Over the past 48 hours, as the nomination of Vice President Kamala Harris went from theoretical to inevitable, she has delivered the first glimpses of how her campaign will run. Reid J. Epstein, who covers politics for The Times, discusses what we’ve learned from her debut. Guest: Reid J. Epstein, who covers politics for The New York Times.
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Dot from the New York Times, I'm michael balbaro.
This is the daily over the past 48 hours, as the nomination of Vice president Kamala Harris went from theoretical to inevitable, she delivered the first glimpse of what her campaign would look like and sound like over the next 100 days.
Today, my colleague Reid Epstein on what exactly we've learned from her debut.
It's Thursday, July 25.
Reed, it has been just one day since you were on the show, but that's a lifetime in this presidential campaign.
So just to start, catch us up on what's happened to the vice president's candidacy since you and I last spoke.
Well, it seems like every few hours that the Harris campaign announced she's shattered some other fundraising record.
The cash and the calls are flooding in for Vice President Kamala Harris.
The latest number on Wednesday morning was that she'd raised $126 million since the campaign launched on Sunday.
In just three days, in less than.
Three days, on her first full day in the race, the vice president securing the support of the more than 1976 delegates she would need to win the democratic nomination.
You know, we have seen the entire Democratic Party embrace her.
So now that the process has played out from the grassroots, bottom up, we are here today to throw our support behind Vice President Kamala Harris.
The only holdouts in elected office when we last spoke were the democratic leaders of the House and Senate, Hakeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer of New York.
They have since endorsed her.
The memeification of the Harris campaign went into overdrive Sunday when singer Charlie XCX tweeted, Kamala is brat.