Harris
Rallies Exuberant Democrats in Wisconsin: ‘The Baton Is in Our Hands’
Vice
President Kamala Harris gave her first speech as the de facto Democratic
nominee to a deafening crowd, keeping up her offensive against Donald Trump.
Vice
President Kamala Harris listed her campaign pledges, which included expanding
abortion rights, building a strong middle class and protecting unions.
Simon J. Levien
By Reid J. Epstein and Simon J. Levien
Reid J. Epstein reported from Washington, and Simon J.
Levien from West Allis, Wis.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/23/us/politics/harris-speech-wisconsin-rally.html
July 23, 2024
So
Wisconsin, I am told as of this morning that we have earned the support of
enough delegates to secure the Democratic nomination. I was elected attorney
general of the State of California, and I was a courtroom prosecutor before
then. And in those roles, I took on perpetrators of all kinds. Predators who
abused women, fraudsters who ripped off consumers, cheaters who broke the rules
for their own gain. So here me when I say I know Donald Trump’s type.
[cheering] And now Wisconsin, the baton is in our hands. We who believe in the
sacred freedom to vote will make sure every American has the ability to cast
their ballot and have it counted. And we who believe in reproductive freedom —
we’ll stop Donald Trump’s extreme abortion bans because we trust women to make
decisions about their own body, and not have their government tell them what to
do.
Harris Holds
First Rally as the Likely Democratic Nominee
Ms. Harris
vowed, in her first rally as the de facto Democratic presidential nominee, to
defeat Mr. Trump by attacking him as a prosecutor would. She defined herself as
a tribune of the middle class fighting against a tool of billionaires and as a
champion of abortion rights against a man who would deny such rights to all
Americans.
Ms. Harris
offered a far more energetic denunciation of Mr. Trump than President Biden, in
front of a crowd that her campaign said was the largest she or Mr. Biden had
addressed since their re-election bid began over a year ago. She walked out to
cheers to the tune of Beyoncé’s “Freedom,” which the singer had allowed her to
use. As one attendee put it, the moment felt like a release of months of
pent-up Democratic energy.
Interrupted
several times by chants of “Ka-ma-la,” Ms. Harris demonstrated how Mr. Biden’s
withdrawal from the 2024 race and her elevation have transformed a desultory,
almost perfunctory campaign into a bastion of enthusiasm. She highlighted the
$100 million in contributions since Sunday and took a victory lap for
effectively wrapping up the Democratic presidential nomination within 48 hours.
“We have
earned the support of enough delegates to secure the Democratic nomination,”
Ms. Harris said. “I am so very honored and I pledge to you I will spend the
coming weeks continuing to unite our party so that we are ready to win in
November.”
The vice
president recycled phrases from her 2020 presidential campaign, calling her bid
“people-powered” and promising that, as president, she would prioritize the
needs of the middle and working class over the desires of corporate interests
and the wealthy.
And in a nod
to her relative youth — she is 59, decades younger than the 81-year-old Mr.
Biden and the 78-year-old Mr. Trump — and her potential to become the first
woman elected as president, Ms. Harris placed the 2024 campaign on a continuum
with the civil and voting rights struggles of America’s past.
“The
shoulders on which we stand, generations of Americans before us led the fight
for freedom and now, Wisconsin, the baton is in our hands,” she said. “We who
believe in the sacred freedom to vote will make sure every American has the
ability to cast their ballot and have it counted.”
The vice
president drew perhaps her largest cheers during the section of her stump
speech that compared her biography to Mr. Trump’s. She told of being a local
prosecutor and attorney general in California who investigated “fraudsters” and
“cheaters,” among other miscreants, and reminded the crowd that Mr. Trump was
found liable of sexual assault by a Manhattan civil court.
“So hear me
when I say I know Donald Trump’s type,” she said. “In this campaign, I promise
you I will proudly put my record against his every day of the week.”
She accused
Mr. Trump of aiming “to take our country backward” and said Trump allies’
plans, known as “Project 2025,” would damage the middle class. (Mr. Trump has
sought to distance himself from the voluminous conservative policy proposals.)
“We know we
got to take this seriously,” she said. “Can you believe they put that thing in
writing? Read it! It’s 900 pages.”
Ms. Harris
arrived in Wisconsin riding a 48-hour wave of momentum from a Democratic Party
that swiftly united around her after more than a year of intramural
hand-wringing about whether Mr. Biden was its best shot at defeating Mr. Trump.
Also on
Tuesday, the Democratic National Committee released draft rules setting the
schedule for when it will formalize its nomination. Any candidates must meet
certain criteria by July 30. If Ms. Harris remains unchallenged, delegates will
begin voting virtually on Aug. 1. The rules will be voted on on Wednesday.
Even before
Ms. Harris arrived in Milwaukee, it was clear that local Democrats were excited
about the change to the top of the ticket. The Harris campaign said every
Democratic statewide officeholder — even the public schools superintendent —
would attend the rally in the Milwaukee suburb of West Allis, a stark contrast
from Mr. Biden’s last Wisconsin visit, when Senator Tammy Baldwin held her own
event 190 miles away from the president’s stop in Madison.
As Ms.
Harris stepped off Air Force Two at the Milwaukee airport, Lt. Gov. Sara
Rodriguez embraced her and insisted on a selfie, as Gov. Tony Evers and Ms.
Baldwin hovered in the background.
Public
opinion research conducted by Priorities USA, a Democratic super PAC,
immediately after Mr. Biden’s exit from the race showed Ms. Harris generating
more enthusiasm than he had among young voters — a key group that had never
warmed to the president’s re-election bid.
Among
Democratic-leaning voters in battleground states who are between the ages of 18
and 34, the percentage of voters who said they would definitely vote increased
by five percentage points in the 24 hours after Mr. Biden’s withdrawal,
according to the data, which was shared with The New York Times. The Priorities
USA survey also found Ms. Harris faring four points better among Black voters
and three points better among Latinos than Mr. Biden had.
In a state
in which the vast majority of communities are either deep red or deep blue,
West Allis, an inner-ring, working-class Milwaukee suburb named for a tractor
manufacturing plant that once dominated the community, is a rare battleground
city. Mr. Biden won 55 percent of the city’s vote in 2020.
In the
school gymnasium, the crowd held up signs reading “Kamala” and “USA.” One group
held up letters that spelled out “Yes we Kam!” in a play on former President
Barack Obama’s winning 2008 campaign slogan.
Among the
crowd, the most common reactions to Ms. Harris’s presidential run were
“excited” and “relieved.”
“We are part
of the groundswell,” said Renee Borkowski, a 56-year-old rallygoer from Lake
Forest, Ill., adding that this was the first rally she had attended since Jimmy
Carter’s 1976 campaign.
Ellen Holly
of Elkhorn, Wis., wore a Biden-Harris campaign shirt but took painter’s tape
and covered Mr. Biden’s name. She scrawled over it with what has become a
rallying cry for the Harris campaign: “Let’s win this.”
“I would
vote for a dead animal in the road before I vote for Trump,” said Ms. Holly,
67, a retired teacher who also supported Mr. Biden.
Other
attendees highlighted the historic nature of Ms. Harris’s first presidential
campaign rally while expressing cautious optimism.
“I’m
worried, but I’m more hopeful than I was last week,” Katrice Battle, 37, a
Milwaukee photographer, said of Ms. Harris’s candidacy, adding she was
invigorated as a Black woman to try to elect the first female president.
But she
acknowledged that once the rah-rah feelings of a new campaign fade, Ms. Harris
has ground to make up against Mr. Trump. “It was relief, then trepidation,” Ms.
Battle said.
Reid J.
Epstein covers campaigns and elections from Washington. Before joining The
Times in 2019, he worked at The Wall Street Journal, Politico, Newsday and The
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. More about Reid J. Epstein
Simon J.
Levien is a Times political reporter covering the 2024 elections and a member
of the 2024-25 Times Fellowship class, a program for journalists early in their
careers. More about Simon J. Levien
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