Updated
Democrats have rallied around the vice president as she looks to clinch the nomination.
Vice President Kamala Harris on Monday will deliver her first public speech since President Joe Biden announced his withdrawal from the race. Less than 24 hours after the announcement, Democrats are coalescing around Ms. Harris, positioning her to clinch the nomination.
Ms. Harris will deliver remarks at a White House event celebrating the National Collegiate Association championship teams from the 2023-2024 season.
Democratic House Whip Katherine Clark (D-Mass.) and House Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar (D-Calif.) announced their own endorsements of Vice President Kamala Harris for their party’s nominee for president.
Ms. Clark took to X with a simple endorsement, sharing a picture of her hugging the vice president with the caption “Team Harris.”
Meanwhile, Mr. Aguilar shared a longer official statement, saying, “I know Kamala to be a fierce advocate for working families and a tough-minded prosecutor who knows right from wrong.”
Vice President Kamala Harris was endorsed by four midwestern governors as the Democratic Party presidential nominee, including Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker.
“Vice President Harris has proven, at every point in her career, that she possesses the skills, strength, and character to lead this country and the vision to better the lives of all Americans,” he said in a statement on July 22. “From protecting women’s rights to defending American workers and strengthening the middle class, Vice President Harris is a champion of the American values we hold dear.”
The governor also said that he “will work hard to get her elected,” and he believes Ms. Harris is most qualified to be president.
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, whose name has been regularly mentioned as a possible replacement for President Joe Biden in the 2024 race, posted a statement on X, endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris.
“Today, I am fired up to endorse Kamala Harris for President of the United States,” Ms. Whitmer wrote.
“She’s a former prosecutor, a champion for reproductive freedom, and I know that she’s got Michigan’s back,” she added. “Vice President Harris has my full support.”
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore announced his endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris for president in an official statement on the morning of July 22.
“The American people deserve a champion who will continue the progress of the Biden–Harris Administration, and that’s why I am proud to voice my full support and offer my full endorsement to Vice President Kamala Harris to be the Democratic Nominee for president,” he said.
Mr. Moore went on to say that his decision “goes far beyond politics,” calling back to his interaction with the vice president after the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed in March.
With President Joe Biden now out of the presidential race, one of his former rivals for the Democratic nomination is calling for a competitive process to select the party’s nominee.
While other Democrats—including the president—have begun to coalesce around Vice President Kamala Harris as the best candidate for the job, Rep. Dean Phillips (D-Minn.), who suspended his own campaign in March, wrote in a July 21 X post that he believes a “brief, transparent, competitive” selection process would “serve democracy, generate energy, and provide legitimacy” to the party’s eventual nominee.
In another post, he suggested conducting a straw poll among Democrat delegates and then inviting Ms. Harris and the other top three candidates to participate in a series of televised town halls before the nominee is selected.
The day after President Joe Biden exited the presidential race, Sen. Joe Manchin (I-W.Va.) confirmed that he would not be the new Democratic Party nominee.
“I am not going to be a candidate for president,” Mr. Manchin told CBS Mornings on July 22.
The senator also said he believes Vice President Kamala Harris, who immediately earned President Biden’s endorsement, is too far left and he would like to see a directional change.
President Joe Biden pulled out of the 2024 presidential race on July 21 and immediately endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris as the new party nominee.
Even with his endorsement of Ms. Harris, the future of the party ticket is uncertain, and Democrats must now navigate an unprecedented shift late in the election year. Ms. Harris has announced her intention to “earn and win this nomination.”
The Democratic National Convention is scheduled for Aug. 19–22 in Chicago, Illinois. Originally, the event would have been a coronation for President Biden as the Democratic nominee, but now the convention will see an open contest of nearly 4,700 delegates looking for a new challenger to pit against former President Donald Trump in November.
Vice President Kamala Harris secured a commanding list of endorsements for her presidential nomination bid in the hours that followed the announcement from President Joe Biden that he is stepping out of the 2024 race.
The list of endorsements included the chairs of all 50 state party chairs, convention delegates from at least four states, and some of the biggest names in the party, including the Clintons, the governors of California, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey, and Democrat mega-donor Alex Soros.
The growing coalition behind Ms. Harris, which started with the endorsement from the president, has all but assured her as the party’s nominee to face GOP nominee former President Donald Trump in November.
“He looks forward to finishing his term and delivering more historic results for the American people,” White House spokesman Andrew Bates told news outlets in a statement.
Mr. Bates said that the president has already delivered strong economic growth and grown the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. He said that the president’s agenda in the final months of the term includes lowering costs, creating jobs, and protecting Social Security.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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