Kamala Harris delivered a searing indictment of Donald Trump’s first 100 days in power, warning in her first major address since leaving office that the nation was witnessing a “wholesale abandonment of America’s highest ideals” by its president.
Speaking to an audience of Democrats in San Francisco, the former vice-president struck a defiant posture as she praised the leaders and institutions pushing back against Trump and his aggressive agenda – from the members of Congress acting boldly to the judges “who uphold the rule of law in the face of those who would jail them”, the universities defying the administration’s “unconstitutional demands”, and the everyday Americans rallying to protect social security.
The speech – her most forceful since Trump returned to power – marked a notable reemergence for Harris. The former vice-president, who now lives in Los Angeles and is weighing her next move – a possible run for California governor next year or another bid for the presidency in 2028 – has mostly kept a low profile since leaving office in January following her devastating loss to Trump in November.
In her remarks, she accused Trump of deliberately sowing fear and chaos to consolidate his own executive power, in a “high velocity” start to his presidency that hurled the country toward a constitutional crisis.
“They are counting on the notion that, if they can make some people afraid, it will have a chilling effect on others,” she said. “But what they’ve overlooked is that fear isn’t the only thing that’s contagious. Courage is contagious.”
Urging Americans to keep organizing, running for office and standing up for fundamental rights and values, she declared: “Let’s lock it in.”
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Delivering the keynote address at the 20th anniversary gala for Emerge America in at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco was a poignant coda for Harris. Her early success running for San Francisco district attorney in 2003 inspired the group’s founding, and on Wednesday Harris, a Bay Area native and the nation’s first female vice-president, paid tribute to its work recruiting and training Democratic women to run for office.
“We need to get more of the alpha energy back with women,” said attendee Connie Price, referencing a quote from Michigan senator Elissa Slotkin. “We have to get less kumbaya and more solutions oriented and women are plenty capable of that.”
The crowd included Democratic donors, candidates and elected officials, among Eleni Kounalakis, the lieutenant governor of California and former California Congresswoman Katie Porter, both of whom are running for governor.
In her remarks, Harris argued that the chaotic start to Trump’s second term was by design, laid out in the conservative policy blueprint Project 2025.
“Please, let us not be duped into thinking everything is chaos,” she said. “What we are, in fact, witnessing is a vessel being used for the swift implementation of an agenda that has been decades in the making.”
During the campaign, Trump sought to distance himself from the unpopular initiative but his actions as president follow the plan closely – from his chainsaw approach to downsizing the federal government to his war on diversity, equity and inclusion policies and “gender ideology”. Trump’s “reckless” tariffs were “clearly inviting a recession”, Harris said, adding, with a subtle reference to her campaign trail warnings, “as I predicted”.
She did not, however, get more personal, despite plenty of avenues to do so.
On Tuesday, the Trump administration fired Harris’s husband, Doug Emhoff and other senior Biden White House officials from the board that oversees the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Earlier this month, the law firm where Emhoff works reached a deal with the White House to avert an executive order targeting its practice. Emhoff, who was in attendance on Wednesday night, was said to have advised against acquiescing to the administration’s demands, and Harris seemed to obliquely address the situation in remarks days later when she said: “We are seeing those that are capitulating to clearly unconstitutional threats”.
But the self-described “joyful warrior” also left room for hope. She commended leaders whose dissent has galvanized the public, including Democratic senators Cory Booker, who delivered a record-breaking 25-hour speech to show resistance to Trump, and Chris Van Hollen, who secured a visit with a man wrongly deported to El Salvador by the administration, as well Bernie Sanders and Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez who have been drawing crowds thousands-strong on their cross-country Stop Oligarchy tour.
Yet with the Democrats out of power in Washington, and Trump pressuring the constitutional system of checks and balances with no resistance from Congress, Harris predicted that “things are probably going to get worse before they get better”.
Concluding her speech, she referenced a viral video of elephants at the San Diego Zoo captured during a 5.2-magnitude earthquake that struck California earlier this month. When the ground began to shake, they instinctively formed a protective circle around the most vulnerable in their herd, which Harris saw as a “powerful metaphor” for collective resistance.
“The lesson is don’t, don’t scatter,” she said.
Filtering out of the ballroom at the end of the evening, attendees parsed Harris’ pithy call to action.
“She was on fire,” said attendee John Glass. “I thought it was going to be more of a perfunctory speech, it was anything but that. I wish she sounded like she did tonight on the campaign.”
“It was nice to see her back” said another attendee Jennifer Wise, who was discussing the evening with Carol Horton. Harris’ speech “was a commentary for the moment”, Horton said, adding that she looks forward to a decision from Harris on whether she will join the crowded field of Democrats vying to succeed California’s term-limited governor, Gavin Newsom, or mount another bid for president in 2028.
A successful campaign to lead the country’s largest blue state would give her a prominent platform from which to challenge Trump and attacks on liberal values and ideas. The former state attorney general and US senator from California is expected to decide by the end of summer.
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