WASHINGTON — Democrats quickly rallied around Vice President Kamala Harris as their likely presidential nominee Sunday after President Joe Biden 's ground-shaking decision to bow out of the 2024 race, a volatile fast-moving political situation just months before the November election.
Shortly after Biden stepped aside he firmly endorsed Harris, who would make history as the nation's first Black and South Asian woman to become a major party's presidential nominee. Other endorsements flowed from former President Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton, the first major female presidential nominee, and prominent U.S. senators, a wide swath of House representatives and members of the influential Congressional Black Caucus.
Would-be challengers for the job became instant Harris supporters.
As Democrats organize to confront Republican Donald Trump this fall, Biden said choosing Harris as his vice president had been the first and ''best decision'' he made. ''Let's do this,'' he said.
''My intention is to earn and win this nomination,'' Harris declared in a statement.
Yet, the political and logistical situation ahead for Democrats remains somewhat uncertain as the party that had expected to sail to November's election portraying Trump as a quasi-authoritarian leader and threat to American democracy, now must rearrange the top of its ticket in a matter of weeks — before the party's nominating convention begins Aug. 19.
A groundswell appeared to be gathering for Harris to lead the party — within hours Biden's campaign formally changed its name to Harris for President, reflecting that she is inheriting his political operation — but there are notable holdouts.
Former President Barack Obama and Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi, who are widely seen as engineering Biden's withdrawal from the race as they worried about not only keeping the White House but winning control of Congress, did not explicitly endorse Harris, and Pelosi favors an open primary to strengthen an eventual nominee.