Milton: Campaigning in Georgia on Monday, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris stressed a need to elect Democratic US Senate candidates who will advance President-elect Joe Biden's agenda. Ivanka Trump, meanwhile, warned that failing to reelect the two Republican incumbents in next month's crucial runoff could erode her father's legislative achievements.
Telling a crowd in Columbus that "everything is at stake" in the January 5 contests, Harris said Democratic candidates Jon Ossoff and the Rev Raphael Warnock would advance Biden policy priorities such as increased funding for schools in low-income districts, a USD 15,000 tax credit to first-time home buyers, and policing reforms.
"We will need the legislation to be passed," Harris said. "We will need Jon and Raphael in the United States Senate. These are the things that are at stake." Harris'' other planned stop was cancelled due to a scheduled Senate vote on a coronavirus relief package.
Speaking ahead of Harris, Ossoff warned that Republicans would block the Biden administration's agenda if they kept Senate control, stymying a progressive platform to raise the minimum wage, expand access to health care and invest in infrastructure.
"We have too much good work to do, Columbus, to be mired in gridlock and obstruction," he said.
Trump, President Donald Trump's daughter and a senior White House adviser, stumped with Republican US Sens David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler on Monday outside a pub in Milton, a wealthy suburb about 30 miles (48 kilometres) north of Atlanta.
Over the crowd's shouts of "We love Trump!" and "Fight for Trump!" she implored voters to send Republicans back to the Senate "to protect all that America stands for." She called the runoff the "most important congressional race in history," and described Perdue and Loeffler as the "last line of defense" against Democrats'' agenda and for her father in Congress.
"We need David and Kelly in the Senate to keep our economy going, to keep delivering on the president's plans, and to keep our schools open," she said, drawing cheers from the audience.