Kamala Harris will become the first presidential candidate since 1984 to turn down an invitation to the black-tie event.
Vice President Kamala Harris has announced she will not attend the Al Smith charity dinner this year, breaking with a tradition that goes back to 1960. Former President Donald Trump says he will attend the event.
A Harris campaign official confirmed she will skip the dinner to focus on campaigning in battleground states.
The Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation dinnerâthe âAl Smith dinnerââis an annual fundraiser hosted by the Catholic Archdiocese of New York, and traditionally attended by both major presidential candidates. In addition to raising millions every year, the chic fundraiser has come to symbolize underlying unity and the ability to put aside political differences for one night, in the name of good cheer.
Set for Oct. 17 at Manhattanâs New York Hilton Midtown, this yearâs dinner is sold out. Last year over 900 people attended the black-tie event, where a table for 10 can go for as much as $250,000.
In 2023, the Al Smith dinner raised $7.1 million for a variety of causes including education, health services, family resources, special needs and foster children.
The event is named after four-term New York governor and Democrat presidential candidate Alfred E. Smith, defeated by Herbert Hoover in 1928. Smith was the first Roman Catholic nominated for U.S. president by a major political party.
The fundraiser debuted in 1946 when then Archbishop of New York Cardinal Francis Spellman established the Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation. The tradition of inviting presidential candidates began with the 1960 race between John F. Kennedyâa Catholicâand Richard Nixon.
New Yorkâs Cardinal Timothy Dolan said Monday he hopes Harris will change her mind and attend the event, which bills itself âA Party for All Parties.â Dolan spoke to reporters at the Elizabeth Seton Childrenâs Center, one of the charities that benefits from the Al Smith dinner.
âWe were looking forward to giving the Vice President an enthusiastic welcome,â Dolan said. âShe speaks very much about high ideals and how itâs good to get away from division and come together in unity and all, and thatâs what the Al Smith dinner is all about. We havenât given up yet.â
âThis hasnât happened in 40 years since Walter Mondale turned down the invitation, and remember, he lost 49 out of 50 states,â Dolan said.
âWe hope sheâs here,â he added. âItâs a grand evening, and itâs an evening of fun and friendship with an extraordinarily noble goal.â
Dolan said that while the event is sponsored by the New York Archdiocese, it is attended by people of various faiths, and âpeople who say they donât belong to any religion whatsoever,â and the causes that it supports are not just Catholic causes.
âItâs really tough to tag it down as a âCatholicâ event,â he said.
In a Truth Social post on Monday, Trump called it âsad, but not surprising, that Kamala has decided not to attend.â
The Epoch Times reached out to the Harris campaign for comment.
Republican candidate Barry Goldwater received no invitation in 1964, although President Lyndon B. Johnson was invited.
In 1984, Walter Mondale declined an invitation to the event; Ronald Reagan was present.
Notably, in 1980, Jimmy Carterâwho supported legalized abortion although he was personally opposedâwas booed by the crowd, possibly a factor in Mondaleâs decision to skip the event.
In 1996, the Archdiocese did not invite either presidential candidate after then-president Bill Clinton vetoed a ban on partial-birth abortion. In 2004, neither candidate was invited, again due to concerns that John Kerryâs pro-abortion stance would stoke division at the fundraiser. Kerry, a Catholic, dissented from the Catholic churchâs teaching on abortion.
The dinner has traditionally offered the candidates an opportunity to roast each other. During the 2016 dinner, Trump joked with Hilary Clinton about legal troubles she was facing at the time over her private email servers: âJust before taking the dais, Hilary accidentally bumped into me, and she very civilly said âPardon me.ââ The joke drew a hearty laugh from Mrs. Clinton and the rest of the audience.
In 2020, the event was held online due to COVID-19 concerns, and did not feature the usual back-and-forth ribbing.
The Associated Press and Aleteia contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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