Vice President Kamala Harris outlined her long-awaited economic plan for America on Wednesday in a speech in the battleground state of Pennsylvania.
Expectations for the Vice President's first-term plans have been high, while her opponent's "concepts of a plan" for healthcare (or anything else) seemed to be fine with the corporate media and her right-wing critics.
Vice President Harris, who was just endorsed by billionaire Mark Cuban, told the audience at The Economic Club of Pittsburgh crowd that "I am a capitalist, I believe in free and fair markets, and I understand the limitations of government.
"I've been working with the private sector and entrepreneurs," she said and promised to hold "bad actors accountable" if she needs to, referencing her track record as California's Attorney General.
Emphasizing economic growth, the Vice President reiterated her commitment to supporting the middle class. "Growing a strong middle class will be a defining principle of my presidency," the Vice President said to applause. "When the middle class is strong, America is strong."
"For Donald Trump, our economy works best if it works for those who own the big skyscrapers," the Vice President continued. "Not those who build them. Not those who wire them. Not those who mop the floors."
Vice President Harris calls it an "opportunity economy" with the middle class as its "growth engine," with tax breaks for new parents to first-time homebuyers. The Vice President also vowed to lower childcare and elder care costs.
"Like generations before us, let us be inspired by what is possible," the Vice President said.