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US Vice President Kamala Harris. (Saul Loeb/AFP)
- US President Joe Biden and top aides on Friday vowed to continue with the campaign.
- More than one in 10 congressional Democrats have now publicly called on Biden, who is isolating at his Delaware home with a case of Covid-19, to drop out.
- Vice President Kamala Harris is widely believed to be the most likely replacement if he steps down.
US Vice President Kamala Harris will headline a fundraiser in Massachusetts on Saturday as President Joe Biden faces continued pressure from fellow Democrats and big money donors to end his floundering campaign.
Biden and top aides on Friday vowed to continue with the campaign, even as major donors signaled they were unwilling to open their checkbooks unless the 81-year-old president stepped aside.
The crisis-in-confidence in Biden’s ability to win has placed a huge spotlight on Harris, widely believed to be the most likely replacement if he steps down.
Her fundraising events, including the one on Saturday in Provincetown, Massachusetts are getting added interest from donors who want to signal they are willing to coalesce around her potential bid for the White House, according to three Democratic fundraisers.
More than one in 10 congressional Democrats have now publicly called on Biden, who is isolating at his Delaware home with a case of Covid-19, to drop out following a disastrous debate last month against Republican former president Donald Trump that raised questions about the incumbent’s ability to win the 5 November election or carry out his duties for another four years.
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Biden’s campaign hoped to raise some $50 million in big-dollar donations in July for the Biden Victory Fund but was on track for less than half that figure as of Friday, according to two sources familiar with the fundraising efforts.
The campaign called reports of a July fundraising slump overstated, noting that it anticipated a drop-off in large donations due to vacations. It said the campaign still has 10 fundraisers on the schedule this month.
Harris assured major Democratic donors on Friday that the party would prevail in the presidential election as more lawmakers called for her running mate, Biden, to stand down.
“We are going to win this election,” she said on a call arranged on short notice to calm donors, according to a person on the call.
“We know which candidate in this election puts the American people first: Our president, Joe Biden.”
Harris attended the call “at the direct request of senior advisers to the president,” one of the people said, an account confirmed by another person familiar with the matter.