Presumptive Democratic Presidential candidate, Joe Biden, announced on Tuesday that Kamala Harris will be his Vice-Presidential running mate to try to unseat incumbent Donald Trump in the November election.
Harris becomes the first Black woman and the first South Asian to run for United States vice president.
In her first public statement as a nominee, she said he was “honored” to join Biden “and do what it takes to make him our Commander-in-Chief” on her Twitter account with a Biden-Harris banner on top.
Biden’s campaign said he and Harris would make their first joint appearance on Wednesday in Wilmington, Delaware, where Biden lives and has spent most of his time in recent months limiting campaign travel because of the coronavirus pandemic.
In Harris, a senator from California who made her own run for the White House before ending it and endorsing Biden, he gains a deeply experienced politician already battle-tested by the rigours of the 2020 presidential campaign as they head into the final stretch of the November 3 election.
“I have the great honor to announce that I’ve picked @KamalaHarris — a fearless fighter for the little guy, and one of the country’s finest public servants — as my running mate,” Biden said on Twitter.
The long-anticipated announcement came less than a week before the Democratic National Convention, August 17-20, which will be held largely online because of the coronavirus pandemic.
As vice presidential nominee, Harris is scheduled to speak Wednesday, August 19 – one night before Biden is expected to formally accept the Democratic nomination.
Trump said he was “surprised” Biden chose Harris because she was “nasty” and disrespectful” during the primaries, speaking on Tuesday at a White House briefing.
Former President Barack Obama said “Biden nailed this decision”, and said Harris “is more than prepared for the job”, in a tweet.
The 2016 Democratic presidential candidate Hilary Clinton called Harris “an incredible public servant and leader” and would be “a strong partner” for Biden, she said in a tweet.
Harris, who became only the second Black woman to hold a US Senate seat when she was elected in 2016, will be relied on to help drive the Black vote – the Democratic Party’s most loyal constituency. Four years ago, the first dip in Black voter turnout in 20 years contributed to Clinton’s upset loss to Trump.
Biden, whose foundering campaign was rescued by Black voters in South Carolina’s primary in February, needs their strong support against Trump. It will be crucial in battleground states such as Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin that Trump won by the slimmest margins in 2016, but where opinion polls now show him trailing his Democratic rival.