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Half of Democratic primary voters want Kamala Harris to be their next presidential nominee. That is the headline finding of a new Harvard/Harris poll, which places the former vice president at 50% support among Democrats considering the 2028 race. That number has climbed steadily from 39% in January, through 41% in March, to this week’s majority threshold. No other candidate in the field comes close to matching it.
The gap between Harris and her nearest rivals is significant. California Governor Gavin Newsom sits in second place at 22%, while Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro follows at 9%. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez received 8%, and Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker drew 6%. The survey, conducted by the Center for American Political Studies and the Harris Poll, sampled 2,745 registered voters between April 23 and April 26, with a margin of error of plus or minus 1.87% age points.
Other recent polls reinforce the picture. A YouGov survey showed Harris leading with 24%, with Newsom trailing at 12%, and a Focaldata poll found 39% of registered voters backing her if she ran. An Echelon Insights poll put Harris at 22%, one point ahead of Newsom at 21%. Across the aggregated polling landscape, Harris leads in the majority of recent national surveys. The question is whether those numbers reflect a genuine draft or simply the weight of a familiar name.
The scholars tracking this data are careful not to overread it. Robert Y. Shapiro, professor of political science at Columbia University, said to Newsweek that the poll “shows that Harris is a credible candidate,” but noted that rising numbers in early polling often reflect name recognition more than durable strength. He added that continued momentum could help her attract donors and media coverage, both of which shape whether a candidacy becomes viable in practice.
Michael Bailey, a Georgetown University professor of government, echoed that note of caution. He told Newsweek that while Harris’ 50% showing was “impressive,” prediction markets told a different story. As of late April, Kalshi gave her roughly a 7.8% chance of winning the Democratic nomination, and Polymarket put her at about 8 %. Those markets attempt to factor in how competitive support actually holds when real candidates enter the race and begin drawing contrast.
Bailey framed the polling figure as a floor rather than a ceiling. “It would be naive for Harris to think that she would have a cakewalk,” he added, “but it’s easier for her to enter and raise money if she’s sitting at 50% than at 5%.” That practical calculus matters enormously. Donors read polls before they write checks, and media organizations assign resources based on perceived viability. Harris may not have locked up the nomination, but she has bought herself a serious conversation.
Harris is not waiting for circumstances to create momentum for her. In recent weeks she has spoken at the Democratic Women’s Caucus in Michigan, a battleground state she narrowly lost to Donald Trump in 2024. She also addressed the Arkansas Democratic Party’s annual Fisher Shackelford Dinner in Little Rock and made appearances in Greenville and Columbia, South Carolina, an early-voting state that proved decisive in shoring up Joe Biden’s 2020 primary campaign. Each stop looks less like a book tour and more like the early architecture of a campaign.
The stops are deliberate. South Carolina’s Democratic primary electorate is majority Black, and Harris has consistently polled with strong support among Black voters, one of the party’s most reliable and influential voting blocs. Her appearance at the National Action Network’s annual convention this month placed her in a room with more than half a dozen other prospective Democratic contenders, all working the same audience. In that setting, Harris made her most direct public remark yet about 2028, telling the Reverend Al Sharpton: “I might. I am thinking about it.”
She went further than a hint. “I served for four years being a heartbeat away from the presidency,” Harris said at the convention. “I spent countless hours in the Oval Office and the Situation Room. I know what the job is, and I know what it requires.” That language is not the language of someone content to stay on the sidelines. For a candidate who has yet to formally announce, it represents the clearest signal yet that she views herself as not just a former contender but a future one.
Harris enters this period carrying real advantages and real liabilities in equal measure. Her supporters argue she was placed in an impossible position in 2024, inheriting a campaign with fewer than 100 days on the clock after Biden’s withdrawal, and that she still improved on his polling numbers. A Washington Post analysis noted that some Republicans are already cautioning their own allies not to dismiss her, pointing to the historic unpredictability of primary races and the possibility that Trump’s absence from the 2028 ticket could reshape the electorate in unexpected ways.
Her detractors inside the party, however, are not quiet. Democratic consultant Garry South told The Hill that “the Democratic Party doesn’t renominate losers,” citing the cautionary tale of Adlai Stevenson, who lost the presidency twice. Democratic megadonor John Morgan said Harris “will be pulverized from all sides” in a competitive primary and questioned the accuracy of polls showing her strength. Even one former Harris aide admitted that primary voters “desperate for a win in 2028” may be reluctant to gamble on a candidate who lost every swing state in the previous cycle.
Early polls have been wrong before, and the 2028 primary field is not yet fully formed. Notable candidates like Pete Buttigieg, Cory Booker, and Andy Beshear were not even included in the latest Harvard/Harris survey. New entrants could splinter the field significantly. What the current numbers do confirm is that Harris commands attention and donor interest at a moment when both are scarce for anyone else. Whether that translates into a nomination or a repeat of 2024 may ultimately depend less on polls than on what kind of party Democrats decide they want to become.
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