Bret Baier is defending his aggressive interviewing style during his Oct. 16 sit-down with Kamala Harris on Fox News. Baier’s interview with Harris sparked discourse (and a “Saturday Night Live” parody,
Tonight is Kamala Harris' first formal sit-down interview with Fox News. Here’s the exact start time and how to watch the conversation live.
Vice President Kamala Harris engaged in a combative interview with Fox News on Wednesday. She sparred with anchor Bret Baier on immigration and her shifting policy positions while asserting that if elected,
A whopping 7.1 million viewers tuned in to "Special Report with Bret Baier" to watch Vice President Kamala Harris's first-ever interview on Fox News Channel.
Kamala Harris received a better score from swing voters during her Fox News interview on Wednesday than her general popularity with this group, according to a study. Online monitoring and analysis company Impact Social reported that 20 percent of swing voters who watched the interview had a positive impression of Harris.
Kamala Harris ‘ sit down with Fox News’ Bret Baier drew an estimated 7.1 million viewers, according to early Nielsen data, easily beating cable news rivals. The interview also drew 882,000 in the 25-54 demo.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Vice President Kamala Harris will be interviewed by Fox News anchor Bret Baier on Wednesday in Pennsylvania as she steps up her travel and conversations with media outlets in the closing stretch of the presidential campaign.
Vice President Kamala Harris on Wednesday hammered former President Donald Trump as thin-skinned and a threat to U.S. democracy in a combative interview with Fox News.
Pressed and often interrupted by Bret Baier, the vice president opened up a little more distance from President Biden and defended her position on immigration and border security.
Vice President Kamala Harris has brought her campaign to a place many Democrats have long considered enemy territory.
The vice president will take questions from Bret Baier in a session to be broadcast at 6 p.m. She joins a long line of Democratic candidates and elected officials who have ventured into hostile television territory.