Vice President Kamala Harris will campaign alongside Liz Cheney, the most prominent Republican to cross party lines and endorse her, on Thursday in Wisconsin at a symbolic location: the birthplace of the Republican Party.
Ms. Harris and Ms. Cheney plan to appear together in a joint appeal to the sort of Republican voters who may retain conservative positions but are repelled by former President Donald J. Trump and his politics. Their event will take place in Ripon, Wis., the site of a series of meetings that helped lead to the foundation of the G.O.P. in 1854.
The two women agree on little politically beyond their distaste for Mr. Trump. They had next to no relationship when they overlapped in Congress, though they did speak on the phone about Ms. Cheney’s endorsement earlier this summer.
The endorsement by Ms. Cheney — and that of her father, former Vice President Dick Cheney — is meant to show the breadth of Ms. Harris’s support, a point that her running mate, Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota, made in his debate against Senator JD Vance of Ohio on Tuesday night.
“I’m as surprised as anybody of this coalition that Kamala Harris has built, from Bernie Sanders to Dick Cheney to Taylor Swift and a whole bunch of folks in between,” said Mr. Walz, name-checking the left-wing senator from Vermont and the world’s biggest pop music star. “And they don’t all agree on everything, but they are truly optimistic people.”
Ms. Cheney is a Wisconsin native who grew up in Virginia and represented Wyoming in Congress for six years. After Mr. Trump tried to overthrow the 2020 election results, she disowned him and participated in the House select committee investigating the Trump-inspired assault on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. She so alienated fellow Wyoming Republicans that she was run out of office by a primary challenger loyal to Mr. Trump.
“As a conservative, as someone who believes in and cares about the Constitution, I have thought deeply about this and because of the danger that Donald Trump poses, not only am I not voting for Donald Trump, but I will be voting for Kamala Harris,” Ms. Cheney told an audience at Duke University in North Carolina last month.
Since becoming the Democratic nominee, Ms. Harris has tacked toward the center, trying to shed her reputation as a California liberal by repudiating many of the progressive positions she held when she ran for president in 2020.
This time around, she has described herself as a committed “capitalist,” laid out a hard-line position on border security and embraced fracking to extract natural gas from under Pennsylvania — a position she opposed during her first presidential campaign. Polls have shown that voters are more worried that Ms. Harris is too liberal than that Mr. Trump — who has proposed a series of radical right-wing policies — is too conservative.
Wisconsin is seen as a must-win state for Ms. Harris, along with Michigan, where she will campaign on Friday, and Pennsylvania, where she has appeared more than any other battleground. Ms. Harris has built a narrow lead in Wisconsin, rapidly recovering from President Biden’s deficit against Mr. Trump, according to a New York Times polling average.
A survey from Marquette Law School released Wednesday found that 71 percent of Wisconsin Democrats were enthusiastic about voting among in the presidential election — up from 40 percent in June, when Mr. Biden was still in the race.
Ms. Harris has also been endorsed by more than 100 former national security officials from Republican administrations and former Republican members of Congress.
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