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Joe Raedle/Getty ImagesBy AVERI HARPER, ABC News

(FRESNO, Calif.) — Sen. Kamala Harris, the Democratic vice presidential nominee, is heading to her home state of California a day after President Donald Trump’s visit there as massive wildfires decimate communities across the West Coast.

According to the Biden-Harris campaign, Harris will meet with emergency personnel in Fresno Tuesday to assess the damage from the fires ravaging the state. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who on Monday confronted Trump about climate change while the president dismissed it, is expected to join Harris on her visit to the state’s Central Valley. It is her first trip to California since accepting the Democratic vice presidential nomination.

The trip coincides with the reemergence of climate change as a campaign issue.

During a grassroots fundraiser Monday with Hillary Clinton, Harris condemned Trump’s stance on the issue.

“The fact is that we are in the midst of an incredible crisis, because our climate is changing in drastic form, which is leading to California burning in many places, which is leading to storms hitting our Gulf Coast repeatedly year after year and getting worse,” Harris said. “And we have a president in Donald Trump who has pretty much denied the science and even today, could not with the full voice, speak to the fact that we have to address this and we have to address it around projection of what’s predictable, in terms of not only drought, but electrical fires based on lightning, which is part of what we saw in California.”

During former Vice Biden’s remarks on the wildfires Monday, he referred to Trump as a “climate arsonist.”

“If you give a climate arsonist four more years in the White House, why would anyone be surprised if we have more of America ablaze? If you give a climate denier four more years in the White House, why would anyone be surprised when more of America is underwater?” Biden said in prepared remarks.

Trump was briefed Monday in Sacramento by a panel including the California Secretary of Natural Resources Wade Crawfoot.

“We want to work with you to really recognize the changing climate and what it means to our forests, and actually work together with that science,” Crawfoot told Trump. “That science is gonna be key because if we — if we ignore that science, and sort of put our head in the sand and think it’s all about vegetation management, we’re not going to succeed together, protecting Californians.”

“It’ll start getting cooler, you just — you just watch,” Trump countered.

“I wish science agreed with you,” Crawfoot replied.

“Oh, well, I don’t think science knows actually,” Trump said.

More than 3.3 million acres have been burned in the Golden State this year — more than 27 times more than in 2019, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. The wildfires also claimed the lives of 27 people last week.

Biden has proposed that United States go carbon-free by 2035 and his plan calls for a $2 trillion investment in green energy and infrastructure. Trump has rolled back Obama-era environmental regulations and, under his leadership, the U.S. backed out of Paris Climate Agreement.

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