Kamala Harris abruptly left DC for her native California the day after grimacing her way through Donald Trump’s inauguration, clad in a black funeral-esque suit. Safely back in La-La Land, the now-jobless former VP can process the first major defeat of her career.
Cackling Vice President Kamala Harris has vowed to not “go quietly into the night” and to remain active in politics after spectacularly losing her presidential bid.
Former vice president Kamala Harris’ return to her Los Angeles home on Monday was meant to be a grand affair: After she was flown to LAX by an all-woman aircraft crew, she served food to wildfire evacuees and then thanked firefighters at a county fire station in Altadena.
Political leaders can rise or fall with disasters. Former Vice President Kamala Harris took a wise step toward potentially running for governor by meeting with fire victims in Altadena.
The most likely outcome for Harris since her presidential loss in November has been a return to politics by way of California’s gubernatorial race. Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA) is term-limited ...
After four years in the spotlight and the shortest presidential campaign in US history, Kamala Harris faces an unclear political future.
Harris and former Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff met with Los Angeles County firefighters and volunteers distributing free meals in Altadena.
“Karen Bass, Gavin Newsom, they’ve destroyed my state. Kamala Harris will do exactly the same. I’d rather she find another state to destroy,” he said. Other residents were happy for the ...
Until hours before California Gov. Gavin Newsom greeted President Donald Trump with a bro-hug on the Los Angeles tarmac Friday, his advisers had spent the week monitoring new White House advance staffers’ social media accounts,
Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass have ... former Vice President Kamala Harris, on the decades-old criminal justice policy crippling California. Harris was not actually involved ...
Forecasts say the chances of flash flooding are not high, but even so, city crews are reinforcing roads and telling residents to take warnings seriously.
The rain that is expected to hit the scorched Los Angeles landscape this weekend may bring relief to the fire fights, but it could also bring flash floods and mudslides. Although forecasts show that the risk is relatively low, local officials are taking the warnings seriously.