Category Archives: 2024 General Election

Michelle Obama speaks at the 2024 Democratic National Convention, August 21, 2024

Hope is making a comeback! Do something!!


Maybe her best moment, the “black job” comment:
BenIndy: Wow! Pay attention when you come to minute 10:15. It’s a  1½ minute clip you won’t want to miss! –>

Full Transcript of Michelle Obama’s Speech at the Democratic Convention

The former first lady spoke for just over 20 minutes and told the convention that “hope is making a comeback.”

“No one has a monopoly on what it means to be an American. No one,” Michelle Obama said in her speech on Tuesday night in Chicago. Credit…Kenny Holston/The New York Times

By The New York Times, August 21, 2024

OK. We got a big night ahead. Thank you all so much. Thank you so much. OK. There you go.

Hello, Chicago! Yeah. All right. Something wonderfully magical is in the air, isn’t it? You know, we’re feeling it here in this arena, but it’s spreading across this country we love. A familiar feeling that has been buried too deep for far too long. You know what I’m talking about. It’s the contagious power of hope.

The anticipation, the energy, the exhilaration of once again being on the cusp of a brighter day. The chance to vanquish the demons of fear, division and hate that have consumed us and continue pursuing the unfinished promise of this great nation, the dream that our parents and grandparents fought and died and sacrificed for.

America, hope is making a comeback.

Yeah. But, to be honest, I am realizing that, until recently, I have mourned the dimming of that hope. And maybe you’ve experienced the same feelings, that deep pit in my stomach, a palpable sense of dread about the future.

And for me, that mourning has also been mixed with my own personal grief. The last time I was here in my hometown was to memorialize my mother — the woman who showed me the meaning of hard work and humility and decency, the woman who set my moral compass high and showed me the power of my own voice.

Folks, I still feel her loss so profoundly. I wasn’t even sure if I’d be steady enough to stand before you tonight, but my heart compelled me to be here because of the sense of duty that I feel to honor her memory. And to remind us all not to squander the sacrifices our elders made to give us a better future.

You see, my mom, in her steady, quiet way, lived out that striving sense of hope every single day of her life. She believed that all children, all — all people have value. That anyone can succeed if given the opportunity. She and my father did not aspire to be wealthy. In fact, they were suspicious of folks who took more than they needed. They understood that it wasn’t enough for their kids to thrive if everyone else around us was drowning.

So, my mother volunteered at the local school. She — she always looked out for the other kids on the block. She was glad to do the thankless, unglamorous work that for generations has strengthened the fabric of this nation. The belief that if you do unto others, if you love thy neighbor, if you work and scrape and sacrifice, it will pay off. If not for you, then maybe for your children or your grandchildren.

You see, those values have been passed on through family farms and factory towns, through tree-lined streets and crowded tenements, through prayer groups and National Guard units and social-studies classrooms. Those were the values my mother poured into me until her very last breath.

Kamala Harris and I built our lives on the same foundational values. Even though our mothers grew up an ocean apart, they shared the same belief in the promise of this country. That’s why her mother moved here from India at 19. It’s why she taught Kamala about justice, about the obligation to lift others up, about our responsibility to give more than we take. She’d often tell her daughter, “don’t sit around and complain about things. Do something.”

So, with that voice in her head, Kamala went out and she worked hard in school, graduating from an H.B.C.U., earning her law degree at a state school. And then she went on to work for the people, fighting to hold lawbreakers accountable, strengthening the rule of law, fighting to give folks better wages, cheaper prescription drugs, a good education, decent health care, child care, elder care. From a middle-class household, Kamala worked her way up to become vice president of the United States of America.

My girl, Kamala Harris, is more than ready for this moment. She is one of the most qualified people ever to seek the office of the presidency. And she is one of the most dignified. A tribute to her mother, to my mother and to your mother, too. The embodiment of the stories we tell ourselves about this country. Her story is your story. It’s my story. It’s the story of the vast majority of Americans trying to build a better life.

Look, Kamala knows, like we do, that regardless of where you come from, what you look like, who you love, how you worship, or what’s in your bank account, we all deserve the opportunity to build a decent life. All of our contributions deserve to be accepted and valued. Because no one has a monopoly on what it means to be an American. No one.

Kamala has shown her allegiance to this nation. Not by spewing anger and bitterness, but by living a life of service, and always pushing the doors of opportunity open to others.

She understands that most of us will never be afforded the grace of failing forward. We will never benefit from the affirmative action of generational wealth.

If we bankrupt a business — if we bankrupt a business or choke in a crisis, we don’t get a second, third or fourth chance. If things don’t go our way, we don’t have the luxury of whining or cheating others to get further ahead. No.

We don’t get to change the rules so we always win. If we see a mountain in front of us, we don’t expect there to be an escalator waiting to take us to the top. No. We put our heads down. We get to work. In America, we do something.

And throughout her entire life, that’s what we have seen from Kamala Harris. The steel of her spine, the steadiness of her upbringing, the honesty of her example and yes, the joy of her laughter and her light.

It couldn’t be more obvious. Of the two major candidates in this race, only Kamala Harris truly understands the unseen labor and unwavering commitment that has always made America great.

Now, unfortunately, we know what comes next. We know folks are going to do everything they can to distort her truth. My husband and I sadly know a little something about this.

For years, Donald Trump did everything in his power to try to make people fear us.

See, his limited, narrow view of the world made him feel threatened by the existence of two hard-working, highly educated, successful people who happen to be Black. I want to know — I want to know — who’s going to tell him, who’s going to tell him, that the job he is currently seeking might just be one of those Black jobs?

It’s his same old con. His same old con. Doubling down on ugly, misogynistic, racist lies as a substitute for real ideas and solutions that will actually make people’s lives better.

Look, because cutting our health care, taking away our freedom to control our bodies, the freedom to become a mother through I.V.F., like I did — those things are not going to improve the health outcomes of our wives, mothers and daughters. Shutting down the Department of Education, banning our books — none of that will prepare our kids for the future. Demonizing our children for being who they are and loving who they love, look, that doesn’t make anybody’s life better. Instead, instead, it only makes us small. And let me tell you this: Going small is never the answer. Going small is the opposite of what we teach our kids. Going small is petty. It’s unhealthy. And quite frankly, it’s unpresidential.

So, why would any of us accept this from anyone seeking our highest office. Why would we normalize that type of backward leadership? Doing so only demeans and cheapens our politics. It only serves to further discourage good, big-hearted people from wanting to get involved at all. America, our parents taught us better than that. And we deserve so much better than that. That’s why we must do everything in our power to elect two of those good, big-hearted people. There is no other choice than Kamala Harris and Tim Walz. No other choice.

But as we embrace this renewed sense of hope, let us not forget the despair we have felt. Let us not forget what we are up against. Yes, Kamala and Tim are doing great now. We’re loving it. They are packing arenas across the country. Folks are energized. We are feeling good. But remember, there are still so many people who are desperate for a different outcome, who are ready to question and criticize every move Kamala makes, who are eager to spread those lies, who don’t want to vote for a woman, who will continue to prioritize building their wealth over ensuring that everyone has enough.

So no matter how good we feel tonight, or tomorrow, or the next day, this is going to be an uphill battle. So folks, we cannot be our own worst enemies. No. See, because the minute something goes wrong, the minute a lie takes hold, folks, we cannot start wringing our hands. We cannot get a goldilocks complex about whether everything is just right. And we cannot indulge our anxieties about whether this country will elect someone like Kamala, instead of doing everything we can to get someone like Kamala elected.

Kamala and Tim, they have lived amazing lives. And I am confident that they will lead with compassion, inclusion and grace. But they are still only human. They are not perfect. And like all of us, they will make mistakes. But luckily, y’all, this is not just on them. This is up to us, all of us, to be the solution that we seek. It’s up to all of us to be the antidote to the darkness and division. Look, I don’t care how you identify politically, whether you are Democrat, Republican, independent or none of the above. This is our time to stand up for what we know in our hearts is right.

To stand up not just for our basic freedoms, but for decency and humanity. For basic respect, dignity and empathy. For the values at the very foundation of this democracy. It’s up to us to remember what Kamala’s mother told her: Don’t just sit around and complain, do something.

So if they lie about her, and they will, we’ve got to do something. If we see a bad poll, and we will, we’ve got to put down that phone, and do something. If we start feeling tired, if we start feeling that dread creeping back in, we’ve got to pick ourselves up, throw water on our face, and what? [Crowd chants back: “Do Something!”]

We only have two and a half months, y’all, to get this done. Only 11 weeks to make sure every single person we know is registered and has a voting plan. So we cannot afford for anyone, anyone, anyone in America to sit on their hands and wait to be called. Don’t complain if no one from the campaign has specifically reached out to you to ask you for your support. There is simply no time for that kind of foolishness. You know what you need to do. So consider this to be your official ask. Michelle Obama is asking you — no, I’m telling y’all — to do something.

This election is going to be close. In some states, just a handful — listen to me — a handful of votes in every precinct could decide the winner. So we need to vote in numbers that erase any doubt. We need to overwhelm any effort to suppress us. Our fate is in our hands. In 77 days, we have the power to turn our country away from the fear, division and smallness of the past. We have the power to marry our hope with our action. We have the power to pay forward the love, sweat and sacrifice of our mothers and fathers and all those who came before us. We did it before y’all, and we sure can do it again. Let us work like our lives depend on it, and let us keep moving our country forward and go higher, yes, always higher than we’ve ever gone before, as we elect the next president and vice president of the United States, Kamala Harris and Tim Walz. Thank you all, God bless.

Now, before I go, I have one more job tonight. Yeah. One more job.

You all, thank you for all the love. But it is now my honor to introduce somebody who knows a whole lot about hope. Someone who has spent his life strengthening our democracy. And let me tell you, as someone who lives with him: He wakes up every day, every day, and thinks about what’s best for this country.

Please welcome America’s 44th president and the love of my life, Barack Obama.


See more on NYTimes: Michelle ObamaDemocratic PartyU.S. Politics2024 Elections

Benicia in national news regarding Kamala Harris’ role in opposing Valero crude by rail

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Opponents of Valero’s oil train proposal gathered in City Hall on the night of Benicia’s historic vote to STOP crude by rail. September 20, 2016. Photo by Emily Jovais, https://safebenicia.org/

[Note from BenIndy contributor Roger Straw: I was contacted by award-winning E&E Politico reporter Sean Reilly on August 12. Sean wanted to know about the two letters sent by then CA Attorney General Kamala Harris during Benicia’s long and controversial consideration of Valero Benicia Refinery’s “Crude by Rail” proposal. Sean’s excellent article appears below. Note that the Benicia Independent was deeply involved and some say instrumental in helping to defeat the refinery’s (and the rail industry’s) dangerous plan to run mile-long trains loaded with heavy and potentially explosive tar-sands crude oil over the mountains and into our small town. Local activists, commission members and electeds were at the heart of the opposition, but we couldn’t have stopped the CBR proposal without a LOT of help from environmental organizations, activists, staff and electeds from other cities near and far, and experts and attorneys in many fields — including the two letters from our then-Attorney General, Kamala Harris. For more, see our Crude By Rail PERMANANT ARCHIVE.  And please show your appreciation for E&E News / Politico by subscribing here.  – Roger Straw (Oh, and P.S. – go Kamala!!]

How Harris stood up against an oil giant as Calif.’s top lawyer

Then-California Attorney General Kamala Harris speaks to California Democrats on May 16, 2015, in Anaheim. Damian Dovarganes/AP

E&E News, by POLITICO, By Sean Reilly | 08/16/2024

Her stance on a pivotal crude-by-rail decision, considered a precedent-setting move, is seen as emblematic of her environmental priorities.

Kamala Harris skewered both a refinery’s plan to use trains to move potentially huge amounts of oil to a San Francisco Bay Area refinery and local oversight of the project when she served as California’s attorney general.

Although the episode did not draw the national spotlight accompanying Harris’ work on a landmark emissions cheating settlement with automaker Volkswagen and other higher-profile initiatives, some see it as an equally telling example of her environmental priorities as the state’s top lawyer.

Harris “didn’t have to get involved,” Craig Segall, a lawyer for the California Air Resources Board at the time who is now vice president of Evergreen Action, a climate policy group, said in a phone interview and ensuing text exchange.

That she did, Segall said, meshed with a focus on community health and getting ahead of emerging problems. The oil industry was also advancing “truly radical legal arguments,” he added, that would have made it hard for communities to address crude by rail in the future.

Under the plan unveiled by Valero Energy more than a decade ago, Union Pacific trains would have unloaded up to 70,000 barrels of crude each day at a refinery in Benicia, a waterfront city on the Bay Area’s northern shore.

After an impassioned 3 ½ year battle that played out largely at the local level, the project went down to defeat in 2016.

At the outset, however, that outcome was not preordained in a community where Valero wields considerable economic heft.

Shadowing the fracas was the 2013 crude-by-rail inferno that killed 47 people in Canada. In a scathing critique issued the next year, Harris’ office faulted the city’s draft environmental review for “severely” underestimating the risk of an accident.

Among other purported lapses, the review also relied on “improper standards of significance, unenforceable mitigation measures, and inadequate analyses” and failed to assess the possible air pollution impacts of changes to the refinery’s crude oil mix, a Harris deputy wrote in the 15-page broadside.

“I would say it was very important, if not crucial, largely because of the timing,” Benicia Mayor Steve Young said of the letter in a recent interview. Young, a member of Benicia’s planning commission at the time, evolved into a fierce critic of Valero’s plans. He later won election to the City Council before becoming mayor.

Up to that point, Young said, the controversy had been framed as a regional issue revolving around residents’ health and safety worries. “But when the AG’s office stepped in, it was seen as a disinterested third party that had an expert opinion.”

The city eventually issued a revised version of the environmental review that addressed many of the attorney general’s objections; the planning commission ultimately voted to reject Valero’s permit application.

Harris’ intervention, which was closely covered by local news outlets, is warmly remembered by other Bay Area critics of the project. “Her support for a safe and healthy world was incredibly important,” Benicia blogger Roger Straw wrote in a 2020 post urging a vote for Harris when she was seeking the vice presidency as a running mate to Joe Biden.

Harris served as California attorney general from 2011 to 2017 before joining the U.S. Senate and then becoming part of the Biden administration. She is now the Democratic nominee in this year’s presidential race against former President Donald Trump, a Republican.

The Union Pacific trains that were to have brought oil to the Benicia refinery would have rumbled through downtown Sacramento, the California state capital where the attorney general’s office and other state agencies are headquartered.

To what extent, if at all, that motivated Harris’ involvement is unclear. Her campaign did not reply to emails seeking her rationale for weighing in on the Valero project. The deputy who signed the letter now works for the California Environmental Protection Agency, which declined to allow an interview with him and instead referred questions to the attorney general’s office.

There, a spokesperson said the agency often issues feedback letters in the course of monitoring projects for compliance with the state’s Environmental Quality Act but otherwise had no comment on its role in the Benicia project.

A representative of Texas-based Valero did not respond to phone and email messages. Throughout a prolonged campaign to persuade Benicia city officials to issue the needed approvals, the company consistently maintained that the endeavor was safe, records show.

Its decades-old Benicia plant is one of several refineries in the Bay Area, with a workforce totaling more than 400 employees and the ability to turn 170,000 barrels of crude each day into products like gasoline, jet fuel and asphalt. It is the city’s largest private employer, Young said, and also accounts for a large chunk of the local tax base.

The company went public with its crude-by-rail plans in early 2013, portraying them as crucial to maintaining the refinery’s competitiveness by allowing it to substitute North American oil for foreign crude delivered by ship, according to an article at the time in the San Antonio Express-News.

The project was part of a surge in energy industry zeal for train transport, as oil production took off in areas like North Dakota’s Bakken Shale formation. In part because of its concentration of refineries, California stood to be disproportionately affected.

Public opposition

Just months later, however, came the disaster at Lac-Mégantic, Quebec, when a short-line train carrying Bakken crude derailed and exploded. For foes of the Benicia project, the tragedy was “critical” to mobilizing public opposition, Andrés Soto, an activist at the time, said in an interview.

Initially, however, the city’s response to Valero’s proposal was positive. While the project would at least temporarily lead to more air pollution and other environmental effects, they could all be “mitigated,” a May 2013 staff study found. The project had the backing of labor advocates and some residents, public hearing transcripts show.

But opponents successfully pressed for the broader review released in draft form in mid-2014. It offered a more detailed look at the potential effects but again found that fixes were possible.

While “significant and unavoidable impacts to air quality” loomed, for example, there were ways to address them, the draft found.

The local dispute was unfolding against a much bigger backdrop. From 2012 to 2013, the volume of rail-carried oil shipments into California had soared roughly 500 percent from 1 million barrels to 6.3 million barrels and was set to grow further, a state panel found in a report that argued for across-the-board action by government and business.

Railroads were pushing back. In a lawsuit, Union Pacific and other industry challengers sought to strike down a recently enacted California rail safety law, arguing that federal law preempted “this entire regime.”

The suit was eventually thrown out, but Harris’ office weighed in again after Valero appealed the planning commission’s decision to the Benicia City Council and took the preemption issue to the Surface Transportation Board, or STB, a federal agency that helps regulate freight rail transportation.

While the company contended that federal law barred Benicia from considering “rail-related impacts,” Harris’ office replied in April 2016 that the city nonetheless had permitting authority over Valero’s plans for building tank car unloading racks and other facilities, the letter said.

Valero “is not a ‘rail carrier’ constructing a project subject to SIB’s exclusive jurisdiction,” the response said. ”It is an oil company engaged in a project entirely removed from STB’s regulation.”

In an order issued five months later, the Surface Transportation Board reached a similar conclusion, writing that the record “does not demonstrate” that Valero is a rail carrier. Soon after, in a meeting preserved on video, the City Council voted 5-0 to deny the permit.

Then-Mayor Elizabeth Patterson called the decision a precedent-setting move for the state. The audience, seemingly packed with Valero critics, cheered.


SEAN REILLY, E&E News by Politico

Sean Reilly
Sean Reilly, Reporter for E&E News by POLITICO, Covers Air Pollution, EPA

Sean writes about air quality policy and regulations. His work has been honored by the National Press Club and Washington Press Club Foundation, among others; he also contributed a chapter to “Turning Carolina Red,” an eBook published by E&E in 2014. He previously reported for the Federal Times and newspapers in Alabama. He has a bachelor’s degree in political science from Carleton College and a master’s degree in the same subject from Duke University.

Stephen Golub: Fly Me to the Moon (A Hopeful Film Resonates as Kamala’s Campaign Takes Off)

[Note from BenIndy: This post was first published on Stephen Golub’s blog, A Promised Land: America as a Developing Country. There, Steve blogs about domestic and international politics and policy, including lessons that the United States can learn from other nations. If interested, you may sign up for future posts by subscribing to the blog.]

In a blast from the past, a hopeful film resonates as Kamala’s campaign takes off.

Benicia resident and author Stephen Golub, A Promised Land

A Promised Land, by Stephen Golub, August 4, 2024

For a fun, relaxing time the other day, my wife and I went to see Fly Me to the Moon, the lighthearted Scarlett Johansson/Channing Tatum flick about an attempt at faking the 1969 Apollo 11 moon landing. Despite the enjoyable escapism, I couldn’t help comparing it with our troubled times.

A Time of Darkness, Division, Promise and Progress

I’ll start, though, by acknowledging that 1969 was far from untroubled. We were in the depths of the Vietnam war, wreaking havoc on that country while absorbing over 50,000 deaths of our own. The war and a host of other issues bitterly divided the United States. President Richard Nixon was hardly a unifying figure.

Still, if 1969 was far from an innocent time, it at least offered signs of hope and progress, starting with the massively moving  accomplishment of the moon landing itself. The seeds of the women’s rights and environmental movements had already been planted, with progress soon to flower in both fields.

And for all of Nixon’s sins, insecurities and instability, which became even clearer as the Watergate scandal came crashing down on him a few years later, some of his proposals (such as a guaranteed annual income) and achievements (the launching of the Environmental Protection Agency) would be considered progressive today in Democratic circles and anathema to Republicans.

That era also merits comparison with today in other respects. There was no Fox “News” or social media to pervasively present a perverse, fact-resistant version of reality to Americans. Which in turn meant that senior Republicans could and would force Nixon to step down when the actual reality of Watergate made that a necessity. Contrast that with today’s craven Republican leaders caving to Trump even after he sought to extort Ukraine’s president and distort U.S. foreign policy for political gain, and even after he chose to  support insurrectionists intent on tearing apart the Capitol and the Constitution.

Hope

Speaking of today… Fly Me to the Moon is by no means a great movie. But underlying the mix of humor, goofiness, romance, drama, cynicism  and commercialism marking the film, there’s an underlying spirit of hope. And hope, despite the darkness and craziness of 2024, is what many of us now feel for the first time in some time.

It started, obviously, with the leaders of the one flawed but functional major political party we have left persuading a diminished, unpopular president that his time had gone, that for the good of the party and the country he needed to step aside. It continued with his accepting that verdict, as painful as it was, and doing the right thing.

It’s culminated, for the moment, with the impressive rocket launch of Kamala’s campaign. In the wake of her debacle of a race four years ago, the first doubt about her could have been whether she could even run for president competently. The three months ahead will truly be trying, with lots of difficulties. But she’s off to an inspiring start.

What I find most promising is that she seems to have learned valuable lessons from that campaign, as well as from those of Hillary Clinton in 2016 and Joe Biden in 2020. Those lessons include tacking toward the center somewhat, given the realities of winning the crucial, centrist swing states necessary to win the Electoral College, which is all that matters in a presidential campaign. That in turn involves playing up her prosecutorial credentials, as opposed to  previously playing them down.

Her strong start also involves standing steadfast on vital matters of principle (as well as political advantage), especially a woman’s right to an abortion and women’s rights in general; triggering an organic online buzz that might sway younger voters; and bringing on senior advisors from the successful Obama campaigns.

She’s smoothly parrying Trump’s ugly, racist, misogynist, nativist thrusts, most recently by not getting dragged into his pigsty over whether she’s Asian or Black. (Though I wonder how J.D. and Usha Vance feel about what Trump’s either/or attacks mean for their mixed-race kids.)

There’s another president Harris merits comparison with: Ronald Reagan. For all their dozens of differences, she’s coming across as her own kind of Reaganesque “happy warrior”: a blend of strong, stern, sunny, cheerful and hopeful. It’s a winning combination if one can pull it off. So far, she is.

Triumphing Despite the Troubled Skies

Inevitable troubles lie ahead, ranging from potentially legitimate negative stories to attacks on Kamala’s policy positions to Trump lying about  her at every nasty turn.

Which is where we all come in. By voting, donating and working for Harris. By influencing others to do the same. By holding on to hope, even during those days when things look dark.

Triumphing in November is all very doable. After all, we’re not talking about shooting for the moon.

White Guys Won’t Back Harris? $4M Raised by ‘White Dudes for Harris’ May Prove That’s Just, Like, Your Opinion, Man

[BenIndy: We share this with deep apologies to the white dudes who found out about it too late. In truth, we privately shared several identity-group fundraising call notices (including the Black Men for Harris, Out for Kamala Harris LGBTQ+ Unity, South Asian Women for Harris, and Women for Harris calls) with friends and family, but did not think to share them here. The outrage and FOMO we saw after admitting this oversight indicate we must apologize for our grievous error. But don’t worry: there will probably be more events like this one, so keep your eyes open. Join the email lists, become group members, and sign up to be notified. Donate. Jokes aside, white voters have favored  GOP candidates for years. This is an election where we hope to see that trend at least slip.]

‘White Dudes for Harris’— including The Dude himself — raise over $4M

Vice President Harris delivers a keynote speech at the American Federation of Teachers’ 88th national convention in Houston on Thursday. | Callaghan O’Hare / The Washington Post.

Washington Post, by Adila Suliman, July 30, 2024

The Zoom fundraiser for Vice President Harris, attended by Jeff Bridges, Mark Hamill and Pete Buttigieg among others, raised over $4 million, organizers said.

After Black Women for Harris and White Women for Harris, it was the turn of “White Dudes for Harris” — where almost 200,000 people, including the actor who plays “The Dude” himself, helped raise over $4 million during a fundraising Zoom call, according to organizers.

The more than three-hour-long online call saw actors Mark Hamill, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Sean Astin and Josh Gad among the men expressing support for Vice President Harris’s presidential bid, alongside ’N Sync star Lance Bass and a host of Democrat politicians.

Most notable among the celebrities was a man introduced as the “dude in chief,” actor Jeff Bridges, who played The Dude in “The Big Lebowski,” released in 1998, and joked: “I qualify … I’m White, I’m a dude and I’m for Harris.”

Attendees expressed enthusiasm and excitement for the campaign — while also joking about the lack of diversity on the call. “What a variety of Whiteness we have here … it’s like a rainbow of beige!” actor Bradley Whitford of “The West Wing” told the group. Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker (D) teased that a White Dudes gathering “doesn’t usually sound like something I would join, but this is a terrific cause.”

Organizer Ross Morales Rocketto also acknowledged more serious motivations for organizing the call. “The left has been ceding White men to the MAGA right for way, way too long,” he said referencing the slogan popularized by Trump, “Make America Great Again.”

“That’s going to stop tonight, because we know that the silent majority of White men aren’t actually MAGA supporters. They’re folks like you who just want a better life for their families.”

A majority of White men have long sided with Republican presidential nominees, and Trump won a majority of White male voters in 2020, The Post previously reported. President Biden ultimately won by assembling a large enough coalition of voters in key states, winning margins among young and non-White voters, college graduates and independents.

Harris’s campaign has had to contend with attacks focused on her gender and racial identity — with one Republican lawmaker calling her unqualified and a “DEI vice president,” and many political pundits widely presume that her expected vice-presidential pick will have to be a White male to give her ticket the broadest appeal.

During Monday’s call, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg framed Harris’s campaign as one for “freedom.”

“Men are more free when the leader of the free world and the leader of this country supports access to birth control and to IVF,” he told the online gathering.

The White Dudes fundraiser has no official affiliation with Harris but large amounts of money were raised through matched funds and merchandise sales, including a popular trucker hat, the group said.

During his speech, Bridges paid homage to Black Women for Harris for inspiring a wave of copycat fundraising calls. “Kamala is so certainly our girl … a woman president, man, so exciting! And her championing of women’s rights, I’m for that, and for all her stance on the environment.”

Bridges also managed to work in his character’s catchphrase in “The Big Lebowski,” quipping at one point: “As the Dude might say: That’s just my opinion, man.”

In addition to raising funds for Harris’s campaign, speakers hoped to energize supporters ahead of what is expected to be an intense race.

Buttigieg said it was an “honor” to address “this convening of dudes, right after The Dude,” referencing Bridges. “The vibes right now are incredible,” Buttigieg said of the Harris campaign. “The momentum is extraordinary.”

“I’ve never felt this kind of belief, this kind of enthusiasm ever. I want us to enjoy it,” Whitford said.

Similar zoom fundraiser calls have been organized to support Harris’s presidential bid after President Biden announced the end of his candidacy earlier in July.

More than 44,000 people logged onto a Zoom call organized by Win With Black Women to support Harris, raising over $1.5 million, organizers said. The call featured Bernice King, the youngest child of Martin Luther King Jr.; 85-year-old Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), the most senior Black woman in the House; and Donna Brazile, the two-time acting chair of the Democratic National Committee.That event also helped inspire similar fundraising calls for Black men and Latinas.

For safe and healthy communities…