Harris and Trump attend same 9/11 ceremony hours after their first debate
Hours after they sparred at their first presidential debate together, Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump shook each other’s hands in a show of civility Wednesday morning at a Ground Zero ceremony commemorating the 9/11 attacks.
The two presidential nominees stood near each other at the event in lower Manhattan, with President Joe Biden and former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg standing between Harris and Trump. Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, Trump’s vice presidential nominee, and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani also attended the ceremony.
During the ceremony, a woman who lost her husband in the terrorist attacks criticized Biden for saying Tuesday to reporters that he was going to “do 9/11” on Wednesday when mentioning that he would be attending memorials. The woman called it “quite a flippant remark” — one of the only outright political statements heard during the ceremony.
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Biden and Harris were attending because “they want to honor the 2,977 lives that were lost on that tragic day and support the families and also their loved ones who are still, still feeling a horrible pain.”
The service started at 8:30 a.m. ET, and Biden, Harris, Trump and Vance stayed for over an hour before departing.
Harris, Biden and Trump are also traveling to Shanksville, Pennsylvania, home of the Flight 93 memorial, although it’s unclear whether they will be there at the same time.
There, Biden and Harris will take part in a wreath-laying ceremony, the White House said. They will then head to another 9/11 event, at the Pentagon, at 5 p.m. ET.
Harris’ running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, is expected to commemorate the 9/11 anniversary in his home state.
Presidential candidates traditionally refrain from campaigning on the anniversary of the deadliest terrorist attack in U.S. history, but they have crossed paths at 9/11 memorials in previous election cycles.
In 2016, Trump and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton — then the Democratic presidential nominee — attended a 15th anniversary service, but she departed abruptly and appeared unsteady as she left. Her campaign said she felt “overheated,” adding later that she had been diagnosed with pneumonia.
Trump used the incident to question Clinton’s stamina and whether she was “tough” enough to be president.
Trump, as president, and Biden, the Democratic nominee, attended the 9/11 Memorial & Museum’s annual commemoration at Ground Zero in 2020, when Biden spent time consoling family members who lost loved ones in the attacks.
Trump and Biden that day also went to Shanksville, where Biden laid a wreath at the memorial and met with family members and Trump delivered a speech vowing that “America will always rise up, stand tall and fight back.”
Harris went to the New York memorial service last year, while Biden, who was traveling back from Asia, marked the anniversary at an Air Force base in Alaska.
As he’s scheduled to do this year, Biden went to all three of the attack memorial sites in 2021 — the 20th anniversary.
Trump, a New York native, did not attend the memorial in 2021, making stops instead at a police station and a firehouse.
He marked the anniversary with a video statement last year. “No one who lived through the horror of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks can ever forget the agony and the anguish of that terrible day. It was a terrible day,” he said in the video. “We will never forget.”