Former President Donald Trump on Tuesday night brought up one of her most memorable debate comments, when he told Vice President Kamala Harris “hold on a second” during a debate exchange and then said, “I'm speaking now.”
“She's abandoned at least 12, maybe 14 or 15 different policies. For example, she was focused on defunding the police,” Trump said, before Vice President Harris appeared to make a remark.
“Hold on a second, I'm speaking,” Trump shot back. “If you don't mind, please. Does that sound familiar?”
Trump was referring to a moment during the 2020 vice presidential debate when Harris told Mike Pence, “I'm talking,” after he and Pence tried to interrupt her.
Trump-Harris race close nationwide, new survey finds pollsters flag 'warning signs' for Democrats
A new poll ahead of Tuesday's ABC News presidential debate finds Vice President Kamala Harris leading former President Trump by 8 percentage points among Virginia voters. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)
At the time, Harris' critics suggested the remarks were an attempt to create buzz.
Harris and the Trump campaign had discussed in the weeks leading up to the debate whether to mute the microphones of candidates who were not speaking, but the decision was ultimately made to do so.
The moment caught the attention of conservatives on social media, with commentator Dana Loesch calling X a “good joke.”
Voters report Kamala Harris is more radical than Trump: “Too liberal or too progressive”

DETROIT, MICHIGAN – SEPTEMBER 2: Vice President Kamala Harris delivers a Labor Day speech at Northwestern High School in Detroit, Michigan, Monday, September 2, 2024. (Photo by Sarah Rice for The Washington Post via Getty Images) (Sarah Rice for The Washington Post via Getty Images)
“She went to Minnesota and tried to free criminals who were killing people who burned down Minneapolis,” Trump said, moments after asking Harris to finish her remarks. “She went out and raised money to get them out of prison. She did things that nobody would think of doing. Now she's trying to give illegal immigrants in prison sex reassignment surgery.”
Recent polls show Trump is ignoring the burst of enthusiasm for the Democratic Party after Harris entered the race and maintaining his lead nationally.
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Republican presidential candidate and former president Donald Trump departs for a campaign event at the Central Wisconsin Airport on September 7, 2024. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)
According to the latest New York Times/Siena Poll released on Sunday, Trump has the support of 48% of voters, while 47% support Harris.
Fox News Digital's Brian Flood and Michael Lee contributed to this report.