Kamala Harris rapidly picks up Democratic support as 2024 race is reborn

Vice President Kamala Harris arrives aboard Air Force Two Saturday in Buzzards Bay, Mass. Powerful leaders of the Democratic establishment quickly embraced Vice President Kamala Harris on Sunday, after President Joe Biden’s shocking exit from the race. (Erin Schaff/The New York Times)

Powerful leaders of the Democratic establishment quickly embraced Vice President Kamala Harris on Sunday after President Joe Biden’s shocking exit from the race, hoping that a seamless succession could end a month of damaging chaos and transform a contest widely believed to be tipping toward Republicans.

By Sunday evening, Harris appeared to have a glide path to the nomination: No other top Democrats announced plans to challenge her, although some stopped short of an endorsement, including the party’s top congressional leaders and former President Barack Obama.

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With breathtaking speed, she took control of Biden’s enormous political operation and contacted Democratic leaders in Congress and statehouses to ask for their support. The Biden campaign formally renamed itself Harris for President, giving her immediate access to an account that had $96 million in cash at the end of June. On an internal call, the Biden campaign’s leaders told staff members that they would now work for Harris.

“I will do everything in my power to unite the Democratic Party — and unite our nation — to defeat Donald Trump and his extreme Project 2025 agenda,” Harris said in a statement. “We have 107 days until Election Day. Together, we will fight. And together, we will win.”

The rapid turn of events plunged the party and the nation into unfamiliar political territory, giving unelected Democratic officials the final say over the party’s nominee. Complicated decisions loom. Harris must choose a running mate, take charge of the campaign with little time before early voting begins in some states in September, rebuild support among voters who had fled Biden and prepare to withstand a full-blown Republican assault.

Speculation immediately turned to her potential running mate, with many Democrats privately arguing that Harris should pick a white man to widen her appeal and provide demographic balance to the ticket. A flotilla of governors — including Roy Cooper of North Carolina, Andy Beshear of Kentucky, Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania and Tim Walz of Minnesota — as well as Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona have been frequently mentioned by donors, officials and other lawmakers.

Biden endorsed Harris within minutes Sunday afternoon. Before she had uttered a word about her intentions, he was swiftly followed by other party leaders, including Bill and Hillary Clinton, key Democratic senators and influential House members. By evening, Shapiro had publicly backed Harris after a phone call from her. She also picked up endorsements from California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Cooper and Kelly.

Not all Democrats were pushing for a coronation. Neither Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., the majority leader, nor Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., the minority House leader, backed her, nor did Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., the former speaker who wields considerable power. Obama appeared to call for a more competitive nominating process.

“We will be navigating uncharted waters in the days ahead,” he said. “But I have extraordinary confidence that the leaders of our party will be able to create a process from which an outstanding nominee emerges.”

Privately, some Democrats argued that a more competitive process would benefit Harris because it could dispel doubts about her political skills. Some also said it could counter perceptions that the party was making decisions for the country in today’s equivalent of a smoke-filled room. Harris said Sunday that she intended “to earn and win this nomination.”

The party’s quick embrace of Harris poured a dash of cold water on the idea that some other challenger would emerge. Any Democratic rival would face a steep climb to match her political support, money and other resources. Such a bid could also hurt the candidate’s future prospects, particularly among Black women, who are some of the party’s most reliable voters.

Many Democrats felt a palpable sense of enthusiasm and relief. They now see an opportunity to recover from nearly a month of internal battles and a race that seemed headed for catastrophic defeats from the White House all the way down to statehouse races.

“Democrats have a choice to make: Unite and win, or fight each other and lose,” said Mayor Randall L. Woodfin of Birmingham, Alabama, urging his party to embrace Harris. Woodfin, who had been a strong supporter of Biden’s, said Democrats now had “a chance to have a younger ticket that pulls in more younger voters, enthusiasm, energy and excitement.”

Although Harris may inject enthusiasm into the Democratic grassroots, it remains uncertain how the country will respond to her campaign. She is a Black woman from California, a liberal stronghold, and her bid will inevitably test the country’s appetite for a historic first.

An analysis of recent polling found that Harris trailed Trump by a slim margin in top battleground states, although she outperformed Biden among Black voters, younger voters and women.

But the nomination of Harris, 59, would also introduce complications for Trump, 78, forcing him to run against a candidate who is decades younger than him, more energetic than Biden and more skilled at wielding Democrats’ best political issue, abortion rights.

Trump has also previously supported her: He made two donations worth $6,000 in total to her bids for California attorney general in 2011 and 2013.

A cascade of Democrats in competitive states issued statements of support Sunday.

Sen. Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, who did not appear with Biden when he was recently in the state, offered her backing. So did Sen. Jon Ossoff of Georgia as well as Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, who represents a state that senior Biden campaign staff members had grown increasingly worried about. Sen. Martin Heinrich of New Mexico, the third Senate Democrat to urge Biden to step down, said he would also support Harris.

Harris also made some early strides toward capturing the support of party delegates who will select the nominee. Democratic National Committee delegates from North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee voted to endorse Harris — the first state delegations to formally back her.

Former Rep. Brenda Lawrence, a Michigan Democrat, said the concerns that voters raised about Biden often had to do with his age rather than his policies.

“Now we have a younger person with another old man — that’s Trump,” she said. “I’m excited about this race, and I’m very optimistic about us turning this around and making history.”

Several big Democratic groups also backed Harris, including Emily’s List, which supports Democratic candidates who back abortion rights. The group has fiercely defended Harris and has for months used polls to test messaging about her political strengths and weaknesses. The American Federation of Teachers, a major labor union, also moved to support Harris.

© 2024 The New York Times Company

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