Kamala Harris, the previous Vice President of the US and 2024 Democratic presidential nominee, made the clearest signal but that she could, in truth, once more search the presidency in 2028.
“I would. I’m interested by it,” Harris stated on Friday throughout a sit-down with the Rev. Al Sharpton for the civil rights chief’s annual Nationwide Motion Community Conference in New York Metropolis.
Harris, who devastatingly misplaced the 2024 election to now-President Donald Trump, appeared to check an early marketing campaign pitch as to why she can be greatest suited to succeed her former opponent within the White Home.
“I served for 4 years, being a heartbeat away from the presidency of the US,” stated America’s first feminine, first Black, and first South Asian Vice President of the US. “I spent hours in my West Wing workplace, footsteps away from the Oval Workplace. I spent numerous hours…within the State of affairs Room. I do know what the job is, and I do know what it requires.”
Harris, who has been touring the nation selling her memoir “107 Days,” which particulars her historic run for president, since its September 2025 launch, stated she’s discovered from her conversations with Individuals, significantly these within the South, that the “established order isn’t working.”
“[It] hasn’t been working for lots of people for a very long time. And a part of the problem is the necessity to do away with among the forms in authorities and to grasp that the individuals…they don’t need course of. They need progress,” she stated. “That’s the work that must be completed.”
The previous White Home contender emphasised that any presidential candidate should not merely wish to occupy the workplace, however be squarely centered on the individuals who elect them.
“The American individuals have a proper to count on that anybody who needs to run for workplace and be a frontrunner, that it might’t be about themselves, and what they need for themselves. It’s got to be concerning the American individuals,” Harris defined. “I’m interested by it within the context of, then, you recognize, is who and the place and the way can one of the best job be completed for the American individuals. That’s how I’m interested by it.”
The previous Vice President added, “I’ll preserve you posted.”
Some in Democratic circles have moved previous Harris because the social gathering’s standard-bearer since her 2024 loss. They level to her loss as an indication that the nation merely isn’t able to elect a lady, or, extra pointedly, a Black girl. Others say one other likelihood on the high of the ticket isn’t out of the realm of risk for Harris. Controversial actions by President Trump usually result in clips of Harris forewarning voters in 2024 with variations of “She instructed you so.” Insiders additionally level out that, thus far, Harris, who has sturdy title ID amongst Individuals, has earned probably the most votes (75 million) of any presidential candidate in U.S. historical past, other than her former boss, President Joe Biden, and Trump.
Harris additionally stays extremely widespread amongst Black voters, who overwhelmingly desire her over different potential 2028 candidates, as evidenced by Friday’s NAN conference, the place attendees usually reveled in Harris with thunderous applause. One attendee interjected, “Run it again!” throughout Harris’s remarks whereas discussing the Trump administration, suggesting a redo of the 2024 election.
The help of Black voters, particularly Black ladies — 92% of whom voted for Harris in 2024 — can be essential to any Democratic candidate in 2028. In 2024, President Biden urged the Democratic Nationwide Committee to vary its main election calendar to make South Carolina, the place Black voters have an outsized affect, the primary main state. Doing so may give Harris an early increase within the 2028 main contest.
Nonetheless, any run once more for the White Home can be far more difficult for Harris than in 2024, when she confronted no main challengers. A crowded discipline of Democrats is anticipated in 2028. Rumored contenders embrace: California Governor Gavin Newsom, Maryland Governor Wes Moore, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, Illinois Governor JB Pritzker, Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear, U.S. Senator Cory Booker, Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, U.S. Congressman Ro Khanna, and U.S. Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.


















