Harris tries to flip the script on Trump on the border during raucous Georgia speech

Asma Khalid photographed by Jeff Elkins/Washingtonian

ATLANTA — Vice President Harris used the biggest event of her campaign thus far to take on one of her biggest political liabilities: the reoccurring surges in migration at the southern U.S. border during the Biden administration.

Kamala Harris, then the San Francisco District Attorney, poses for a portrait on June 18, 2004.

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Republicans have attacked Harris as a failed "border czar" who did little to stop migration, even though President Biden had asked her to find ways to address the root causes of migration from Northern Triangle countries early on in her time as vice president. Former President Donald Trump had made border security one of his signature issues, building a wall on the southern border and using various restrictions to try to cut back on immigration.

Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., holds up a tweet by Vice President Harris at a news conference at the Capitol on July 30, 2024.

Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., holds up a tweet by Vice President Harris at a news conference at the Capitol on July 30, 2024. Kent Nishimura/Getty Images/Getty Images North America hide caption

toggle caption Kent Nishimura/Getty Images/Getty Images North America

On Tuesday, Harris tried to turn the tables on this narrative, painting herself as a hard-charging attorney general of a border state who had walked underground tunnels between Mexico and California with law enforcement.

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"I went after transnational gangs, drug cartels and human traffickers that came into our country illegally. I prosecuted them in case after case, and I won," Harris said. "Donald Trump, on the other hand, has been talking a big game about securing our border, but he does not walk the walk," she said.

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Harris was only a few months into her time as vice president when Biden gave her a politically treacherous assignment: to find ways to deal with the deep-seated economic and societal problems driving tens of thousands of Central American people to try to seek asylum in the United States.

Her first foreign trip was to Guatemala and Mexico, and Republicans slammed her for not first visiting border communities grappling with increased numbers of people. And then she became irritated in an NBC interview, fueling Republican criticism back home.

Biden and Trump were both at the border today, staking out ground on a key 2024 issue

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Harris didn't mention her work on the root causes of migration during her Tuesday night speech. Instead, she picked up a strategy that Biden was also seeking to use in his campaign — focusing on a tough border security bill that Biden had agreed to sign, that would give him the authority to, in his words, "shut down the border" when migrant numbers surge.

Republicans in Congress backed away from that bill, after some in the Senate had initially supported it. Harris, like Biden, blamed Trump for tanking the bill, because the issue of immigration played well for him. Biden later took executive action to try to accomplish some of the same goals, though it is being challenged in court.

Vice President Harris speaks at a campaign event at the Georgia State Convocation Center on July 30, 2024 in Atlanta.

Vice President Harris speaks at a campaign event at the Georgia State Convocation Center on July 30, 2024 in Atlanta. Megan Varner/Getty Images hide caption

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"Donald Trump does not care about border security — he only cares about himself," Harris said. “As president, I will bring back the border security bill that Donald Trump killed, and I will sign it into law, and show Donald Trump what real leadership looks like," she said.