EAST LANSING, Mich. — Two days out from Election Day, Kamala Harris dashed through four stops across battleground Michigan on Sunday without uttering Donald Trump's name, while urging voters not to fooled by the GOP nominee's disparagement of the electoral system that he falsely claims is rigged against him.
The vice president said she trusts the upcoming vote tally and urged voters, ''in particular people who have not yet voted to not fall for this tactic, which I think includes suggesting to people that if they vote, their vote won't matter.''
At a Michigan State University rally, Harris got a rousing response when she asked who had already voted and then gave students another job – to encourage their friends to cast ballots in a state that allows Election Day voter registration.
And instead of her usual speech riffs about Trump being unstable, unhinged and out for unchecked power, Harris sought to contrast her optimistic tone with the darker message of the Republican opponent she did not name.
It was all in service of trying to boost her standing in one of the Democratic ''blue wall'' states in the Midwest considered her smoothest potential path to an Electoral College majority.
''We have an opportunity in this election to finally turn the page on a decade of politics driven by fear and division,'' she said in a oblique reference to Trump. ''We are done with that. We are exhausted with that. America is ready for a fresh start, ready for a new way forward where we see our fellow American not as an enemy, but as a neighbor.''
Harris also avoided direct mention of Trump during her 11-minute morning talk at Greater Emmanuel Institutional Church of God in Christ. But her comments nonetheless served as a clear juxtaposition with the Republican nominee.
''There are those who seek to deepen division, sow hate, spread fear and cause chaos,'' she said. She spoke at the same time Trump was in Pennsylvania declaring the U.S. a ''failed nation'' and saying that he ''shouldn't have left'' the White House after the 2020 election, which he denies losing to Democrat Joe Biden.