logo
Kamala Harris Finishes Third Place in Her Home State in New 2028 Poll

Kamala Harris Finishes Third Place in Her Home State in New 2028 Poll

Newsweek10 hours ago
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
New California polling shows former Vice President Kamala Harris losing steam in her home state in a look-ahead to Democrats' chances in the 2028 presidential election primary, after she recently announced she would not be seeking a run as California's next governor.
Why It Matters
Many political observers are curious about Harris' future in politics after she announced a week ago that she would not run to succeed term-limited California Governor Gavin Newsom, saying in part that "for now," her "leadership and public service" will be provided in an arena outside of elected office.
Harris, who had an unsuccessful presidential run in 2020, was tasked by Democrats to defeat Donald Trump in 2024 with limited months' notice and preparation following questions about former President Joe Biden's mental acuity. She ultimately lost every swing state in November and garnered about 2.3 million fewer votes than her Republican opponent.
What To Know
An Emerson College poll of California voters released Friday shows Harris at 11 percent, trailing California Governor Gavin Newsom at 23 percent and former Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg at 17 percent in a potential 2028 Democratic primary. Harris is, however, ahead of New York Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who is at 9 percent.
On the Republican side, 40 percent support Vice President JD Vance, 10 percent support Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, and 9 percent support Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.
Former Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at the State of the People POWER Tour opening ceremony on June 6, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
Former Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at the State of the People POWER Tour opening ceremony on June 6, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.The poll of roughly 1,000 California voters was conducted August 4 to 5 and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
The results differ from a national Emerson poll in June, when Buttigieg led the Democratic pack with 16 percent followed by Harris at 13 percent, Newsom at 12 percent, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez both 7 percent, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders at 5 percent, and New Jersey Senator Cory Booker at 3 percent. Twenty-three percent were undecided.
However, that poll took into account U.S. voters and not just those from California.
Camille Mumford, communications director for Emerson College Polling, told Newsweek via email on Friday that directly following the 2024 election, their November poll found Harris front of mind for Democratic voters who named her as their top choice for the nomination in 2028.
"Eight months later, voters appear to be looking for a new face as the nominee, and Harris has fallen into the pack of potential candidates," Mumford said. "Harris performs strongest among Black Democratic primary voters nationally, 30 percent of whom supported her in June; and those in the Midwest and South, 16 percent of whom support Harris, compared to 9 percent of those in both the Northeast and West."
Harris, who has a history in California as former district attorney, attorney general and U.S. Senator, lacked a strong home base in the 2020 Democratic primary, Mumford noted.
In Emerson's September 2019 poll, Biden, Sanders and Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren led the primary with Harris trailing in fourth place. She then dropped out in December of that year, ahead of the deadline for taking her name off of the California primary ballot.
California Governor Race
Now that Harris has said she won't run for California governor, it's allowed other familiar faces in the state to garner more attention.
Per the new Emerson poll, California voters find former Democratic Representative Katie Porter leading the primary for California governor with 18 percent, followed by Republican political commentator Steve Hilton at 12 percent, Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco at 7 percent, and former Democratic Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa at 5 percent. About 38 percent remain undecided.
What People Are Saying
Spencer Kimball, executive director of Emerson College Polling, in a statement: "With Kamala Harris officially out of the race, Katie Porter has emerged as the Democratic frontrunner, increasing her support from 12 percent to 18 percent since the April Emerson poll."
Harris, in a statement released on X on July 30: "Over the past six months, I have spent time reflecting on this moment in our nation's history and the best way for me to continue fighting for the American people and advancing the values and ideals I hold dear.
"I have given serious thought to asking the people of California for the privilege to serve as their governor. I love this state, its people and its promise. It is my home. But after deep reflection, I've decided that I will not run for Governor in this election."
What Happens Next
It remains to be seen whether the former vice president will enter the 2028 presidential race.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Energy officials say termination of Solar for All program will hurt low-income Mainers
Energy officials say termination of Solar for All program will hurt low-income Mainers

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Energy officials say termination of Solar for All program will hurt low-income Mainers

(Stock photo by Sirisak Boakaew/ Getty Images) Maine energy officials on Friday decried the Trump administration's announcement it will cancel nearly $7 billion in grants to fund solar energy projects for low-income households, saying it will raise costs for Maine people, particularly those with lower incomes. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency sent notices to states and other recipients of grants through the Solar for All program, which Democrats created in their massive 2022 taxes, energy and domestic policy law, that the agency was canceling all unspent funds from the initiative. The EPA said Republicans eliminated the federal fund that distributed the program's money in the 'one big, beautiful' law President Donald Trump signed on July 4. 'Thousands of Maine people stood to benefit from lower energy bills delivered by the Solar for All program,' said Dan Burgess, director of the Governor's Energy Office. 'Terminating this funding doesn't help Maine people, it only hurts them.' In April 2024, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency awarded Maine $62 million through the federal Solar for All program that supports the state's clean energy workforce, in addition to expanding solar to low-income households. Just last month, the EPA approved the state's plan to implement the program so benefits could reach Mainers by 2026, according to a Friday news release from the Governor's Energy Office. However, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced on social media that the new law terminated the agency's legal ability to distribute the funds. 'The bottom line again is this: EPA no longer has the authority to administer the program or the appropriated funds to keep this boondoggle alive,' Zeldin said in a video posted to X. 'With clear language and intent from Congress in the one big, beautiful bill, EPA is taking action to end this program for good. We are committed to the rule of law and being a good steward of taxpayer dollars.' Solar for All was projected to help over 20,000 low-income Maine households save between $380 and $1,400 annually on their energy bills through incentives for rooftop solar and a new community solar and storage program. Solar can lower costs and improve reliability by reducing demand on the electrical grid, lowering wholesale energy prices and circumventing the need for costly transmission and distribution investments, the state energy office noted. It also lessens the reliance on fossil fuels, which come with volatile price tags while exacerbating climate change. Part of the funding was also earmarked to support workforce training for over 700 Maine residents in essential building trades including electrical work, construction, maintenance and repair. 'Canceling the program deprives Maine of access to affordable solar, energy storage, and the skilled electricians, installers, and construction workers needed to meet our energy and economic needs now and in the future,' Burgess said. He added that the state remains committed to the program and will explore options to preserve it. His office is consulting with the Office of the Maine Attorney General on next steps. When Maine received its Solar for All grant in 2024, the state had 977 megawatts of solar energy installed, an increase from the 62 megawatts that were in place five years earlier. The majority of solar arrays in Maine are small-scale, less than 5 megawatts. Democrats created the Solar for All fund as part of the $27 billion Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund in the law they passed without any GOP support in either chamber and President Joe Biden signed in August 2022. The Solar for All fund was meant to bring the benefits of solar power to 900,000 households in low-income communities, while reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Asked about the program's termination, U.S. Sen. Susan Collins told the Portland Press Herald it 'would be unfortunate news,' but that underscored the risk of including such a grant program in a 'completely partisan bill.' 'Not one Republican voted for the Inflation Reduction Act that included this grant program,' Collins reportedly said. 'While it is no surprise now that control of the White House has changed that the new administration would consider terminating this IRA program, my staff has asked the EPA for additional information.' According to a list on the EPA website, the awardees included the Executive Office of the State of New Hampshire; Rhode Island Office of Energy Resources; the Maine Governor's Energy Office; the Alaska Energy Authority; the Oregon Department of Energy; Washington State Department of Commerce; Bonneville Environmental Foundation in Idaho; Tanana Chiefs Conference in Alaska; New Jersey Board of Public Utilities; Maryland Clean Energy Center; Pennsylvania Energy Development Authority; Virginia Department of Energy; West Virginia Office of Energy; Department of Environment and Conservation Tennessee; Kentucky Energy and Environment Cabinet; North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality; South Carolina Office of Resilience; the Solar and Energy Loan Fund of St. Lucie County, Inc., in Florida; the Capital Good Fund in Georgia; Minnesota Department of Commerce; the State of Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy; the State of Ohio Office of Budget and Management State Accounting; Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation; Indiana Community Action Association Inc.; New Mexico Energy, Minerals, & Natural Resources Department; State of Louisiana Department of Natural Resources; Hope Enterprise Corporation in Arkansas; the Missouri Environmental Improvement and Energy Resources Authority; the Center for Rural Affairs in Nebraska; Colorado Energy Office; Utah Office of Energy Development; Bonneville Environmental Foundation in Montana; Coalition for Green Capital in North Dakota; Coalition for Green Capital in South Dakota; Executive Office of the State of Arizona; Nevada Clean Energy Fund; Hopi Utilities Corporation in Arizona; and other programs that covered multiple states and tribes. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Solve the daily Crossword

DOJ investigating N.Y. AG's office and Sen. Adam Schiff
DOJ investigating N.Y. AG's office and Sen. Adam Schiff

NBC News

time32 minutes ago

  • NBC News

DOJ investigating N.Y. AG's office and Sen. Adam Schiff

U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi has appointed a "special attorney" to probe mortgage fraud allegations against Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and New York Attorney General Letitia James, two administration officials told NBC News. The Justice Department is also in the initial stages of an investigation of James over her successful civil fraud case against President Donald Trump, according to three people familiar with the matter. Bondi tapped Ed Martin, a conservative activist and former interim U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C., as special attorney to investigate Schiff and James, both prominent Democratic opponents of the president, the two administration officials said. A senior law enforcement official said a grand jury seated in the Eastern District of Virginia will investigate the James mortgage fraud allegations and a grand jury in Maryland will investigate the allegations against Schiff. Martin met Friday morning with Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte, who sent a criminal referral on the California senator to the Justice Department in May, the administration officials said. Pulte sent a referral on James in April, prompting the Justice Department to open an investigation on allegations that she made false statements on mortgage loan applications. Trump had previously called for both Democratic officials to be prosecuted because of the mortgage fraud allegations. Schiff and James have denied wrongdoing. Preet Bharara, who is representing Schiff, said in a statement Friday that the allegations against the senator 'are transparently false, stale, and long debunked.' Schiff previously blasted Trump's claims, in a video statement in July. "This is the kind of stuff you see tinpot dictators do. It is designed to intimidate his political opponents and somehow try to silence them," he said then. The U.S. attorney probe of James is focused on whether her office used its authority to violate Trump's legal rights through its civil lawsuits against the president and his businesses, according to three people familiar with the matter. That investigation is also looking at whether the National Rifle Association's rights were violated by her civil suits, the three sources said. It is being run out of the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Northern District of New York, two of those sources said. In response to an NBC News inquiry, a spokesperson for the attorney general's office said: 'Any weaponization of the justice system should disturb every American. We stand strongly behind our successful litigation against the Trump Organization and the National Rifle Association, and we will continue to stand up for New Yorkers' rights.' A spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney's Office did not return a request for comment. James, a Democrat, successfully sued Trump and his company over what her office said were fraudulent misrepresentations of his wealth and financial statements. A judge awarded James' office over $300 million in the case, an amount that's since swelled to over $500 million with interest. Trump is appealing the judgment. James' office also sued the NRA and its leadership with mixed results. The attorney general had sought the dissolution of the NRA in what is commonly referred to as the corporate 'death penalty,' but a judge struck down those claims. In 2024, James' office did win its civil fraud case against the longtime head of the NRA, Wayne LaPierre, with a jury convicting him of diverting millions of dollars from the gun group for his own personal lifestyle. The gun group said it was "gratified" to find out about the investigation. "She uses her powers as an elected official to try, in her words, to 'dissolve the organization in its entirety', thus silencing the voice of millions of our members,' NRA Executive Vice President and CEO Doug Hamlin said in a statement. "That she now expresses concerns over 'weaponization' is the height of hypocrisy--an utter lack of self-awareness at the very least.' It is not immediately clear how far along the DOJ investigation into James' office is and what evidence, if any, the Justice Department has gathered in the probe. An attorney for James, Abbe Lowell, said the probe of James' fraud case against Trump and his businesses 'has to be the most blatant and desperate example of this administration carrying out the president's political retribution campaign." "Weaponizing the Department of Justice to try to punish an elected official for doing her job is an attack on the rule of law and a dangerous escalation by this administration," he added. The FBI and Justice Department began its probe of the mortgage fraud allegations against James in the spring. It's unclear why Martin is now in charge of the review. Martin served as Trump's interim U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C., earlier this year, but his nomination was withdrawn after Republican senators expressed concerns over his association with Jan. 6 rioters. Trump then announced in May that Martin was moving to the Justice Department to serve as director of a 'weaponization working group." Martin did not comment on the Friday appointment. In his statement defending Schiff, Bharara criticized Martin, calling him 'the most brazenly partisan and politically compromised person possible for the task.' 'Any supposed investigation led by him would be the very definition of weaponization of the justice process,' said Bharara, who served as U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York before being fired by Trump during his first term in office. Lowell pushed back on the allegations against James in an April letter to Bondi, acknowledging there were some mistaken forms while noting contemporaneous letters and forms showing that James submitted the correct information. The letter called the "threadbare allegations" the "next salvo in President Trump's revenge tour against Attorney General James." In addition to her fraud case against Trump and his companies, James and her office have launched a number of successful legal challenges to his administration's agenda, dating back to his first term in office. Trump has maintained that James is biased against him. In 2021, he sued to stop her from proceeding with her fraud investigation, saying, 'Her mission is guided solely by political animus and a desire to harass, intimidate, and retaliate against a private citizen who she views as a political opponent." The lawsuit also alleged that Trump was the victim of "viewpoint discrimination." Trump later dropped the suit, but has continued to criticize James, including in an April Truth Social post that called her a "wacky" and "totally corrupt politician" who should immediately resign.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store