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With Biden out, Democrats move fast to try to strengthen Harris

One day after President Joe Biden rocked the world by dropping his reelection bid, the Democratic Party appeared to be swiftly coalescing around Vice President Kamala Harris. Prominent Democrats – governors, senators, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi – offered endorsements. On Monday, the Associated Press reported that Ms. Harris now has the support of more than half of the Democratic convention delegates needed to clinch the nomination.

Democratic anxiety remains high that former President Donald Trump could return to power, but there’s a fresh wave of hope that Ms. Harris can salvage her party’s prospects in November. 

Why We Wrote This

Democrats are energized, with party leaders lining up to endorse Vice President Kamala Harris, and campaign cash is pouring in. But time is short, and they face an uphill battle.

Still, the task is daunting. Ms. Harris ran a famously inept presidential campaign in the 2020 cycle and has had high-profile stumbles as vice president. She will own the Biden record, not popular with the public, as well as a portfolio of tough issues and memes that mock her laugh and other awkward public moments. 

And time is running out. The Democratic National Convention begins in four weeks, and the party is playing catch-up. 

“She better figure it out fast, because she and her team are about to get hit with everything but the kitchen sink – and probably that, too,” says Jim Manley, a veteran Democratic consultant. 

Less than 24 hours before President Joe Biden rocked the world by dropping his reelection bid, about 100 progressive activists gathered in front of the White House to call on the president to “pass the torch.” 

It was time, they made clear, for the older president to do what he had said he’d do early in 2020: serve as a “bridge” to the next generation, strongly implying he’d serve just one term. 

“Wide swaths of the Democratic Party” shared concerns about Mr. Biden, Quentin Colón Roosevelt, the 20-year-old great-great-great-grandson of President Teddy Roosevelt, told the crowd.  

Why We Wrote This

Democrats are energized, with party leaders lining up to endorse Vice President Kamala Harris, and campaign cash is pouring in. But time is short, and they face an uphill battle.

Now that Mr. Biden is out, Democratic anxiety remains high that former President Donald Trump could return to power, but there’s also a fresh wave of hope that Vice President Kamala Harris can salvage her party’s prospects in November. 

The task is daunting. Ms. Harris ran a famously inept presidential campaign in the 2020 cycle and has had high-profile stumbles as vice president. She will own the Biden record, not popular with the public, as well as a portfolio loaded with tough issues (starting with the root causes of illegal immigration) and memes that mock her laugh and other awkward public moments. 

“At this point, it’s still Donald Trump’s election to lose,” says Sherry Bebitch Jeffe, a Los Angeles-based political analyst.

Susan Walsh/AP

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks from the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, July 22, 2024, during an event with NCAA athletes. This was her first public appearance since President Joe Biden endorsed her to be the next presidential nominee of the Democratic Party.

Now, after Mr. Biden’s dramatic announcement, followed shortly by his endorsement of Ms. Harris for the Democratic nomination, the party has begun to coalesce around her. On Monday, the Associated Press reported that Ms. Harris now has the support of more than half of the Democratic convention delegates needed to clinch the nomination.

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