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Though much of the Republican National Committee apparatus spent nearly four years preparing to take on President Joe Biden, the party has had to pivot quickly over the past month after he dropped out and Vice President Kamala Harris became the new nominee.

That said, RNC co-chair Lara Trump, who is also the daughter-in-law of the GOP nominee, former President Donald Trump, said the party is more than prepared for her and has been for quite a while.

“It’s very unprecedented. This has never happened before really in US history,” she told the New York Post. “But of course, we’re not entirely surprised. For years we’ve had this in the back of our mind as a possibility. Clearly, the other side has as well.”

Despite the upheaval in the Democratic Party this summer, Trump and his team claim to have a clear vision and strategies ready to use against Harris, the official Democratic nominee.

“I think the reality is and what we have to continue to focus on and drive home to the voters is that this may be a different candidate, but these are the exact same policies,” she told the outlet. “This is the same person who sat alongside Joe Biden and made every policy decision with him. He was taking this country in the wrong direction, regardless of the fact she wants to run away from those facts.”

And while early polling for Harris has been strong, Lara Trump said that was expected.

“Joe Biden was a very low-energy candidate, and you definitely see a honeymoon period with new faces in any campaign. Plus, the media certainly is doing all they can to galvanize around Kamala and her wealthy supporters,” Trump told The Post.

“But there’s a ticking clock to that. They can get all the rich celebrities they want to show up for her, but that clock is going to go off. I would say it goes off the minute she steps onto a debate stage with Donald J. Trump,” she added.

The path to victory for either candidate runs through crucial swing states such as Pennsylvania, Arizona, and Michigan. Lara Trump believes the GOP has an edge in those battlegrounds, she told the outlet.

“We want to bring people back to basics,” she said. “This election is about people’s lives. Their income. It’s about kitchen table issues. There’s plenty of other things to talk about with her stance on fracking or social issues, and we’ll get to that, but we really just want this election to be about a comparison between two presidencies. Two administrations. Under which one were you and your family better off? If we can get people to think about that, we win.”

She went on to say that is an area where Democrats can’t really compete with her father-in-law.

“None of us know what their real policies are to improve these kitchen table issues,” she said. “Zero. None. The only thing we know is they say they won’t tax tips. And even that they had to rip off from us. But voters are smarter than ever now. I have faith they can see the truth.”

A recent survey of 10 swing states — Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin — shows former President Trump narrowly ahead in five states, while Vice President Harris is leading in four. Georgia is currently a tie, The Post reported.

Regarding their scheduled Sept. 10 debate, there are fresh doubts that it will take place.

“Trump’s team, according to the source, would like for the microphones to be muted throughout the debate except for the candidate whose turn it is to speak, as was the case during the first debate with President Joe Biden,” CNN reported.

“The Harris campaign, however, is requesting that ABC and other networks seeking to host a potential October debate keep microphones on, according to a senior campaign official, marking a change from the June debate when the then-Biden campaign wanted microphones muted except when it was a candidate’s turn to speak,” the outlet added.

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