US Democrats start voting to nominate Harris as presidential candidate
World
By
VOA
| Aug 02, 2024
U.S. Democrats began voting to nominate Vice President Kamala Harris as their 2024 presidential candidate to run against former Republican President Donald Trump in the November election for a new four-year term in the White House.
Nearly 4,000 Democratic activists and politicians sent in signatures supporting Harris at the start of a five-day electronic vote ahead of the party's four-day national convention from August 19 to 22 in Chicago.
Harris is expected to name her vice presidential running mate in the coming days and then embark on a string of rallies through several political battleground states that both Harris and Trump need to win to claim the presidency.
The Democratic faithful voting to nominate Harris originally were picked in state-by-state party primary elections and caucuses earlier this year to vote for the reelection nomination of President Joe Biden.
But when the 81-year-old Biden ended his campaign last month after a stumbling debate against Trump in late June and endorsed Harris, 59, the party adherents quickly coalesced behind her candidacy. No other major opponent emerged to challenge her for the nomination.
READ MORE
Huruma collapse building verdict: Owner jailed for 52 deaths as court acquits state officials
Police urged to use Artificial Intelligence in future recruitments
Witness says Bliss Hospital locked out Rex Masai during June 2024 protests
Kenya advances crypto regulation through VASP roundtable
Old boys raise Sh2m for Meru School, commit to establish endowment fund for poor students
How Sonko won case seeking to freeze Sh574 million
Motsepe defends CAF's AFCON justice system after Senegal-Morocco ruling
Senegal vs Morocco: Inside CAF's injustices
Harris will become the first Black and South Asian woman to ever secure a major U.S. party's presidential nomination.
With the November 5 election less than 100 days away, polling across the U.S. and in key states shows Harris and Trump locked in a closely contested race.