Harris repeats debunked claim Trump wants to 'ban' abortion during first campaign rally since Biden quit race

Vice President Harris fired up voters in one major swing state on Tuesday, while also using her first campaign rally since President Biden's exit from the 2024 race to repeat a debunked claim that former President Trump wants to implement a blanket "ban" on abortion.

"We who believe in reproductive freedom will stop Donald Trump's extreme abortion bans because we trust women to make decisions about their own body, and not have their government tell them what to do," Harris told a raucous crowd of supporters gathered at a school auditorium in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Harris has made the same claim on other occasions, including in an X post earlier this month. "Donald Trump would ban abortion nationwide," she wrote. "President [Joe Biden] and I will do everything in our power to stop him and restore women's reproductive freedom."

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Her claim drew widespread condemnation from users who used Community Notes, the platform’s way for readers to offer context to messages viewed as false or lacking context, to point to reporting from CNN, BBC, The Associated Press and The New York Times that went against her claim.

X CEO Elon Musk, a supporter of Trump, joined in, accusing her of "lying."

"When will politicians, or at least the intern who runs their account, learn that lying on this platform doesn’t work anymore?" he wrote.

Trump has said abortion limits should be left to the states, and posted a video on Truth Social detailing his position earlier this year.

"My view is now that we have abortion where everybody wanted it from a legal standpoint, the states will determine by vote or legislation or perhaps both. And whatever they decide must be the law of the land – in this case, the law of the state," Trump said. 

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Trump has suggested there should be restrictions on abortion after a certain point during a pregnancy, specifically around 15 weeks.

Harris spoke to the crowd for around 18 minutes, much shorter than Trump's usual hour-long or more speeches, and began by recognizing the importance of Wisconsin as a battleground state.

"The path to the White House goes through Wisconsin. Yes it does. And to win in Wisconsin, we are counting on you right here in Milwaukee," she said.

She went on to praise Biden as an "incredible" president, said it was "one of the greatest honors" to have served as his vice president, and claimed his legacy had "surpassed" that of presidents who served two terms in office.

"It is my great honor to have Joe Biden's endorsement in this race," she added.

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The loudest cheers came when Harris said she had reached enough delegate support to secure her party's nomination for president.

"I'm so very honored, and I pledge to you, I will spend the coming weeks continuing to unite our party so we are ready to win in November," she said, acknowledging she has "some work to do" between now and the general election.

She also continued to try and tie Trump to the Heritage Foundation's heavily scrutinized Project 2025, which she called "extreme," and which the former president has disavowed as "ridiculous" and "abysmal."

Harris was briefly interrupted at one point by a protester who began shouting about the plight of the Palestinians amid the war between Israel and Hamas, but the individual was quickly escorted out of the event space.

Fox News' Brian Flood contributed to this report.

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Tennessee girl charged with suffocating cousin, 8, in her sleep after fight over iPhone

A 12-year-old Tennessee girl is charged with suffocating her 8-year-old cousin as she slept while they were visiting family, prosecutors said last week. 

Home security video shows the girl, who will turn 13 this week, allegedly used bedding to suffocate her cousin on July 15 at a home in Humboldt, 98 miles northeast of Memphis, and then cleaned up the victim and re-positioned her body, authorities said.

The younger girl was sleeping in ther top bunk of the bunk beds they shared. The older girl is charged with first-degree murder and tampering with evidence.

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The victim’s mother, Rayana Smith, identified her as Demeria Hollingsworth, Fox 59 reported. 

"She liked to read books, go swimming, play outside, ride her bike every day, play with the kids in the neighborhood, play with my friends’ kids. My baby was sweet," Smith told the news outlet. 

Fox News Digital has reached out to Smith, who said the girls were staying with their grandmother for the summer. 

Before the killing, they had both argued over an iPhone, she said. 

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"When they told me about that, I should have just gone to get my kid," she said. "But they were having fun for the summer and I didn’t think she would kill my baby." 

Frederick Agee, the District Attorney General for the 28th District in West Tennessee, said his office is petitioning Juvenile Judge Mark Johnson to transfer the child to Circuit Court to be tried as an adult, which would allow for a weightier sentence.

"I consider this to be one of the most disturbing violent acts committed by either an adult or juvenile that my office has prosecuted," he said in a statement.

A service for Hollingsworth will be held on July 26, according to a GoFundMe page created by her mother. 

Metro Nashville Public Schools confirmed to Fox News Digital that Hollingsworth attended Cockrill Elementary School. 

"The Cockrill community is mourning the unexpected loss of Demeria Hollingsworth, a beloved student who had been part of Cockrill since Pre-K. Demeria was known for her hard work, intelligence, and sweet demeanor," school Principal Casey Campbell said in a statement provided by the school district. "She was cherished by everyone who knew her. Her passing has left all of us at Cockrill devastated. She will be greatly missed."

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