WASHINGTON (AP) â Vice President Kamala Harris opened a media blitz by the Democratic ticket on Sunday by appearing on the popular âCall Her Daddyâ podcast about abortion, sexual abuse and other issues that resonate with women, working in some digs at her GOP opponent along the way.
In the roughly 40-minute interview, taped last week, the Democratic presidential nominee spoke about the grit it takes to be a woman seeking public office, the toughness her mother instilled in her and the importance of reproductive rights in this election.
The program is the most-listened-to podcast for women and it has millions of fans tuning in for talk about relationships, sex, mental health and womenâs empowerment. The discussion with Harris was on the tame side for the show, with the vice president keeping her message focused, in part, on the value of ignoring people who have doubted her.
âI donât hear no. I urge all the âDaddy Gang,â donât hear no, just donât hear it,â she said. âI think itâs really important not to let other people define you.â
The interview was part of a broader media outreach effort by Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, as the Democrats seek to boost their support in the final 30 days of the campaign against Republicans Donald Trump and JD Vance.
Harris has been criticized for not doing more media interviews.
On the podcast, the Democratic nominee largely stuck to her usual messaging on abortion, and said that in her travels she's seen that even people who have strong opposition to abortion tell her they âare now seeing whatâs happening and saying âHmm, I didnât intend for all this to happen' â when they see the health problems arising since Roe v. Wade was repealed.
Harris dinged Trump as she has in recent speeches, leaning in on his integrity and saying âthis guy is full of liesâ when he talks about abortion and other issues. She dismissed Vanceâs comments about âchildless cat ladiesâ as âmean, and mean-spirited.â
Trump has continued to stress that abortion policy should be left to the states and that doctors have a duty to provide emergency care to women whose lives are in danger. Vance, for his part, has said his remark about childless women were misinterpreted and that he wants to support families.
There's much more to come from Harris and Walz.
Harris has taped an interview with CBSâ â60 Minutesâ that will air Monday night. She is booked Tuesday on Howard Sternâs satellite radio show, ABCâs âThe Viewâ and âThe Late Showâ with Stephen Colbert on CBS. Walz will be on Jimmy Kimmelâs ABC show on Monday.
In a â60 Minutesâ excerpt released Sunday, Harris navigated around a question about whether Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was âa real close ally,â saying that âThe better question is: Do we have an important alliance between the American people and the Israeli people? And the answer to that question is yes.â
And nearly a week after his verbal stumbles in the only vice presidential debate, Walz used his debut campaign appearance on a Sunday news show to try to fend off criticism of his stand on abortion rights and to âown upâ to past misstatements.
Walz's Fox appearance also touched on the turmoil in the Middle East, with anchor Shannon Bream pressing the Minnesota governor on whether Israel has a right to preemptively attack Iran's nuclear and oil facilities in response to Tehran's firing of missiles against Israel. It was a question that Walz did not fully answer during his debate this past week with Vance, an Ohio senator.
Walz said Sunday that âspecific operations will be dealt with at the timeâ and he spoke of âconsequences for what they do."
He said Israel has a right to defend itself and that Harris worked with Israel this past week to repel the Iranian attack. President Joe Biden said last week he would not support an Israeli strike on sites related to Tehranâs nuclear program.
Walz defended a law that he signed as governor to ensure abortion protections, saying it "puts the decision with the woman and her health care providers.â
Trump has said he would not sign a national abortion ban into law, and during the interview Sunday, Walz was asked whether he was calling that âa flat-out lie.â
âYes ... of course,â Walz said.
Walz also faced questions in the interview about misstatements related to his military service, drunken driving arrest, infertility treatment for his family and claims to have been in Hong Kong during the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre in China.
âI will own up when I misspeak,â Walz said. âI will own up when I make a mistake.â
He said he believes voters are more concerned by the fact that Vance could not acknowledge during their debate that Trump lost the 2020 election to Biden and that there could be restrictions on the infertility treatments, like the intrauterine insemination that his wife, Gwen, received.
âI think theyâre probably far more concerned with that than my wife and I used IUI to have our child and that Donald Trump would restrict that," Walz said. "So I think folks know who I am.â
Bream noted that Trump has come out in support of fertility treatments, even as he has said that abortion questions should be decided by states.