Face of Nation : It was on the third day of a five-day bus tour across Iowalast week that 2020 White House contender Kamala Harris finally seemed to hit her stride.
Armed with fresh endorsements from two of the state’s most sought after political influencers early on Saturday, the U.S. Senator from California got an enthusiastic welcome from over 500 people at a Des Moines area high school. For the first time during her tour that started on Thursday, the crowd began chanting Harris’ new slogan about Republican Donald Trump’s presidency: “Dude gotta go!”
The country needs a leader who can “prosecute the case against Donald Trump” and “it will take a prosecutor to do it,” Harris, California’s former top prosecutor and a former district attorney of San Francisco, told the audience. “And we’ve got quite the rap sheet.” Harris, 54, is among two dozen Democrats vying for the party nomination to take on Trump in the November 2020 election.Months after entering the presidential race as a relatively fresh face on the national stage, Harris, who is of Jamaican and South Asian descent, has ranked fourth in most national opinion polls, behind former Vice President Joe Biden and liberal U.S. Senators Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Bernie Sanders of Vermont.
Harris was in fourth, dropping 4 points to 5.7% support over the same time period. But in Iowa, there are signs that her campaign could be gaining traction. A Monmouth University poll released Aug. 8 showed Harris third in the state, with 11% support, behind Biden and Warren.
And on Saturday, her campaign announced major endorsements from Iowa power couple Sue and Bob Dvorsky, a former state party chairwoman and a former state senator, who supported former President Barack Obama in 2008 in his surprise upset over Hillary Clinton, then Clinton in 2016 when she eked out a win over Sanders. The winner of Iowa’s Democratic caucuses has gone on to be the party’s nominee for the last six election cycles and Obama’s victory there in 2008 catapulted him from little-known junior U.S. senator to the White House.
Harris said she felt that her performance in the second debate did not match her stand-out performance in Miami. But she shrugged off concerns about her momentum stalling. “You know I’m a frontrunnerand that became clear on the second debate in a way that it was not on the first. You’ve got to be prepared to take the hits when you’re a frontrunner and that’s what happened,” Harris told Reuters aboard a bus with “Kamala” written on it in large, capital letters.
“I honestly don’t pay attention to polls,” Harris said. “I hear about them but that’s not my North Star because if I had listened to the polls I would have never run for any office I’ve run for.” During her Iowa campaign stops, Harris said repeatedly that she is in the race to win it.