Kamala Harris races to sew up Democratic party nomination

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Kamala Harris was close to locking up Democratic support for her run at the White House on Monday, as endorsements and money poured in for the vice-president’s candidacy one day after US President Joe Biden dropped out of the race and endorsed her.

Three leading governors previously considered possible contenders to replace Biden — Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, JB Pritzker of Illinois and Andy Beshear of Kentucky — all backed Harris on Monday. Bill and Hillary Clinton, California governor Gavin Newsom and other party grandees had announced their support earlier.

In a post on X, Harris said she was marking the “first full day of our campaign” by travelling to Biden headquarters in Delaware. She also used a previously scheduled appearance at the White House to fete Biden’s “legacy of accomplishment” as president as “unmatched in modern history”.

Harris’s campaign has taken over the infrastructure and apparatus of the former Biden campaign and said on Monday that it had raised nearly $50mn from small donors since the president dropped out, boosting her firepower for the election run.

Harris was set to make her first public appearance since Biden’s bombshell announcement later on Monday, when she is scheduled to meet college athletes at the White House.

Beshear described the vice-president as smart, strong and kind, adding: “The contrast between her and those running on the other side couldn’t be clearer.”

Harris also clinched on Monday endorsements from Wes Moore, the governor of Maryland, and Dick Durbin, the Illinois senator and second highest-ranking Democrat in the upper chamber of Congress.

The steady stream of support from top Democrats could help the party avoid the potential chaos of an “open convention”, when delegates convene in Chicago next month to officially pick their presidential candidate.

However, Harris has yet to secure the public endorsements of former President Barack Obama and ex-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, two of the biggest voices in the party.

Joe Manchin, the centrist senator from West Virginia, briefly flirted with the idea of challenging Harris before telling CBS News on Monday morning that he would not be running for president.

But he called on Democrats to hold a “mini primary” to find “the strongest candidate” rather than immediately rallying behind Harris.

Michael Bloomberg, the Biden campaign donor and former Republican mayor of New York, said on X that the four weeks until the Democratic convention in Chicago were “more than enough time for the party to take the pulse of voters, especially in battleground states”.

He added: “The decision is too important to rush, because the election is too important to lose.”

Biden announced he was stepping aside on Sunday after more than three weeks of Democratic party infighting over whether the 81-year-old president was up for the job in the wake of a disastrous debate performance against Trump last month.

Biden swiftly endorsed Harris, the 59-year-old former prosecutor and one-time US senator, as his successor, giving her a big advantage in the race for the Democratic nomination.

Harris said she was “honoured” to have his endorsement and she intended to “earn and win this nomination”.

Newsom, who had been considered a possible contender to face Trump, backed Harris late on Sunday, calling her “fearless” and “tenacious” and said there was no one “better to prosecute the case against Donald Trump”.

Washington is rife with speculation over who Harris might select as her running mate if she secures the nomination. Possible picks include several popular Democratic governors, including Beshear and Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania.

According to a person familiar with events on Sunday, Harris spent more than 10 hours on Sunday placing calls to more than 100 party officials, members of Congress, governors, labour leaders, and advocacy and civil rights organisations.

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