Elections

Trump campaign glimpses the unexpected from Kamala Harris’ downfall in 2020 race

Not long ago, California Senator Kamala Harris was one of the few Democratic candidates for president who earned praise from Donald Trump.

“I would say the best opening so far would be Kamala Harris,” Trump said in an interview last January, shortly after she rallied 20,000 people in her hometown of Oakland. “I would say in terms of the opening act, I would say, would be her.”

But Harris’ decision to withdraw from the race on Tuesday, after months of sliding poll numbers and depleting funds, offered Trump and his campaign a rare lesson: crowd size isn’t everything.

Trump sent a farewell message in a tweet Tuesday evening: “Too bad. We will miss you Kamala!”

To which Harris replied on Twitter: “Don’t worry, Mr. President. I’ll see you at your trial.”

The Democratic field now has 15 candidates in the race for the nomination, after over a dozen candidates - including House members, senators and governors - dropped out in recent months. The Democratic nominee will face Trump, a Republican, in the general election later next year.

White House aides and Trump campaign officials mocked Harris on her way out the door, trolling her on Twitter with videos that had, in her stymied bid for the Democratic nomination, been used by her campaign to show off her jovial side.

The Trump campaign brushed off her exit from the race as irrelevant in a statement to McClatchy that cast remaining contenders in the Democratic field as further to the left than in past election cycles.

“Kamala Harris’s departure doesn’t change anything,” said Tim Murtaugh, a Trump campaign spokesman. “It has never mattered to us who emerges from the Democrat primaries. Whoever it is will be running on a big government socialist platform and will be overmatched against President Trump and his record of accomplishment.”

Rather than being a product of the far-left, Harris’ campaign troubles stemmed in part from her inability to choose sides on major debates dividing the Democratic Party between progressives and moderates. She made pronouncements on health care, guns and criminal justice that she later backtracked on.

Harris soared to the top of the Democratic field after she landed an attack on former Vice President Joe Biden at the first primary debate only to be dragged down a month later by Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii in a similar format.

Harris’ support – polling nationally at an average of 3.4% among possible Democratic voters, according to the latest aggregation of national surveys by RealClearPolitics – could turn to a candidate who is seen as a threat to Trump.

A Morning Consult survey released this week found Harris had 5% percent support among potential Democratic voters. In that poll, Harris’ supporters said they were most likely to pick either former Vice President Joe Biden and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren as their second choice, followed by Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

But Trump campaign officials are not publicly speculating on the potential impact her exit will have on the primary battle.

In London on Tuesday for a meeting of NATO leaders, Trump said his campaign is “winning so big” roughly six months out from the start of the general race.

“We had our biggest fundraising month ever,” he said. “The impeachment hoax is going nowhere. The Republican Party has never been as unified as it is right now. I’ve never seen anything like it.”

Updates with Trump and Harris tweets.

This story was originally published December 3, 2019 at 5:42 PM with the headline "Trump campaign glimpses the unexpected from Kamala Harris’ downfall in 2020 race."

Michael Wilner
McClatchy DC
Michael Wilner is an award-winning journalist and was McClatchy’s chief Washington correspondent. Wilner joined the company in 2019 as a White House correspondent, and led coverage for its 30 newspapers of the federal response to the coronavirus pandemic, the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, and the Biden administration. Wilner was previously Washington bureau chief for The Jerusalem Post. He holds degrees from Claremont McKenna College and Columbia University and is a native of New York City.
Francesca Chambers
McClatchy DC
Francesca is Senior White House Correspondent for McClatchy. She is an Emmy award-winning reporter, known for her coverage of campaigns, elections and the White House.She has covered three presidencies, dating back to former President Barack Obama, and the White House bids of numerous Democrats and Republicans, including Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders and former President Donald Trump.Francesca is a member of the White House Correspondents’ Association board and a graduate of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications at the University of Kansas.
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