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regular-article-logo Saturday, 28 December 2024

Kamala Harris gains ground in key battleground states, continues her fundraising spree

The 59-year-old Democratic leader has also been attracting a record crowd in her rallies

PTI Published 12.08.24, 11:11 AM
Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign rally at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas on Saturday, Aug. 10, 2024.

Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign rally at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas on Saturday, Aug. 10, 2024. AP/PTI

Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris has voiced confidence in winning the November 5 general elections against her Republican rival Donald Trump, as she gained ground nationally and in several key battleground states.

US Vice President Harris, who is of both Indian and African origin, continues to be on a fundraising spree, taking her campaign coffers to an unprecedented level.

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The 59-year-old Democratic leader has also been attracting a record crowd in her rallies.

“We will win this election,” Harris told a fundraiser in San Francisco on Sunday in which she amassed USD 12 million more for her presidential bid.

The fundraiser was attended by around 700 donors, including several prominent Indian-Americans.

In less than a month of her being on top of the Democratic Party ticket, after incumbent President Joe Biden decided to withdraw from the race, Harris has nearly wiped out the national lead of her Republican rival and former president Trump.

According to Real Clear Politics, which monitors all the major national and state polls, Harris is now leading Trump by 0.5 percentage points in an average of all the national polls.

Harris has also surged ahead in two battleground states, Wisconsin and Michigan, where Biden was trailing earlier, as per Real Clear Politics.

The latest poll by The New York Times said that Harris is leading in three key states - Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan - by four percentage points.

Harris told the donors in San Francisco that she is not taking any chances.

Speaking about the enthusiasm behind her campaign, Harris said she’s “never been one to really believe in the polls, whether they’re up or they are down.” Still, “what we know is the stakes are so high. And we can take nothing for granted at this moment,” she said.

“It’s really been a good couple of weeks, but we have a lot of work to do,” Harris said.

“The people are ready to use their power,” she said.

The energy around the country is “undeniable,” she added, arguing, “The press and our opponents like to focus on our crowd size, and, yes, the crowds are large.” But even better is that attendees are signing up for volunteer shifts in the thousands, she noted.

On Saturday, Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz Walz, addressed more than 12,000 Nevadans – one of the largest political rallies in modern Nevada political history.

The rally marked the final stop on a weeklong tour of battleground states launched after she picked Walz to be her running mate.

Harris picked Walz as her running mate for the presidential elections last week. She formally secured the Democratic presidential nomination a day before that, becoming the first Indian-American to win the nomination from a major political party.

“Thousands of people showed up here to Thomas and Mack—and Harris explained to them why she should be the next president of the United States. A rock star's welcome as Kamala Harris walked out to the podium,” local TV station KVVU-LV said.

“At one of the largest political rallies in modern Nevada political history, Vice President Kamala Harris and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz continued their barnstorming tour as the new Democratic presidential ticket on Saturday — one of the clearest signs yet of Democrats’ renewed hopes in the swing state,” the local news portal Nevada Independent reported.

Starting on Tuesday, Harris and Walz blitzed the battlegrounds, drawing crowds of fired-up supporters, including more than 14,000 in Philadelphia, over 12,000 in Eau Claire, and 15,000 plus in both Detroit and Arizona.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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