MALVERN, Pa. (NewsNation) — Vice President Kamala Harris is barnstorming three must-win states on Monday, trying to court undecided voters, especially suburban women.
And she’s bringing along what her campaign hopes is her secret weapon: former Republican Congresswoman Liz Cheney.
With the campaign heading into its final two weeks, Harris is trying to woo disaffected Republicans, specifically those who voted against former President Donald Trump and for former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.
Harris and Cheney will blitz through suburban counties Haley won prior to dropping out of the Republican presidential primary contest: Chester County, Pennsylvania; Oakland County, Michigan; and Waukesha County, Wisconsin.
GOP-leaning polls trigger questions about accuracy
Harris hopes to capitalize on what her team says are Trump’s “unprecedented weakness” among women and white, college-educated voters. In Chester County, for instance, more than 9,000 people voted for Haley in the Republican primary after she had dropped out of the race.
Cheney, who has been campaigning with Harris under the slogan “country over party,” will be joined by longtime Republican strategist Sarah Longwell and conservative radio host Charlie Sykes.
Despite the Harris campaign’s efforts, Trump and Haley officials are discussing the two appearing together in the final stretch of the election, a source familiar with the matter confirms to NewsNation.
During a “Fox and Friends” interview Friday, Trump noted that although he soundly defeated Haley, he would still tap the former United Nations ambassador during his administration to help him win.
Participate in NewsNation’s town hall with JD Vance
“I’ll do what I have to do,” Trump said.
Haley offered her “strong endorsement” of Trump in July in her Republican National Convention speech. Last month, Haley told listeners of her SiriusXM show that while she does not always agree with Trump, she still supports him because she thinks he will “make the country better.”
“I have not forgotten what he said about me. I’ve not forgotten what he said about my husband or his, you know, deployment time or his military service,” Haley said. “I haven’t forgotten about his or his campaign’s tactics from, you know, putting a birdcage outside our hotel room to calling me ‘bird brain.’
“But politics is not for thin-skinned people. It’s just not. And I think that if you really want to do a service for your country, you have to be able to put the personal part of it aside,” Haley added.