The Guardian (USA)

Biden campaign raises $26m in 24 hours after announcing Kamala Harris pick

- Lauren Aratani

Joe Biden’s Democratic presidenti­al campaign raised $26m in the 24-hour period after he announced that Kamala Harris, the California senator, will be his running mate, a huge boost in funding for the ticket.

The amount was seen as a sign of strength and momentum behind Biden’s campaign brought on by Harris’ arrival. Donald Trump’s fundraisin­g in July topped Biden’s by nearly $30m, bringing in a total of $165m compared with Biden’s $140m, but the former vice-president is closing the gap.

During a virtual grassroots fundraiser, Biden said that 150,000 donors were first-time contributo­rs. “It’s really palpable, the excitement, because there’s so much at stake,” he said.

The fundraiser immediatel­y followed Biden and Harris’ first joint campaign event in Wilmington, Delaware, on Wednesday, where the candidates said Trump had left the US “in tatters” because of his failed response to the Covid-19 pandemic and its economic fallout.

“We have a president who cares more about himself than the people who elected him,” Harris said, in her first speech as the vice-presidenti­al nominee.

“He inherited the longest economic expansion in history from Barack Obama and Joe Biden. And then, like everything else he inherited, he ran it straight into the ground,” she said.

If they prevail in November, Biden and Harris are likely to inherit a country still reeling from the pandemic that the Trump administra­tion has failed to contain. Young protesters are demanding sweeping change to political and economic power as well as a governing agenda that addresses systemic racism, the climate crisis and economic inequality.

The pair were briefed by public health experts on the coronaviru­s crisis on Thursday.

The president’s campaign has launched a scattersho­t assault on Harris, attacking her as “radical” and leftwing, even though progressiv­es in her party view her as more moderate. On Wednesday, Trump used his press briefing to attack Harris with language that nodded to America’s pejorative “angry Black woman” stereotype.

On Thursday he followed with a series of sexist attacks against Harris, calling her a “mad woman” and “extraordin­arily nasty” when referring to her questionin­g of Trump’s intensely controvers­ial US supreme court nominee Brett Kavanaugh during his confirmati­on hearing in 2018.

In an interview with Fox Business’s Maria Bartiromo on Thursday, Trump referred to Harris as “the angriest of the group” of Democrats who ran for president. Though she had initially been seen as a strong contender, Harris dropped out of the race in December.

Earlier on Thursday morning, Trump tweeted that the media had given Harris a “free pass” saying there was “nobody meaner or more condescend­ing” to Biden during the primaries.

Trump’s tirade on Fox Business also included the New York congresswo­man Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, saying that she “is not even a smart person” and that she “goes out and yaps”. Trump also described the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, as “stone-cold crazy”.

Biden had struggled to keep pace with his Democratic rivals in fundraisin­g during the primary race but quickly grew his finance operation for the general election. Harris is known as a successful fundraiser, and already helped raise millions of dollars for the Biden campaign before she was named as his running mate.

Harris will deliver her much-anticipate­d speech for the Democratic national convention next week at the Chase Center in Wilmington. The convention has been totally upended by the coronaviru­s pandemic. It has been dramatical­ly scaled back and is to be held almost entirely virtually, with speakers such as Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and the Obamas slated to make appearance­s. Biden will formally accept the Democratic presidenti­al nomination on Thursday night.

The national convention­s are usually some of the main events of the presidenti­al election, marking the official end of the primaries and gearing the party toward the general election.

Lauren Gambino contribute­d to this report

 ??  ?? Kamala Harris speaks alongside Joe Biden in Wilmington, Delaware. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
Kamala Harris speaks alongside Joe Biden in Wilmington, Delaware. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

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