Harris campaign leadership urges staffers not to speak with reporters: Sources
Harris campaign leadership said they ran a "very close" race.
During an all-staff call earlier this week, Vice President Kamala Harris' campaign leadership urged staffers not to speak with reporters and addressed concerns about the future after her loss to Donald Trump in the election, two people on the call told ABC News.
Campaign Chair Jennifer O'Malley Dillon and Deputy Campaign Manager Quentin Fulks implored staffers not to speak with reporters with Fulks saying they still needed staffers "staying in this fight."
One source noted that the call gave the same "gaslighty" feeling they received after President Joe Biden left the race in July. In an all-staff call following Biden's departure from the race, staffers were caught off guard and were only given a one-minute heads up that he was exiting the race before he made it public.
ABC News has reached out to the Harris campaign for comment on the matter.
The call, which was shared more widely on Thursday, was a recording from an initial call that the campaign held on Wednesday following Harris' concession speech at Howard University.
During the call, O'Malley Dillon told staffers that they ran a "very close" race. She said that state teams knocked on more than 50 million doors in the final days before Election Day and their field operation helped the Senate races in those states. O'Malley Dillon teared up toward the end of the call, a source confirmed.
Harris spoke on that call, noting that this moment "sucks," a source told ABC News.
"We all just speak truth, why don't we, right? There's also so much good that has come of this campaign," Harris said, according to the source.
Harris had a hopeful tone in her message to supporters at Howard on Wednesday, too, saying "sometimes the fight takes a while ... The important thing is don't ever give up."
During the call, leadership spoke about the next general steps for staffers and connecting with people for their next jobs.
Both sources noted how shocked they still felt about the loss, particularly with how wide the margins were in the battleground states.
Both sources said the moment on "The View" when the vice president wasn't able to differentiate herself from Biden as a moment the entire campaign felt was a big mistake.
Last month on the show, when asked what she would have done differently than Biden over the last four years, Harris said, "there is not a thing that comes to mind," before citing, much later in the interview, her pledge to put a Republican in her Cabinet.