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Election 2024 updates: Harris raises $100 million, plans Milwaukee campaign rally Tuesday

Vice President Harris will hold her first campaign rally Tuesday in Wisconsin.

After President Joe Biden's decision to drop out of the 2024 presidential race on Sunday, Vice President Kamala Harris has emerged as the party favorite to replace him at the top of the ticket.

Biden endorsed Harris on Sunday -- and, since then, a wave of others Democrats have done so. Harris on Monday secured enough delegates to become presumptive Democratic nominee, ABC News reported.


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Sen. Bernie Sanders says Harris can 'win big' by taking on issues of working class

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., said Monday night that he wants to see Vice President Kamala Harris campaign for president "on issues of importance for the working class of this country."

In an interview with Linsey Davis on ABC News Live, Sanders said he wants Harris to "stand up to corporate greed and massive income and wealth inequality."

He also called for her to support raising the minimum wage and expand Social Security and Medicare. Sanders also said he wants Harris to "demand that the wealthy start paying their fair share of taxes."

If Harris takes on those issues, Sanders said he believes she "can win big," but he still wants to “have just another conversation” with the vice president.

Sanders had been supporting President Joe Biden in the 2024 election before Biden's withdrawal from the campaign on Sunday night.

"This has been a very unprecedented situation. I am not overjoyed about the way that President Biden was treated," Sanders said. "We are where we are right now, and I'm 99% sure that the vice president will be the nominee. And then she has an excellent chance to win this election."

While he still has plans to speak with Harris, he is committed to keeping former President Donald Trump from returning to the White House.

"Well, I'm going to do everything I can to see that Donald Trump, [the] most dangerous president in American history, is defeated," Sanders said.

-ABC News' Maria Olloqui and Jolie Lash


AFL-CIO unanimously endorses Kamala Harris for president

The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations has thrown its unanimous support behind Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential race.

"From day one, Vice President Kamala Harris has been a true partner in leading the most pro-labor administration in history," AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler wrote in a statement Monday.

"At every step in her distinguished career in public office, she’s proven herself a principled and tenacious fighter for working people and a visionary leader we can count on," Shuler continued.

"From taking on Wall Street and corporate greed to leading efforts to expand affordable child care and support vulnerable workers, she’s shown time and again that she's on our side. With Kamala Harris in the White House, together we'll continue to build on the powerful legacy of the Biden-Harris administration to create good union jobs, grow the labor movement and make our economy work for all of us," she added.

The support for Harris' campaign comes as some of the nation's largest unions also have offered support, praise and outright endorsements to the vice president.

The Service Employees International Union, whose 2 million members make it the nation's largest private sector union, endorsed Harris on Sunday. So did Local 3000 of the United Food and Commercial Workers, a labor organization in the Pacific Northwest, which drew attention last week when it became the only Biden-aligned union to call for him to step aside.

-ABC News' Beatrice Peterson and Max Zahn


Kamala Harris thanks Biden for endorsement during call to campaign HQ

Vice President Kamala Harris thanked President Joe Biden for endorsing her in the 2024 presidential race on Monday.

"It is my great honor to have Joe's endorsement in this race," Harris said while speaking to campaign staff in Delaware.

Echoing Biden's comments on his commitment to the Democratic campaign, Harris said, "Joe is not done, far from it."

"He knows there is still more work to do and our nation will continue to praise his bold and visionary leadership as president," Harris said, adding, "Thank you, Joe."

-ABC News' Gabriella Abdul-Hakim, Fritz Farrow and Will McDuffie


Biden calls in to Harris campaign HQ, thanks staffers: 'Mission hasn't changed at all'

President Biden called in to speak with Kamala Harris' campaign HQ on Monday, saying he "isn't going anywhere" after announcing Sunday that he's stepping aside from his reelection bid.

"The name has changed at the top of the ticket, but the mission hasn't changed at all," Biden said over the phone. "And by the way, I'm not going anywhere. I'm going to be out there on the campaign with her," he added.

"I'm going to be working like hell, both as a sitting president, getting legislation passed, as well as in campaigning," Biden said.

-ABC News' Gabriella Abdul-Hakim, Fritz Farrow and Will McDuffie