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Harris pledges marijuana reform, defends record in Charlamagne interview

U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris defended her record as a prosecutor, pledged to decriminalize marijuana and push for police reform as she aimed to shore up support among Black men in an interview with radio host Charlamagne tha God on Oct. 15.

Democratic presidential nominee and U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris arrives on Air Force Two at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, Monday, Oct. 14, 2024, in Detroit, after attending a campaign rally in Pennsylvania. Jacquelyn Martin/Pool via REUTERS / Reuters

U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris defended her record as a prosecutor, pledged to decriminalize marijuana, and push for police reform as she aimed to shore up support among Black men in an interview with radio host Charlamagne tha God on Oct. 15.

Charlamagne, a Black comedian and author who hosts radio program "The Breakfast Club," is known for his blunt interviews of celebrities.

Although he is a Harris supporter, he has been critical of her and President Joe Biden in the past and called Democrats "cowards" for ineffectively prosecuting a case against Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.

In one of his first questions he asked Harris to address a rumor that she disproportionately locked up Black men over her more than a dozen years as San Francisco's district attorney.

"It's just simply not true," Harris said, adding she was described as "one of the most progressive prosecutors" on marijuana cases. She said as president she would work to decriminalize marijuana because she knew how the laws have hurt certain populations, especially Black men.

Some polls show that fewer Black men support Harris than they did Biden in the 2020 election.

Her campaign and allies including Barack Obama are working to win them back in Michigan and other battleground states that will be decided by a thin margin.

Harris said one of the biggest challenges she faces is misinformation from the Trump team aimed at Black voters. "They are trying to scare people away because they know they otherwise have nothing to run on," she said.

Asked about how she would curb police brutality and murders of Black men, Harris said she would work to pass the George Floyd Policing Act, which stalled in Congress in 2021.

Charlamagne countered that Harris probably could not get the votes, a reference to the sharply divided U.S. Congress, and asked why she should push on that. 

"I don't subscribe to that approach," Harris said, adding that it took a lot of work to pass voting rights and other acts through Congress and that she would help elect legislators who would support it.

She declined to answer directly whether she thought Attorney General Merrick Garland should have put Trump in prison for his role in the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

"I think that the court should handle that," she said. "I'm going to handle November."

Audience callers said they feared that the U.S. election might not be free and fair or that Trump would try to spark another Jan. 6-style event.

Harris avoided calling those fears unfounded, and instead accused Trump of failing to stand up for the Constitution. "This man is weak and he is unfit," she said.

She also listed her economic proposals aimed at Black men, and other policies aimed at small-business owners and lowering drug prices. 

FOX, ROGAN NEXT?

On Oct. 16, Harris will be interviewed on Fox News, the conservative-leaning network that paid a US$787 million settlement in 2023 to a voting machine company that sued it over false claims by some Fox hosts of vote-rigging in the 2020 presidential election.

She is also weighing joining the podcaster Joe Rogan, whose show reaches millions of men across the political spectrum, and who has joked that a "puppet master" was behind Harris' strong debate performance against Trump.

The effort reflects increasing anxiety within Democratic circles about Harris' waning momentum in the handful of decisive election states and fears that her under-performance with men, and Black men in particular, could doom her bid for the White House.

Over a quarter of young Black men say they would support Trump in the election race, according to a September poll by the NAACP, the nation's largest civil rights organization. Biden received about 80 percent of the Black male vote in 2020.

Harris' lead over Trump has narrowed in recent days, several polls show. Her lead held steady at 3 points in the latest national Reuters/Ipsos poll and other battleground state polls show the two in a dead heat. 

Harris has been on a media blitz, speaking with friendly hosts from comedy shows, talk shows and podcasts.

During her fifth trip to the Detroit area since launching her campaign in July, Harris also promoted a set of recently unveiled policy proposals aimed at Black men, including forgivable small business loans and access to a new legal recreational marijuana industry.

If elected, Harris would be the first woman and first person of Asian descent to hold the office, as well as the second Black president.

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