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Many Elected Democrats Quickly Endorsed Kamala Harris. See Who Did.

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Many Elected Democrats Quickly Endorsed Kamala Harris. See Who Did.

195 publicly supported Ms. Harris

10 governors, 32 senators, 153 representatives

Cooper

N.C. Gov.

A photo of GavinNewsom

Newsom

Calif. Gov.

A photo of Josh Shapiro

Shapiro

Pa. Gov.

A photo of KirstenGillibrand

Gillibrand

N.Y. Sen.

A photo of ChristopherMurphy

Murphy

Conn. Sen.

A photo of MarkWarner

Warner

Va. Sen.

A photo of RaphaelWarnock

Warnock

Ga. Sen.

A photo of StenyHoyer

Hoyer

Md. Rep.

A photo of AlexandriaOcasio-Cortez

Ocasio-Cortez

N.Y. Rep.

A photo of MikieSherrill

Sherrill

N.J. Rep.

A photo of ElissaSlotkin

Slotkin

Mich. Rep.

A photo of JohnCarney Jr.

Carney Jr.

Del. Gov.

A photo of JoshGreen

Green

Hawaii Gov.

A photo of KathyHochul

Hochul

N.Y. Gov.

A photo of JayInslee

Inslee

Wash. Gov.

A photo of JanetMills

Mills

Maine Gov.

A photo of PhilMurphy

Murphy

N.J. Gov.

A photo of JaredPolis

Polis

Colo. Gov.

A photo of TammyBaldwin

Baldwin

Wis. Sen.

A photo of MichaelBennet

Bennet

Colo. Sen.

A photo of SherrodBrown

Brown

Ohio Sen.

A photo of LaphonzaButler

Butler

Calif. Sen.

A photo of MariaCantwell

Cantwell

Wash. Sen.

A photo of BenjaminCardin

Cardin

Md. Sen.

A photo of BobCasey

Casey

Pa. Sen.

A photo of ChrisCoons

Coons

Del. Sen.

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Cortez Masto

Nev. Sen.

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Heinrich

N.M. Sen.

A photo of JohnHickenlooper

Hickenlooper

Colo. Sen.

A photo of MazieHirono

Hirono

Hawaii Sen.

A photo of TimKaine

Kaine

Va. Sen.

A photo of MarkKelly

Kelly

Ariz. Sen.

A photo of AmyKlobuchar

Klobuchar

Minn. Sen.

A photo of Ben RayLuján

Luján

N.M. Sen.

A photo of EdwardMarkey

Markey

Mass. Sen.

A photo of PattyMurray

Murray

Wash. Sen.

A photo of JonOssoff

Ossoff

Ga. Sen.

A photo of AlexPadilla

Padilla

Calif. Sen.

A photo of GaryPeters

Peters

Mich. Sen.

A photo of JackyRosen

Rosen

Nev. Sen.

A photo of BrianSchatz

Schatz

Hawaii Sen.

A photo of TinaSmith

Smith

Minn. Sen.

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Stabenow

Mich. Sen.

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Warren

Mass. Sen.

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Whitehouse

R.I. Sen.

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Wyden

Ore. Sen.

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Allred

Texas Rep.

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Amo

R.I. Rep.

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Auchincloss

Mass. Rep.

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Balint

Vt. Rep.

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Barragán

Calif. Rep.

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Beatty

Ohio Rep.

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Bera

Calif. Rep.

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Beyer Jr.

Va. Rep.

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Bonamici

Ore. Rep.

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Bowman

N.Y. Rep.

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Boyle

Pa. Rep.

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Brown

Ohio Rep.

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Brownley

Calif. Rep.

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Budzinski

Ill. Rep.

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Bush

Mo. Rep.

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Caraveo

Colo. Rep.

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Carbajal

Calif. Rep.

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Carson

Ind. Rep.

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Carter

La. Rep.

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Casar

Texas Rep.

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Casten

Ill. Rep.

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Castor

Fla. Rep.

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Castro

Texas Rep.

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Cherfilus-McCormick

Fla. Rep.

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Chu

Calif. Rep.

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Clarke

N.Y. Rep.

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Clyburn

S.C. Rep.

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Cohen

Tenn. Rep.

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Connolly

Va. Rep.

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Courtney

Conn. Rep.

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Crockett

Texas Rep.

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Crow

Colo. Rep.

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Davis

Ill. Rep.

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Dean

Pa. Rep.

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DeGette

Colo. Rep.

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DeLauro

Conn. Rep.

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Dingell

Mich. Rep.

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Escobar

Texas Rep.

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Evans

Pa. Rep.

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Fernandez

N.M. Rep.

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Fletcher

Texas Rep.

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Foster

Ill. Rep.

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Frankel

Fla. Rep.

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Frost

Fla. Rep.

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Gallego

Ariz. Rep.

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Garamendi

Calif. Rep.

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Garcia

Calif. Rep.

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Garcia

Texas Rep.

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García

Ill. Rep.

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Goldman

N.Y. Rep.

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Gomez

Calif. Rep.

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Gottheimer

N.J. Rep.

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Grijalva

Ariz. Rep.

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Hayes

Conn. Rep.

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Horsford

Nev. Rep.

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Houlahan

Pa. Rep.

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Hoyle

Ore. Rep.

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Huffman

Calif. Rep.

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Ivey

Md. Rep.

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Jackson

N.C. Rep.

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Jackson

Ill. Rep.

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Jacobs

Calif. Rep.

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Jayapal

Wash. Rep.

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Johnson

Ga. Rep.

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Kamlager-Dove

Calif. Rep.

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Keating

Mass. Rep.

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Kelly

Ill. Rep.

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Khanna

Calif. Rep.

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Kildee

Mich. Rep.

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Kim

N.J. Rep.

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Landsman

Ohio Rep.

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Larsen

Wash. Rep.

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Lee

Calif. Rep.

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Lee

Pa. Rep.

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Lee

Nev. Rep.

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Levin

Calif. Rep.

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Lieu

Calif. Rep.

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Magaziner

R.I. Rep.

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Manning

N.C. Rep.

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McBath

Ga. Rep.

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McClellan

Va. Rep.

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McCollum

Minn. Rep.

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McGarvey

Ky. Rep.

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McGovern

Mass. Rep.

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McLane Kuster

N.H. Rep.

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Meeks

N.Y. Rep.

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Menendez Jr.

N.J. Rep.

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Meng

N.Y. Rep.

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Mfume

Md. Rep.

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Moore

Wis. Rep.

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Moskowitz

Fla. Rep.

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Moulton

Mass. Rep.

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Mullin

Calif. Rep.

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Nadler

N.Y. Rep.

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Neguse

Colo. Rep.

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Omar

Minn. Rep.

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Pallone

N.J. Rep.

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Pappas

N.H. Rep.

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Pascrell

N.J. Rep.

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Pettersen

Colo. Rep.

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Pocan

Wis. Rep.

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Porter

Calif. Rep.

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Pressley

Mass. Rep.

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Quigley

Ill. Rep.

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Ramirez

Ill. Rep.

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Raskin

Md. Rep.

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Rochester

Del. Rep.

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Ross

N.C. Rep.

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Ruppersberger

Md. Rep.

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Salinas

Ore. Rep.

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Sánchez

Calif. Rep.

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Sarbanes

Md. Rep.

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Scanlon

Pa. Rep.

A photo of JanSchakowsky

Schakowsky

Ill. Rep.

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Schiff

Calif. Rep.

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Schneider

Ill. Rep.

A photo of HillaryScholten

Scholten

Mich. Rep.

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Scott

Va. Rep.

A photo of TerriSewell

Sewell

Ala. Rep.

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Sherman

Calif. Rep.

A photo of AdamSmith

Smith

Wash. Rep.

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Spanberger

Va. Rep.

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Stansbury

N.M. Rep.

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Stanton

Ariz. Rep.

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Stevens

Mich. Rep.

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Strickland

Wash. Rep.

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Swalwell

Calif. Rep.

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Sykes

Ohio Rep.

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Takano

Calif. Rep.

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Thanedar

Mich. Rep.

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Thompson

Miss. Rep.

A photo of DinaTitus

Titus

Nev. Rep.

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Tokuda

Hawaii Rep.

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Tonko

N.Y. Rep.

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Torres

Calif. Rep.

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Torres

N.Y. Rep.

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Trahan

Mass. Rep.

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Trone

Md. Rep.

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Underwood

Ill. Rep.

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Vasquez

N.M. Rep.

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Veasey

Texas Rep.

A photo of NydiaVelázquez

Velázquez

N.Y. Rep.

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Wasserman Schultz

Fla. Rep.

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Waters

Calif. Rep.

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Watson Coleman

N.J. Rep.

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Wexton

Va. Rep.

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Wild

Pa. Rep.

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Williams

Ga. Rep.

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Wilson

Fla. Rep.

184 more

72 issued statements but did not specify support for Ms. Harris

13 governors, 13 senators, 46 representatives

A photo of WesMoore

Moore

Md. Gov.

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Whitmer

Mich. Gov.

A photo of RichardBlumenthal

Blumenthal

Conn. Sen.

A photo of CoryBooker

Booker

N.J. Sen.

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Duckworth

Ill. Sen.

A photo of RichardDurbin

Durbin

Ill. Sen.

A photo of ChuckSchumer

Schumer

N.Y. Sen.

A photo of JonTester

Tester

Mont. Sen.

A photo of ChrisVan Hollen

Van Hollen

Md. Sen.

A photo of HakeemJeffries

Jeffries

N.Y. Rep.

A photo of NancyPelosi

Pelosi

Calif. Rep.

A photo of AndyBeshear

Beshear

Ky. Gov.

A photo of TonyEvers

Evers

Wis. Gov.

A photo of MichelleGrisham

Grisham

N.M. Gov.

A photo of MauraHealey

Healey

Mass. Gov.

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Hobbs

Ariz. Gov.

A photo of LauraKelly

Kelly

Kan. Gov.

A photo of TinaKotek

Kotek

Ore. Gov.

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Lamont

Conn. Gov.

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McKee

R.I. Gov.

A photo of J.B. Pritzker

Pritzker

Ill. Gov.

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Walz

Minn. Gov.

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Carper

Del. Sen.

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Hassan

N.H. Sen.

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Merkley

Ore. Sen.

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Reed

R.I. Sen.

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Shaheen

N.H. Sen.

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Welch

Vt. Sen.

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Adams

N.C. Rep.

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Blumenauer

Ore. Rep.

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Cárdenas

Calif. Rep.

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Case

Hawaii Rep.

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Clark

Mass. Rep.

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Cleaver II

Mo. Rep.

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Correa

Calif. Rep.

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Costa

Calif. Rep.

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Craig

Minn. Rep.

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Cuellar

Texas Rep.

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Davids

Kan. Rep.

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Davis

N.C. Rep.

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DelBene

Wash. Rep.

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Pa. Rep.

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Doggett

Texas Rep.

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Eshoo

Calif. Rep.

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Politics

Embattled Secret Service director to face grilling from top House committee over Trump shooting

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Embattled Secret Service director to face grilling from top House committee over Trump shooting

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Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle will testify Monday before the House Oversight Committee in a hearing on the circumstances surrounding the attempted assassination of former President Trump – amid intense criticism of her leadership and calls for her to step down.

The House Oversight Committee subpoenaed Cheatle to appear last week as part of an open investigation into the shooting in Butler, Pennsylvania. Trump was shot in the ear, while one attendee was killed and two others injured. 

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In a statement, Anthony Guglielmi, chief of communications for the Secret Service, confirmed her attendance on Friday, and ABC News has since reported excerpts of testimony Cheatle is expected to deliver.

“The Secret Service’s solemn mission is to protect our nation’s leaders. On July 13th, we failed,” Cheatle is expected to tell the committee on Monday. “As the Director of the United States Secret Service, I take full responsibility for any security lapse. As an agency, we are fully cooperating with the FBI’s investigation, the oversight you have initiated here, and conducting our own internal mission assurance review at my direction. Likewise, we will cooperate with the pending external review and the DHS Office of the Inspector General.”

SENATORS CONFRONT SECRET SERVICE CHIEF AT REPUBLICAN CONVENTION: ‘YOU OWE PRESIDENT TRUMP ANSWERS’ 

Former President Trump is rushed offstage during a rally on July 13, 2024, in Butler, Pennsylvania. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

In the wake of the shooting, Republicans and some Democrats immediately raised questions about the performance of the agency, including about how a gunman was able to get so close to the former president and fire multiple shots. In his letter to Cheatle, Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., had accused the Secret Service of a lack of transparency in issuing the subpoena.

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“Americans demand answers from Director Kimberly Cheatle about the Secret Service’s historic security failures that led to the attempted assassination of President Trump, murder of an innocent victim, and harm to others in the crowd. We look forward to Director Cheatle’s testimony on Monday, July 22 to deliver the transparency and accountability that Americans deserve,” Comer said in response to Cheatle confirming she would testify.

HOUSE GOP LEADERS DEMAND ACCOUNTABILITY ON TRUMP ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT: ‘SO MANY QUESTIONS’ 

United States Secret Service Director Kimberly

Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle at a press conference on June 4 in Chicago. (Kamil Krzaczynski/AFP via Getty Images)

In addition to the Oversight Committee hearing, the House Homeland Security committee has called for a hearing and subpoenaed documents from DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. In the Senate, both Homeland Security Committee Chairman Gary Peters, D-Mich., and ranking member Rand Paul, R-Ky., have launched an investigation. The DHS Office of Inspector General is also reviewing the Secret Service’s handling of the rally.

In a preview of the pressure Cheatle may face, she was confronted by multiple Republican senators at the Republican National Convention on Wednesday.

“This was an assassination attempt, you owe the people answers, you owe President Trump answers,” Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., said.

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TRUMP RALLY SHOOTING: HEART-STOPPING FOOTAGE SHOWS AUDIENCE MEMBERS NOTICING GUNMAN BEFORE SHOTS FIRED

Cheatle, meanwhile, has called the shooting “unacceptable” and “something that shouldn’t happen again.” She is expected to tell the committee Monday that she will move “heaven and earth” to make sure what happened on July 13 never does again, according to the excerpts obtained by ABC News. 

“Our mission is not political. It is literally a matter of life and death, as the tragic events on July 13th remind us. I have full confidence in the men and women of the Secret Service,” she is expected to tell the committee. “They are worthy of our support in executing our protective mission.”

However, in response to the intense criticism from lawmakers, the Secret Service says she does not intend to resign.

 

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“Continuity of operations is paramount during a critical incident and U.S. Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle has no intentions to step down,” Guglielmi said. “She deeply respects members of Congress and is fiercely committed to transparency in leading the Secret Service through the internal investigation and strengthening the agency through lessons learned in these important internal and external reviews.”

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Politics

California Democrats urge delegates to support Harris. Will it sway the DNC?

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California Democrats urge delegates to support Harris. Will it sway the DNC?

With President Biden dropping out of the presidential race, California is poised to play a critical role in selecting a new Democratic nominee. The state is home to the most delegates for the Democratic National Convention — and to Vice President Kamala Harris, a former U.S. senator who has a house in Los Angeles.

Within hours of Biden endorsing Harris on Sunday, California’s Democratic leaders began working to lock the state’s 496 delegates down for the vice president. State Democratic Party Chair Rusty Hicks sent a form to delegates, asking them to endorse Harris.

“Now it is time for Democrats to unite around our common calling — defeating Donald Trump, retaking the House of Representatives and preserving our democracy,” Hicks said. “I am asking delegates from our great state of California and home to our Vice President, Kamala Harris, to officially endorse her nomination for President of the United States at the convention in Chicago.”

San Francisco Democrats, including Mayor London Breed, hastily organized a Monday morning rally for Harris on the City Hall steps.

The potential for California to flex its political muscle on the national stage follows a period of waning power for the Golden State.

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For years, Californians enjoyed seats in the highest echelons of power — Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) became the most powerful woman in congressional history as speaker of the House. Then came her Republican successor, Kevin McCarthy of Bakersfield. Sen. Dianne Feinstein of San Francisco became the longest-serving female senator in U.S. history and served on powerful committees.

But in quick succession over the last two years, California’s power slipped. Pelosi stepped down in 2022 to offer space for “a new generation” of Democratic leaders. McCarthy lost his speakership in a historic fallout with his own party, and then resigned from Congress. Feinstein died in September.

If Oakland-born Harris, who served as California’s senator and attorney general before she was vice president, becomes the Democratic nominee, a Californian would be a major party’s presidential candidate for the first time in decades.

Another Democrat could emerge to vie for the party’s nomination at the Chicago convention, but California’s bloc of delegates will be crucial for securing it. Already, several California political leaders quickly called for Democrats to support Harris — including Gov. Gavin Newsom.

“Tough. Fearless. Tenacious,” Newsom said in a statement on social media. “With our democracy at stake, and our future on the line, no one is better to prosecute the case against Donald Trump’s dark vision and guide our country in a healthier direction than America’s Vice President.”

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Newsom was widely considered as another potential replacement for Biden, though he repeatedly swatted down rumors of harboring his own presidential aspirations. The governor served as a surrogate for the Biden campaign, crisscrossing the country to stump for him — and raising his own national profile.

But as speculation mounted in recent weeks over Biden, Newsom made it clear he would not compete with Harris. “Of course,” Newsom said recently, when asked whether he stood by comments he made last year about not running against Harris. “Yes.”

California Sens. Alex Padilla and Laphonza Butler also threw their support behind Harris.

“This is a woman who has dedicated her entire career to public service,” Butler said in an interview Sunday. “This is a woman who has never … backed down from a fight.”

Notably absent from the list of Harris supporters Sunday was Pelosi, who applauded Biden as “a patriotic American who has always put our country first,” without mention of the vice president.

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The former speaker reportedly fielded calls in the last several weeks from Democrats who were upset about Biden’s disastrous debate performance and fearful about his reelection chances. Pelosi told fellow California Democrats last week that she would prefer the party engage in an open process to select a new nominee, rather than automatically tapping Harris, Politico reported.

Rep. Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael) said he was confident Harris would become nominee, but that some Democrats are debating the best way for that to happen.

“You’ve got some national Democratic leaders who are very supportive of Kamala Harris but also feel strongly there should be some sort of process,” Huffman said.

Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank), a close confidant of Pelosi’s and another California leader in Congress, immediately gave Harris his support. Schiff was the topmost congressional leader to call for Biden to drop out last week.

“She has the judgment, experience, leadership, and tenacity to take on and defeat Donald Trump,” Schiff said in a statement Sunday. “I worked with her when she was our Attorney General, Senator, and Vice President, and I can’t wait to work with her as President.”

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Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Long Beach), who backed Harris’ presidential bid in 2020 and is on Biden’s national campaign committee, said he was “proud to support the vice president.”

“For California, especially, this is an incredible step forward and an incredible day,” he said. “I think the whole state and the party is unifying behind her and I think she’ll be the nominee within a couple of days.”

While the California political class is lining up behind Harris, the delegates could still be a toss-up. Steve Maviglio, a Democratic political consultant who is an alternate delegate from Sacramento, said the delegates he’s spoken to are unified in wanting to defeat Trump in November. The consensus, he said, is hope for “a seamless hand-off from the Biden campaign to the Harris campaign.”

“I don’t think there’s a lot of appetite for a mini-primary, four more weeks of turmoil,” Maviglio said. “We want to get this done, focus!”

Practically, he added, it would be impossible for another candidate to emerge and mount a proper fight against Trump in the next four months. Already, Biden’s campaign coffers are being transferred to Harris. As vice president, Harris also is already familiar with key Democratic donors.

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“It’s weird in that people will look back and say ‘That’s historic.’ But you actually feel like you’re living history right now, and it’s a very peculiar feeling,” Maviglio said. “I just hope this doesn’t come back to bite us in our butt.”

Times staff writers Noah Bierman and Seema Mehta contributed to this report.

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Video: Joe Biden Dropped Out. What’s Next?

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Video: Joe Biden Dropped Out. What’s Next?

President Biden on Sunday abruptly abandoned his campaign for a second term under intense pressure from fellow Democrats and threw his support to Vice President Kamala Harris to lead their party in a dramatic last-minute bid to stop former President Donald J. Trump from returning to the White House. Peter Baker, the chief White House correspondent for The New York Times, explains what happened as Mr. Biden decided to withdraw, and what could happen next.

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