Vice President Kamala Harris delivered her first message to supporters three weeks after losing the presidential election to Donald Trump. During a call with donors and volunteers Tuesday afternoon, Harris thanked her supporters for their work on her campaign despite coming up short in key battleground states in the race against Trump.
The leaders of Kamala Harris' presidential campaign insist they simply didn't have enough time to execute a winning strategy against Donald Trump, pointing to “ferocious" political headwinds that were ultimately too much to overcome in the 107-day period after President Joe Biden stepped aside.
A member of the progressive "squad" criticized the Harris-Walz campaign for its GOP outreach that included advertising the support of Liz Cheney.
MSNBC said it was "unaware" that Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign paid $500,000 to Al Sharpton’s National Action Network nonprofit ahead of a friendly interview.
Weeks before Kamala Harris sat down with MSNBC for a friendly interview, her campaign contributed two payments of $250,000 to an Al Sharpton-owned group.
“I think she’d be by far the best governor candidate for the state of California,” said Michael Preston, who previously worked for Harris when she was state attorney general.
Jen O'Malley Dillon, the chair of VP Kamala Harris' campaign, said the idea the vice president wasn't doing interviews or avoiding the press was "bulls---."
Vice President Harris “wasn’t willing” to publicly break with President Biden during her 2024 presidential run, and wanted to avoid the negative news cycles that doing so would have triggered,
Voters over the age of 65 are among the most reliable to cast ballots. Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris evenly split these voters nationally, with 49% each, according to exit polls. In Pennsylvania, Trump had an edge with voters 65 and over – 52% to 48% for Harris.
The largest outside group that supported Kamala Harris in the 2024 election paid companies owned or otherwise linked to its founders over $10 million.
Kamala Harris' star-studded list of endorsers drew attention, but there is no proof – and plenty of denials – that she paid for their support.