Vice President Kamala Harris has repeatedly taunted her opponent's seeming reluctance to debate, telling a series of raucous audiences about Donald Trump's criticisms of her: "As the saying goes, if you've got something to say, say it to my face."
After first backing out of an agreement, Trump reversed and said he'd meet Harris on Sept. 10 for an event hosted by ABC. That sets up a long-anticipated faceoff between the Democrat and Republican nominees — and, indeed, the chance for both to deliver their attack lines directly at one another.
Sharing a stage with Trump presents a critical chance for Harris to define herself and her opponent in a truncated campaign, with many open questions about her policy positions. But it also sets up a major test, one that President Joe Biden failed badly enough that he ended his campaign and made way for Harris.
Harris, a former San Francisco district attorney and California attorney general, has long presented her debating prowess as a strength, and her sharp questioning of opponents has produced many a career highlight. But she has also had testy exchanges that didn't play as well.
"She's certainly had a good rollout in the past few weeks and that will naturally translate to expectations on the debate stage," said Aaron Kall, director of the University of Michigan's debate program. "Part of the problem is, President Biden did so poorly in the first one, there's no way she could do worse, and so that comparison is not going to help. But her debate history is a mixed bag."
Perhaps the pinnacle of Harris' short-lived 2020 presidential campaign was a broadside against then-candidate Biden, who later made her his running mate, anyway. She seized on Biden opposing busing to integrate public schools in the 1970s by describing a young girl who boarded such buses before offering, "That little girl was me."
It was memorable but also planned. Harris' campaign then posted the same phrase on social media over a picture of its candidate as a school-aged girl in pigtails.
But a low moment of Harris' same campaign came at a subsequent debate. Another rival, former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, launched a lengthy attack on Harris' prosecutorial record.
Gabbard said Harris "put over 1,500 people in jail for marijuana violations and then laughed about it when she was asked if she ever smoked marijuana." With the audience roaring, Gabbard further accused Harris of having "blocked evidence that would have freed an innocent man from death row until the courts forced her to do so."
Gabbard now says she was surprised that Harris' record hadn't been more carefully scrutinized during the primary. She said she uncovered the issues she raised not with opposition research, but by using Google.
"I was surprised at how unprepared she was to respond to them. Just from, you know, I would imagine that you'd prepare before going into a debate," Gabbard said in an interview. "And also that she made no attempt to deny them or frankly justify them, if she was proud of those decisions.
"Ultimately this is disrespectful to voters, if she's not responding to, or addressing, questions about a record that she claims to be proud of."
In her response on the debate stage, Harris attempted to dismiss Gabbard, saying, "I am proud of making a decision to not just give fancy speeches, or be in a legislative body and give speeches on the floor, but actually doing the work."
She got even more personal after the debate, calling herself a "top-tier candidate" while suggesting that Gabbard was polling at "0 or 1% or whatever she might be at." At a subsequent debate, Harris hit back, saying Gabbard had spent years "full-time on Fox News criticizing President Obama."
Gabbard, who has served as a Fox News contributor, remained in the presidential race long after Harris had dropped out.
Sometimes flashing a touch of defiance can work.
Harris first established a national reputation as being especially verbally nimble while questioning Trump's nominee for attorney general, William Barr, and his pick for the Supreme Court, Brett Kavanaugh.
After Kavanaugh repeatedly sidestepped abortion questions, Harris demanded to know if he could think of "any laws that give the government the power to make decisions about the male body?" forcing Kavanaugh to concede, "I am not thinking of any right now."
Kall, of the University of Michigan, said Harris' 2020 debate performance against Republican Vice President Mike Pence was also well-received. Her most memorable line then was probably rebuking Pence's interruptions by retorting, "Mr. Vice President, I am speaking."
She used that line again when protesters decrying the Biden administration's support for Israel's war with Hamas in Gaza interrupted Harris at a rally this past week near Detroit's airport. The vice president was at first accommodating, saying, "I am here because I believe in democracy, and everybody's voice matters."
But she then continued, "I am speaking now," drawing sustained applause from rallygoers before adding, "If you want Donald Trump to win, then say that. Otherwise, I'm speaking."
"Abandon Biden," a progressive group that has opposed the president's now-defunct reelection bid over his Israel policy, bristled at Harris' "disdain for citizens of this country who are pleading for an end to a genocide."
Cullen Tiernan, who was a spokesperson for Gabbard's 2020 campaign, spent hours in debate prep with the then-congresswoman before the on-stage exchange with Harris. He played one of her other primary rivals, Tim Ryan, and laughed about "coastal elites starting being a big problem for me," latching onto one of Ryan's catchphrases.
Now a political activist based in New Hampshire, Tiernan said he saw parallels between Harris' debate stage reaction to Gabbard's criticisms and the interruption in Michigan — but not in a good way.
"As a progressive person, I'm looking for change and empathy, and understanding about what's happening," he said. "Not gaslighting, and feeling like the reality that is being discussed never existed."
Gabbard said she hoped a Trump-Harris debate would showcase for voters the huge differences between the candidates.
"Given the history of many presidential elections, unfortunately, political theater is the norm," she said. "But that substantive debate is really what we need and what we deserve right now."
Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.