris campaign has come under fire for its misleading claims about President Donald Trump and his running mate, J.D. Vance, in connection with the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025. Despite repeated assertions, fact-checkers have debunked the campaign’s assertions, revealing a deliberate effort to misrepresent Trump’s policies.
At a rally in Wisconsin on Tuesday, Vice President Kamala Harris criticized Trump and his “extreme Project 2025 agenda.” She claimed, “Can you believe they put that thing in writing? Read it. It’s 900 pages. But here’s the thing. When you read it, you will see Donald Trump intends to cut Social Security and Medicare. He intends to give tax breaks to billionaires and big corporations and make working families foot the bill. They intend to end the Affordable Care Act and take us back to a time when insurance companies had the power to deny people with pre-existing conditions.”
These accusations have been discredited by multiple fact-checking organizations. CNN, for example, highlighted inaccuracies in Harris’s claims. According to CNN, “The Project 2025 document does not show that Trump intends to cut Social Security; the document barely discusses Social Security at all and does not propose cuts to the program.” The document also does not call to “end” the Affordable Care Act or eliminate protections for pre-existing conditions. Instead, it critiques the Affordable Care Act, particularly its Medicaid expansion, but advocates for reforms rather than complete termination.
In response to the criticism, a Harris campaign official stated that the campaign had “made a deliberate decision to brand all of Trump’s policies” as “Project 2025,” believing that the term resonated with voters. Campaign spokesperson Joseph Costello added, “Project 2025 is a blueprint for many of the dangerous policies we know that a second Trump term would include, and it is indisputable that in his first term, Donald Trump repeatedly tried to cut Social Security and end the Affordable Care Act.”
Further scrutiny has revealed additional falsehoods. VERIFY, a website dedicated to combating misinformation, debunked claims that Project 2025 proposed eliminating individualized education plans (IEPs). USA Today also pointed out that Project 2025 is a conservative policy blueprint created by the Heritage Foundation and other groups, not a specific agenda authored by Trump. Trump himself has distanced his platform, which he refers to as Agenda 47, from Project 2025.
Reporter Ben Domenech criticized the Harris campaign for inaccurately associating J.D. Vance with Project 2025. Domenech, who interviewed Vance before his Senate candidacy and the inception of Project 2025, stated, “The Harris campaign is falsely representing this interview, which took place before Vance even announced a run for the Senate and years before Project 2025 existed. I know this because I’m the interviewer.”
The Harris campaign’s misrepresentation of Project 2025 has been widely condemned, underscoring the growing need for accurate political discourse in the lead-up to the election.
SOURCE: CNN
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