Kamala Harris hits campaign trail in Tennessee special election
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Former US vice-president Kamala Harris speaks during a campaign event for Ms Aftyn Behn, a Democratic congressional candidate, at Hadley Park in Nashville, Tennessee, on Nov 18.
PHOTO: VINCENT ALBAN/NYTIMES
Shane Goldmacher
Follow topic:
NASHVILLE – Former US vice-president Kamala Harris made a surprise appearance on Nov 18 with the Democratic candidate in a closely watched Tennessee special election for Congress, marking the first time since she left office that she has returned to the campaign trail for another candidate.
The race for the open House seat is in a district that President Donald Trump won by more than 20 percentage points in 2024, and is seen as a long shot for Democrats.
But Ms Harris’ decision to campaign is the latest sign that the Dec 2 election is being seriously contested. National party leaders now see the contest as an important test of the political environment before the 2026 midterm elections.
Early voting has already begun in the race between state Representative Aftyn Behn, the Democrat, and Mr Matt Van Epps, a veteran and the Republican nominee. Mr Van Epps recently received some help from Mr Trump in the form of a virtual rally.
Ms Harris headlined a canvassing kick-off event at a local park for Ms Behn on the afternoon of Nov 18 after making an appearance on the campus of Fisk University, a historically Black college that is in the contested district.
“Why am I in Tennessee? Because I know the power is in the South,” Ms Harris said into a bullhorn at Hadley Park in Nashville. She did not mention Ms Behn by name but urged the crowd to get out the vote in two weeks.
“This election is 14 days from today!” she said.
Ms Behn spoke before Ms Harris’ arrival.
Ms Harris was already scheduled to be in Nashville this week for her book tour for her election memoir
She had considered running for governor of California but ultimately decided against a candidacy
Before the November election in California, Ms Harris also attended a rally for Proposition 50, a ballot measure to redraw the state’s congressional map to add as many as five new Democratic seats. Voters overwhelmingly passed the measure.
The open 7th Congressional District in Tennessee includes downtown Nashville but also stretches from the Kentucky border in the north to the Alabama border in the south.
The vacancy was created in 2026 when Representative Mark Green, a Republican, resigned to work in the private sector.
Both parties have begun to spend more substantively in the closing weeks of a race in which turnout is expected to be low. NYTIMES

