Category Archives: Kamala Harris

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.

Benicia Author Stephen Golub on Kamala’s Prospects: The Good, the Bad and the Maybe

[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.]

Image uncredited.

Summing up how Harris can win, can lose and what she needs to do.

 

Benicia resident and author Stephen Golub, A Promised Land

A Promised Land, by Stephen Golub, July 29, 2024

Good things Harris has going.

Humanity. It’s a cliche for a politician to play up their human qualities, especially in the context of a campaign ad, but this one offers an insight about Harris that’s personal, poignant and a powerfully clear contrast with her opponent:

Enthusiasm. I’d bet that many of us have never experienced a surprising, joyous, politically driven emotional leap like we did the moment we learned that Biden dropped out; I’ll never forget getting my wife’s “OhMyGosh!” text.

Change. In a year when a vast number of voters were sick of their two alternatives, which this Jon Stewart rant aptly and furiously framed as a choice between a “megalomaniac and a suffocating gerontocracy,” Harris is a breath of fresh air compared to the tired, toxic cloud that’s Trump.

She’s telegenic. This shouldn’t matter but it does in an image-focused society where, to paraphrase an old Billy Crystal Saturday Night Live bit, it’s not how you feel (or think or act) – it’s how you look.

She projects positive, cheerful energy. In contrast with dour, “American carnage” Donald.

Black women’s votes and activism. Though it would be overly ambitious to see them as democracy’s saviors, public enthusiasm for her candidacy starts (but by no means ends) with the Democratic Party’s most loyal voting bloc; it could be crucial in turning out Black and other support, even in the predominantly white swing states of Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

The Indian American vote. America’s five million Indian Americans constitute the country’s second largest immigrant group, with 70 percent of their voters opting for Biden-Harris in 2020 and in a close 2024 contest a potentially larger pro-Harris margin in swing states such as Pennsylvania (61,000 voters in 2020), Georgia (57,000), Michigan (45,000) and North Carolina (36,000) possibly making a difference.

Young people’s votes and activism. Kamala is generating excitement among young voters dismayed by the former choice between Old and Older.

She’s not Biden. That’s a bit cruel but certainly true. In addition to the age difference, she can put together a speech, an argument and an appearance far better than Joe.

She’ll learn from Biden. Though her candidacy and campaign will unavoidably differ from his 2020 battle, she’ll profit by knowing what Biden did right and wrong along the way, as well as from his admirable presidency.

She’s not Clinton. She doesn’t have the baggage that burdened Hillary in 2016 by virtue of virtually ceaseless attacks on her over the course of her quarter-century on the national stage and hostility toward her even among some Democrats.

She’ll learn from Clinton. Among other things, she’s already on the attack and won’t be impeded by Hillary’s (and Michelle Obama’s) commendable but credulous “When they go low, we go high” sentiments because, in Kamala’s own words, “I know Trump’s type.”

She’ll learn from herself. Harris’s 2020 presidential candidacy did not go well, to put it mildly. She’s presumably learned from that.

Harris the prosecutor. As she puts it, she’ll “prosecute the case” against Trump in debates and otherwise, as the prosecutor takes on the felon and the cop tackles the crook.

A running start. Though I’d favored an open process for picking Biden’s replacement, Harris’s ability to quickly step into his campaign shoes and forestall opposition has been impressive – especially in contrast with that alternative process, which would have left the Democrats scrambling for a candidate who would then need to build a campaign practically from scratch after the Democratic Convention, weeks from now.

Timing. As Sarah Longwell of the conservative anti-Trump site The Bulwark points out, Harris benefits from a combination of circumstances coming together – including the contrast with Trump, the absence of a divisive primary contest and the short general election time frame – to propel  and bolster her candidacy.

Project 25. Harris can and will attack the ambitious, nefarious “Project 25” plan, put forward by the Trump-supporting Heritage Foundation, which would restrict abortion rights nationally, replace many thousands of civil servants with political appointees, enable Trump to order FBI investigations and DOJ prosecutions of political opponents and otherwise wreak havoc on the country.

Trump’s deterioration since 2016. As demonstrated by his endless Republican Convention acceptance speech, he’s rambling, stumbling and bumbling through his tired “greatest hits” that may continue to excite his MAGA base but prompt more critical press and public attention.

Trump has even more piggish baggage than 2016. Among many other things, a jury found him liable for sexual abuse that the trial judge subsequently explained constitutes rape (via digital penetration) in many people’s and authorities’ eyes, including those of the U.S. Department of Justice and the American Psychological Association.

Trump doubled down on that baggage by picking a Mini-Me in Vance.Among many other things, J.D. has accused alleged “childless cat ladies” of running and ruining the country – and then himself foolishly doubled down by only seeking to make amends with cats.

Maybe most of all, women’s rights. As demonstrated by Trump’s and Vance’s conduct and words, the threat is not just about the Supreme Court cruelly and crucially overturning Roe v. Wade; it’s about an ongoing assault on women’s rights and equality, which Harris was smart to attack in her first campaign address by emphasizing “We’re not going back!”

Bad things going against her.

Sexism.

Racism.

Nativism. It’s sad that in a nation of immigrants Trump will use her being the child of immigrants against Harris, but just watch.

Harris the prosecutor. Though (as already noted) an asset in key respects, after spending most of her professional life in various prosecutorial roles Harris has to be more than this – and sometimes not a prosecutor at all – in strategizing and making her case to the public, which is not a courtroom.

Her California background. As justifiably important as it is to stand up for women, minorities and the disenfranchised in California (and everywhere else), a focus on those progressive priorities can backfire if she doesn’t take pains to reassure men and whites, if she can’t distance herself from policy positions unpopular in swing states and if she doesn’t also prioritize bread-and-butter economic issues that surveys indicate resonate for voters.

Voter suppression. We’ve been so busy with Biden’s withdrawal, Harris’s positive possibilities and Trump’s political depravities that we might overlook the ever-expanding Republican voter suppression playbook, which features many Republican-controlled states adopting laws and other restrictions that criminalize legitimate voter outreach and registration efforts; not surprisingly, Florida leads the way with fines of up to $250,000.

The maybes that will determine whether she wins.

Quickly flesh out her public image. As with some prior vice presidents, public knowledge about Harris is quite limited; she can positively shape and reshape her image, but has to move fast since Trump is trying to do same against her.

Stay on the attack. She’s off to a great start, but has to keep making Trump the focus – not that this will sway his supporters, but because it could affect the sliver of voters that will decide the election in the key swing states.

Show that the snipes against her are unfair or outdated. Criticisms of her high staff turnover, her disastrous 2020 primary campaign and other negative factors could help drag her down unless she counteracts them – something she’s strongly started to do with the fine roll-out of her campaign.

Counteract the VP snipes. She’ll particularly need to play up her contributions to the Biden Administration, ranging from her foreign policy roles to taking the lead on women’s rights (which she’s already ably doing), and combat the unfair blasts about her supposedly being a failed “Border Czar” when in fact she had far narrower responsibilities, mainly regarding the root causes of Central American immigration.

Pick a good running mate. With no shortage of fine candidates out there, I’ll favor Arizona Senator Mark Kelly as a former combat jet pilot and astronaut who movingly supported his wife (former Congresswoman Gabby Giffords) and campaigned for gun control after a mass shooting gravely wounded her and who speaks powerfully about Harris’s potentially most vulnerable issue, immigration.

Persuade Americans to choose hope over hate. I’ll close by borrowing a page from Harris’s own playbook, and hope that the message and messenger will triumph at this turning point in America’s history. I believe that they will.

[Hat tip: RF.]

Read the details in GSA letter to Biden stating that transition can formally begin

By Roger Straw, November 2020

Although Emily Murphy sounds defensive and a bit whiny in her letter, it does reveal some interesting details about the upcoming transition.  Read the letter here. (Click on the image for the 2-page PDF version.)

Click the image to read the letter.

GSA Administrator Emily Murphy finally starts the transition process

Trump Administration Finally Clears Way For Biden Transition To Begin

“I have always strived to do what is right,” GSA administrator Emily Murphy said in a letter to the president-elect on Monday.

Huffington Post, By Nick Visser, November 23, 2020
GSA Administrator Emily Murphy arrives to tesitfy during the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government Subcommittee hearing on "GSA (General Services Administration) Oversight Hearing" on Wednesday, March 13, 2019.
Emily Murphy, Trump appointed administrator of the General Services Administration

Emily Murphy, the administrator of the General Services Administration, said the transition between President Donald Trump and President-elect Joe Biden can begin, releasing millions of dollars in funds and clearing the way for a new administration.

“I have dedicated much of my adult life to public service, and I have always strived to do what is right,” Murphy wrote in a letter to Biden on Monday. “Please know that I came to my decision independently, based on the law and the available facts. I was never directly or indirectly pressured by any Executive Branch official — including those who work at the White House or GSA — with regard to the substance or timing of my decision.”

Trump thanked Murphy for her work just moments later.

Biden’s campaign released a statement shortly after Murphy’s announcement, calling the decision a “needed step to begin tackling the challenges facing our nation, including getting the pandemic under control and our economy back on track.”

“This final decision is a definitive administrative action to formally begin the transition process with federal agencies,” the Biden-Harris transition executive director, Yohannes Abraham, said in a statement. “In the days ahead, transition officials will begin meeting with federal officials to discuss the pandemic response, have a full accounting of our national security interests, and gain complete understanding of the Trump administration’s efforts to hollow out government agencies.”

The president noted on Twitter that while he still planned to fight the outcome of the election, he agreed the transition should begin “in the best interest of our country.”

“I am recommending that Emily and her team do what needs to be done with regard to initial protocols, and have told my team to do the same,” he wrote.

The move will make $6.3 million available to Biden and his team to begin the transition process, as well as additional funds to prepare his staff and appointees.

Murphy had drawn widespread ire over her delay in “ascertaining” that Biden won the election, which is required before millions of dollars in transition funds and access to government officials can begin. She said, however, that Trump’s bevy of court losses and the certification of votes in several battleground states had allowed her to determine that Biden was the likely winner of the election.

Murphy added that she received many threats amid the delay in what she called an “effort to coerce me into making this determination prematurely,” although they, too, had not influenced her decision.

“I do not think that an agency charged with improving federal procurement and property management should place itself above the constitutionally-based election process,” she wrote Monday.

Several notable figures had lambasted the Trump administration over the delay, saying any further refusal to declare Biden the winner could hamper the country’s efforts to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, which has entered its most dangerous stage as the country beings to travel en masse before the holiday season.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, said last week he was “concerned” that things hadn’t gone “smoothly” and Biden said “more people may die” if Trump kept obstructing the transfer of power.

“As my chief of staff, Ron Klain, would say … a vaccine is important. It’s of little use until you’re vaccinated,” Biden said last week upon questioning about the rollout of any coronavirus preventative. “So how do we get the vaccine, how do we get over 300 million Americans vaccinated? What’s the game plan?”

For safe and healthy communities…