Republican presidential hopefuls are criticized by Kamala Harris and dubbed "extremists."


Vice President Kamala Harris has called the Republican presidential contenders "extremists" and claimed that the panelists at the party's first primary debate outlined a plan to make the nation less safe, less free, and less fair.

"No one on stage claimed to have 'won' this debate. Instead, the two-hour Republican presidential primary debate in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, highlighted how much the American people stand to lose from an extremist ideology, said Democrat Kamala Harris.

Two Indian Americans participated in the discussion: Nikki Haley, 51, a former governor of South Carolina, and Vivek Ramaswamy, 38, a businessman.

Each extreme Republican contender presented a vision for a less just, free, and secure America one by one. In order to aid special interests and the extremely affluent, these politicians intend to increase costs for working families. to undermine Medicare and Social Security. To rob millions of people of their fundamental liberties and rights," said Harris, who is running as Vice President Joe Biden's running mate in the 2024 presidential election.

"And to undo the Bidenomics policy that has contributed to the strongest two years ever for small business creation, creating 13 million employment. The goal of these extremists is to distract the American public from the fact that they lack any rational argument by focusing on pointless nationalist debates.

"President Biden and I will keep fostering bottom-up and middle-out economic growth as we work to create a country where everyone can live prosperous lives. We are steadfastly committed to completing the tasks we have already begun, including those to "create good jobs, lower costs, repair America's roads and bridges, create a clean energy economy, protect a woman's right to make decisions about her own body, protect our children from gun violence, and ensure that all Americans can dream about the future with ambition and aspiration," Harris said.

Ajay Bhutoria, the Democratic National Committee's deputy national finance chair, claimed in a second statement that MAGA Republicans were attempting to shift focus away from their contentious support for widespread abortion bans by proposing new policy views.

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