Kamala Harris will regain political focus on Wednesday night to sternly criticize Donald Trump, warning that his presidency puts the United States at risk of a constitutional crisis.
Since leaving the White House in January, the former vice president has kept a low profile most of the people after his painful defeat against Trump. Now, the day after Trump celebrated 100 days at a rally in Michigan, she is expected to give up a strong abandonment of the president's astonishing power grab, triggering warning authoritarianism.
In her speech, Harris, 60, will warn of the looming constitutional crisis and urge Americans to join the fight together to protect the rights and freedoms of presidents seeking unchecked powers, according to a person familiar with the matter. She is expected to praise her dissenting leaders, including Democratic Senator Cory Booker, who delivered a record 25-hour speech to show resistance to Trump, with Chris Van Hollen and Chris van Hollen being wrongly expelled from El Salvador through the administration.
It is also hoped that she stressed that the chaos in Trump's return to power was laid out through design in the 2025 conservative policy blueprint project. During the campaign, Trump tried to distance himself from unpopular initiatives, but his actions as president followed closely the plan – with his chain measures – to reduce the federal government’s strategy on diversity and tolerance, with his religion and inclusion of politics, and the war on “equality and integration.”
On Tuesday, the Trump administration fired Harris' husband Doug Emhoff, and other senior White House officials on the board oversee the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Earlier this month, the law firm where Emhoff worked reached a deal with the White House to avoid executive orders against his practice. Emhoff is said to have advised you to oppose the agreement, and Harris seemed to have skewed the situation in his speech a few days later, warning: "We see those who are succumbing to a clear unconstitutional threat."
These words came when Harris weighed her next move. The former state attorney general and U.S. senator from California are expected to decide at the end of the summer whether to join the crowded territory of Democrats to succeed California-bound Gov. Gavin Newsom.
A campaign to successfully lead the country’s largest blue country will provide her with an outstanding platform to challenge Trump and his attacks on democracy. Or she can choose to hold another presidential campaign in 2028.
The former vice-chairman continues to raise funds through the Harris Victory Fund, a joint fund-making committee for her Democratic National Committee and the state Democratic presidential campaign committee.
Many supporters have longed to hear Harris’ letters as the Democrats look for leaders and paths ahead after the devastating losses in November.
Harris has been in his intermittent speech since January, encouraging Americans to prioritize their own well-being while continuing to fight to protect the rights and protections of the new administration under threat. But when talking to audiences at an event in Southern California earlier this month, she sounded even more urgent: “There is a sense of fear in our country.”
Wednesday’s event was a thrilling end to Harris as she mapped out the next move. She will give a keynote speech at the 20th anniversary party held at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco to celebrate her work recruiting and training Democratic women to run for office. The organization's idea stems from Harris's 2002 campaign to defeat the current and once boss of the San Francisco District Attorney.
“Vice President Harris was the original Emerge Woman,” Emerge President and CEO A'shanti F. Gholar said in a statement. “She continues to be the champion of appearance and an advocate for elevating women in the office of elected.”