Kamala Harris Plans Aerial Taunt at Alabama-Georgia Game Over Trump's Debate Rejection
ICARO Media Group
**Kamala Harris Plans Aerial Taunt at Alabama-Georgia Game Over Trump's Debate Rejection**
At the Alabama-Georgia football game this Saturday, former President Donald Trump will likely see more than just a packed stadium of 100,000 enthusiastic fans. Vice President Kamala Harris has orchestrated an aerial message targeting Trump over his refusal to engage in a second debate with her.
The Harris campaign has arranged for a plane to fly a banner over Tuscaloosa during the highly-anticipated game, reading, "Trump's Punting on 2nd Debate." This sky-high taunt is intended to be visible not only to the thousands of Crimson Tide and Georgia Bulldogs supporters but also to a national television audience.
In addition to the airborne message, the Harris campaign will run a national advertisement during the game, which will echo her challenge for Trump to join her on the debate stage once more. The Vice President has already accepted CNN's invitation to participate in a second debate next month, but Trump has dismissed the October 23 date as "too late," citing that early voting has already commenced in several states.
Despite his public reservations, sources tell CNN that Trump has contemplated the idea of debating Harris again. Some of his advisers believe it would be an opportunity to argue that Harris has had over four years to address her current campaign promises. Many felt Trump did not emphasize this point enough during their previous debate in Philadelphia.
Nevertheless, some of Trump's advisers are convinced that he has definitively decided against participating in another debate. Trump himself has hinted that his decision could be influenced by his mood at the time.
For Harris, another debate could be advantageous as well. While polls, including one conducted by The New York Times-Sienna College, indicated that viewers largely saw Harris as the winner of their first debate, it hasn't significantly shifted the polls, leaving the race tightly contested.