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Vice President Kamala Harris sat down with CNN’s Dana Bash for her first major TV interview since becoming Democrats’ presidential nominee.

The interview was conducted in Savannah on the sidelines of a bus tour through the key Sun Belt state of Georgia and alongside her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.

Harris took in-depth questions on her policy evolution on key issues like fracking and defended her record on immigration and the Biden administration’s handling of the economy.

Here are key lines from the interview:

After a broad claim about focusing on the middle class, Harris made a larger point about moving on from Donald Trump.

Pushed by Bash about her specific plans, Harris said she would focus on her “opportunity economy” plan to bring down the cost of everyday goods and give parents of newborns a $6,000 tax credit “to help them buy a car seat, to help them buy baby clothes, a crib.”

She also mentioned housing affordability and her plan to give first-time homebuyers a $25,000 tax credit to help with a down payment.

But what about people who feel groceries were less expensive and housing more affordable when Trump was president?

So she maintains ‘Bidenomics’ is a success?

There’s a lot in that answer, but one thing worth noting is that the expanded child tax credit she mentioned has since lapsed. Given that Harris as well as Trump’s running mate, Sen. JD Vance, both have said they support a more generous child tax credit, it’s fair to think an expansion is possible no matter who wins the election.

When she ran unsuccessfully in a crowded Democratic primary in 2020, Harris at one point said she favored banning fracking. Harris later changed that position, and during the vice presidential debate said the administration would not ban fracking. Many climate activists oppose fracking, but it is a key issue in battleground states like Pennsylvania.

Republicans have argued the administration should have acted much sooner to cut down on border crossings. While Harris did not answer the question specifically, she argued that earlier this year, before President Joe Biden used executive action to cut down on border crossings, Democrats worked with a few conservative Republicans on a border bill that Republicans ultimately turned against.

She said those agents could have worked to stop fentanyl from coming into the US. If elected, Harris said she would try to revive the border bill.

This is another throwback to a controversial position Harris took during the 2020 Democratic primary.

Bash asked Harris how voters should view her policy evolutions, to which Harris repeated, like a mantra: “My values have not changed.”

Harris did not express any policy differences from Biden, and she reiterated the balance she struck at the Democratic National Convention: acknowledging both Israel’s right to defend itself and the suffering of Palestinians, repeating that a ceasefire deal must get done.

Vance, an Iraq War veteran, has accused Walz of misrepresenting his military service because one time Walz referred to carrying weapons of war “in war” even though he never deployed. The campaign has said Walz misspoke.

Walz has also previously mischaracterized the infertility treatment his wife underwent in becoming pregnant with their children. It was not in vitro fertilization, which some Democrats have argued would be in danger if Trump wins the election. Trump denies that claim, and on Thursday even proposed making the government or insurance companies pay for IVF treatments. The Walz family used intrauterine insemination, IUI, as opposed to IVF.

Separately, Walz’s congressional campaign in 2006 mischaracterized a 1995 drunk driving arrest for which charges were later dropped. Can voters trust what Walz says? He did not address the drunk driving arrest during the interview with Bash, but said, “I certainly own my mistakes when I make ‘em.” He went further on the IVF question.

Cutting hairs? Perhaps he meant “splitting hairs.”

She contrasted that with Trump, whose rise in politics has been part of a decade that “has been contrary to where the spirit of our country really lies.”

She was spending time with her family and her young nieces.

Bash asked about the video of Walz’s son, tearfully saying, “That’s my dad,” during the DNC.

See the photo here.

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