MADISON, Wis. — Kamala Harris said Friday it was ''disqualifying'' for Donald Trump to say former Rep. Liz Cheney, one of the former president's most prominent Republican critics, should have rifles ''shooting at her'' to see how she feels about sending troops to fight.
The Democratic vice president has campaigned extensively with Cheney, especially in the ''blue wall'' battleground states that make up her strongest path to victory on Tuesday, while Trump has been going after the former Wyoming congresswoman and her father, former Vice President Dick Cheney, over the Iraq war and U.S. military interventions abroad.
Speaking to reporters after arriving in Madison, Wisconsin, Harris asked voters to consider who they'd prefer sitting in the Oval Office, driving the message she's been emphasizing in the campaign's closing week. Harris called Cheney ''a true patriot'' and said Trump ''has increased his violent rhetoric.''
''His enemies list has grown longer. His rhetoric has grown more extreme,'' Harris said. ''And he is even less focused than before on the needs and the concerns and the challenges facing the American people.''
Trump and his allies say his comments are being misconstrued. They say he was arguing that Cheney is a ''war hawk'' but would be less supportive of using the military if she had to fight in wars herself.
He doubled down Friday, repeating the same imagery that drove the backlash.
''If you gave Liz Cheney a gun and put her into battle, facing the other side with the guns pointing at her, she wouldn't have the courage and the strength or the stamina to even look the enemy in the eye,'' Trump said during a rally in Warren, Michigan.
The Republican presidential candidate has been using increasingly threatening rhetoric against his adversaries and talked of ''enemies from within'' undermining the country. Some of his former senior aides and Harris have labeled him a fascist in response.