Kamala Harris Visits ‘Late Show with Stephen Colbert,’ Talks Abortion Rights, Ukraine and 2024 Election

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Vice President Kamala Harris returned to The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on Wednesday, where she discussed laws currently being passed about reproductive rights, calling them “inhumane.” She also shared her thoughts on Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis‘ claim that the war on Ukraine is a “territorial dispute” and what she believes will be the key issues in the 2024 presidential election.

“I think it’s the height of irresponsibility,” Harris said when Colbert asked her about the many laws that have been drafted since Roe v. Wade was overturned. “In fact, in many cases [it’s] inhumane what has been happening in states around our country that are passing laws that would criminalize health care providers, literally provide for jail time for doctors and nurses who provide reproductive health care, that would punish women for simply seeking the kind of care that they choose, that they need.”

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Harris also addressed the idea that some states wouldn’t allow for abortion in cases of rape or incest.

“Let’s speak clearly about what this means,” she said. “After a person has gone through a most vicious violation of their body, then the government will tell them, ‘And after that, you also will not have autonomy and be able to make decisions about your body as it relates to the decision you make next.'”

Earlier in the evening, Harris and Colbert kicked off their conversation by discussing one of his favorite shows — HBO’s Veep, with the host asking the vice president if the series had any similarities to what it’s like holding that office. “There are bits of it that are actually quite accurate,” she said, before sharing a funny story about a member of her team who lit the fireplace in her office but forgot to open the chimney flue. “There was smoke everywhere.”

On a more serious note, she later explained that one of her jobs is “to stand before our allies and partners around the world — in particular in the context of our transatlantic relationships — and to not only state our position, but to encourage others to stand with us as we have been doing since Feb. 24 of last year, during this year of this unprovoked attack on Ukraine.”

Colbert piggybacked off of Harris’ mention of Ukraine to ask what she thought of DeSantis calling the war a “territorial dispute.”

“When you have had the experience of meeting and understanding the significance again of international rules and norms and the importance of the United States of America, standing firm and clear about the significance of sovereignty and territorial integrity,” she said, “the significance of standing firm against any nation that will try to take by force another nation, if you really understand the issues, you probably would not make statements like that.”

Elsewhere in the interview, despite Colbert’s prying, Harris wouldn’t offer an official announcement that she and President Joe Biden would be running for re-election. Instead she and the host repeated what Biden has often said: That he “intends to run” and if he does, Harris will be “running alongside him.” Colbert also asked Harris what she thinks will be the biggest issues in the coming election. She doubled down on statements Biden has made that next year’s race will be about building on the momentum of the last two years, primarily addressing the climate crisis — a cause into which she said she and Biden have put $1 trillion.

In their final exchange of the night, Colbert asked Harris what fuels her love of this country and makes her want to serve as vice president.

“In these years where we have witnessed so-called leaders attempting to create division between us,” she said, “I meet people who are the most optimistic about what is possible, who believe in each other, who understand that we all have so much more in common than what separates us.”

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