2024 Trump VS. Harris

""Freedom for Who?""

Transcript

“We choose freedom.”

“Where do you stand on defund the police?”

“We need to take a look at these budgets and figure out whether it reflects the right priorities.”

“It is outdated, it is wrong-headed thinking to think that the only way you're going to get communities to be safe is to put more police officers on the street.”

“We have to reimagine how we achieve public safety.”

“Part of this has to be about upending the system.”

“Politicians were successful in moving away critical funds to police stations, and now what we are seeing across the country is violence surging.”

“Cities across the country are seeing a major spike in violent crime now, while cities are pushing to defund the police nationwide.”

“We choose freedom.”

Credits

""Freedom for Who?"," Trump, 2024

From Museum of the Moving Image, The Living Room Candidate: Presidential Campaign Commercials 1952-2012.
www.livingroomcandidate.org/commercials/2024/freedom-for-who (accessed April 29, 2025).

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2024 Trump Harris Results
Former president Donald Trump defeated Vice President Kamala Harris in the 2024 election, becoming the first president since Grover Cleveland in 1892 to be elected to a nonconsecutive second term. He also became the first Republican since 2004 to win the popular vote. In an unprecedented event, the presumptive Democratic nominee, President Joe Biden, dropped out of the race on June 27, 2024, after a disastrous debate performance. Biden endorsed Harris, who was nominated without contest. The election turned out to be a referendum on Biden’s presidency as much as it was a contest between Trump and Harris.
Republican
Donald Trump for president
JD Vance for vice president

“Make America Great Again.”

Donald Trump’s campaign, and his election, were unprecedented in several ways. He has secured the loyal support of his followers, despite—or perhaps because of—the disruptive nature of his rhetoric and his frequent courting of controversy. Yet the lines of attack in his campaign ads follow templates set by many previous Republican campaigns, portraying his opponent as recklessly liberal and weak on military issues, the handling of the economy, and immigration. The campaign also used a common approach for attacking vice presidents, tying them to the records of the president they have served.
Democrat
Kamala Harris for president
Tim Walz for vice president

“When We Fight, We Win.”

Vice President Kamala Harris was the Attorney General of California, the first woman, African American, and South Asian woman to reach that office. She was elected U.S. Senator in 2016, and in 2020, with Joe Biden at the top of the ticket, she was elected Vice President. Harris’s ads focused on her life story as the embodiment of the American dream; on her role as a prosecutor, in contrast to Donald Trump’s court convictions and ongoing legal proceedings; and on support for the economic concerns and rights (including abortion) for middle-class voters, contrasting what she portrayed as the extremist positions of the Trump campaign.
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Democrat
 
"Kamala Was In On It" "Dangerously Liberal" "Fails the Test" "Kamala Harris Owns Bidenomics" "'Harris' Liberal Ideas Get People Killed "Freedom for Who?" "The Great Debate" "I Don't Understand" "Where's the Justice?" "Day One" "Kamala Chameleon" "Fix It" "Trump Always" "Sex Changes for Prisoners" "I'm Not with Her" "We Fight" "Closing Ad 2"
"Kamala Harris Launches Her Campaign for President" "Determination" "Blocked" "Everyday" "Fearless" "Full House" "The Time is Now" "Knows" "Monster" "The Best People" "Wanted" "Different" "John Kelly" "Mother" "Amber Thurman" "Brighter Future" "Closing Argument"