Share and Follow
During an event last night, the vice president faced a question about whether she would pursue the role she previously lost in the upcoming 2024 election.
“Well, I might consider it,” she responded thoughtfully. “I’m contemplating it.”
“I have a clear understanding of the position and its demands,” she added.
The remarks were made at the National Action Network’s convention, a civil rights organization established by former candidate Al Sharpton.
Reports indicate she received a warm and enthusiastic welcome from the audience.
“This is a convention, not a revival,” Sharpton told the crowd.
“The status quo is not working,” she said.
“The American people have the right to expect that anyone who wants to run for office – it can’t be about themselves.”
At this stage in the US political cycle, potential candidates are normally very coy about their presidential ambitions.
Typically would-be contenders do not announce whether they will run until after the midterm elections in November.
But Harris is touring the country in a way that politicians rarely do if they intend to retire.
Rumours abounded that Harris would run again for president when she declined a bid for the governorship of California last year.
The event also included a series of other likely Democratic candidates for president, including Pete Buttigieg, JB Pritzker, Josh Shapiro and Wes Moore.
Most polls of the Democratic primary for the 2028 election show Kamala Harris with a tenuous lead over her rivals.
While she has the advantage of universal name recognition, it is clear Democratic voters are not convinced she is the best option.
The previous losing candidate typically leads in early polls the next election around.
But it is very rare for a nominee to make a second attempt after losing a general election.Â
The last major party candidate to claim a presidential nomination twice in a row without winning was Adlai Stevenson in 1952 and 1956.
He lost in a landslide both times. Nevertheless, he tried and failed to get the nomination a third time at the 1960 Democratic convention.
Harris claimed the nomination in an unusual and very expedited fashion in 2024 after Joe Biden dropped out after the primaries but before the convention.
A poll released by YouGov this week showed only 62 per cent of people who voted for Trump were confident in that decision.