Kamala Harris concedes the Democratic presidential nomination
On December 3, 2019, Kamala Harris ended her campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. Harris, a senator from California, was one of the leading contenders for the nomination, but she failed to gain enough support from voters to continue her campaign.
In a statement released on her website, Harris said that she was “proud of the campaign we have run and the movement we have built.” She also thanked her supporters for their “hard work and dedication.”
Harris’s withdrawal from the race leaves a field of four major candidates: former Vice President Joe Biden, Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, and businessman Tom Steyer.
Harris’s decision to end her campaign comes as a surprise to many. She had been polling well in national polls and had won the endorsement of several major unions. However, she struggled to gain traction in early-voting states such as Iowa and New Hampshire.
Harris’s exit from the race is a major blow to the Democratic Party’s efforts to field a diverse field of candidates. Harris was the only black woman in the race, and her departure leaves just one black candidate, Steyer, in the field.
The Democratic primary race is now likely to focus on the four remaining candidates: Biden, Sanders, Warren, and Steyer. The first nominating contest, the Iowa caucuses, will be held on February 3, 2020.
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