Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • JUDY WOODRUFF: Three Democratic candidates in three days have exited the Democratic race

  • for president.

  • With more than a dozen still remaining in the race, John Yang reports on how the latest

  • to bow out could reshape the campaign.

  • JOHN YANG: Judy, California Senator Kamala Harris launched her campaign in January amid

  • high expectations.

  • Today, as she left the race, she told supporters in a video message that she doesn't have the

  • resources to compete.

  • SEN.

  • KAMALA HARRIS (D-CA), Presidential Candidate: I'm not a billionaire.

  • I can't fund my own campaign.

  • And as the campaign has gone on, it has become harder and harder to raise the money we need

  • to compete.

  • In good faith, I cannot tell you, my supporters and volunteers, that I have a path forward

  • if I don't believe I do.

  • JOHN YANG: To talk about what happened to Senator Harris' campaign and what her departure

  • does to the race, I'm joined by Chelsea Janes of The Washington Post.

  • Chelsea, thanks so much for joining us.

  • We began -- the Democrats began this campaign season with a historically diverse field of

  • candidates.

  • As things stand now, in the next debate, the "PBS NewsHour"/Politico debate, you're going

  • to have six candidates on the stage, all of them white, four white males, two white women.

  • What does that say about what's happening in this race?

  • CHELSEA JANES, The Washington Post: It is certainly striking.

  • And, today, we have seen a lot of candidates and pundits and people in that world take

  • to Twitter and point that out.

  • I think it's disappointing to a lot of people, who -- in these underrepresented groups that

  • looked at someone like Kamala Harris and said, you know, that's the first person to look

  • like me who is going to have a shot at this.

  • And to have it whittle down as it has, I think, on the one hand, you have the most diverse

  • field in history, and, on the other, it's not shaping up to remain that way.

  • And I think there's a lesson to be learned there.

  • What it is, is far above my pay grade, but I do think that it's really disappointing

  • to a lot of people in an increasingly diverse Democratic electorate, who hoped that they

  • would see somebody different represented this time around.

  • JOHN YANG: The other candidates may still qualify for the debate, but that's what the

  • qualifications -- who has qualified so far.

  • As you say, Kamala Harris began this race as a rising star in the party, a woman, one

  • of the few women, African-American women, in the Senate, mixed race.

  • She tried to recreate the coalition that elected Barack Obama.

  • You were just in South Carolina last week talking about her difficulties gaining traction.

  • What happened to her race?

  • What happened to her campaign?

  • CHELSEA JANES: You know, I think it really started with a bang.

  • As we all know, she had over 20,000 people in Oakland, still one of the biggest events

  • of this entire campaign cycle.

  • But I think what that did was sort of mask for a lot of people sort of the reality of

  • Kamala Harris as a relatively unknown figure nationally.

  • To those of us in the Beltway, who watch all the hearings and know who she was from that,

  • yes, she feels like she's been around a bit.

  • But I think, nationally, she had a lot of introducing to do, and her campaign sort of

  • had to operate more nationally, on a broader scale, as if she were a front-runner and I

  • think, eventually, sort of built out this big operation that, when the polling dropped

  • and the money wasn't coming, it was too big to sustain.

  • And, you know, entering a Senate race in 2022 in a state as expensive as California, she

  • can't do go into debt.

  • She can't have something like that hanging over her.

  • So, I think this was a calculation that was mostly financial, which is surprising.

  • But I think, ultimately, they decided there's no reason to push this.

  • We're not seeing signs of progress.

  • And what was once a really promising campaign just wasn't able to regain its footing.

  • JOHN YANG: In your piece, you talked about how she sort of wavered between the -- never

  • really defined herself, as part of the progressives, part of the moderates.

  • Talk about the difficulty she had sort of defining herself.

  • CHELSEA JANES: Yes.

  • You know, I think it's really interesting.

  • You look at this field, you see Biden.

  • You kind of know who Joe Biden is, and voters say, oh, I know Joe.

  • And Bernie Sanders, you know who Bernie Sanders is.

  • And Elizabeth Warren, with her 2 cents and her big structural change, has sort of carved

  • out a brand for herself.

  • But Kamala Harris was never as easy to put on a bumper sticker as some of the others

  • and never found that message that really summed up the brand in a word or two and made you

  • know exactly who she was.

  • And maybe it's not fair to ask that of candidates, but I think, in her case, in this time, people

  • really wanted to see someone with clear intentions and clear priorities.

  • And as she tried to pitch herself as sort of the one who would work on issues and be

  • practical, not ideological, and as she tried to thread the needle between sort of the moderates

  • in the Democratic Party and Sanders and Warren for the left, she sort of lost clarity in

  • exactly who she was and why she was running.

  • And I think one thing we have heard from voters everywhere is that they want someone they

  • can trust and someone whose intentions are very clear.

  • They want to know who these people are.

  • And I don't think she ever gave people the answer they were looking for.

  • JOHN YANG: Given that, with less than two months to go before the first votes are cast,

  • is there a candidate who would be a naturally -- natural recipient of her supporters now?

  • CHELSEA JANES: It's a great question.

  • I have heard a lot of theories on that.

  • But I -- my understanding is that some of their polling showed that her -- people that

  • supported Kamala Harris, their second choice, it wasn't a clear-cut thing.

  • It came from a lot of places.

  • I think you're going to see some of it go to Elizabeth Warren.

  • I think there's a large contingent of people, kind of the suburban women that Harris was

  • courting, that might find their way to her.

  • I think Mayor Pete is obviously someone with whom she's had overlap.

  • And I think, initially, it was Joe Biden that her campaign really thought she'd have to

  • sort of undermine to get those voters and pry those voters away from him.

  • So maybe he will be the recipient of some of those voters.

  • But I think it helps a variety of candidates, and maybe isn't necessarily a huge push for

  • one over the other.

  • JOHN YANG: Chelsea Janes of The Washington Post, thanks so much.

  • CHELSEA JANES: Thanks for having me.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Three Democratic candidates in three days have exited the Democratic race

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it