'White Dudes for Harris' raises more than $4M as critics ramp up attacks - Action News
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'White Dudes for Harris' raises more than $4M as critics ramp up attacks

The Dude and Luke Skywalker were among the famous faces on a fundraising call that, according to organizers,raised more than $4 million US on Monday for U.S. vice-president Kamala Harris's presidential campaign.

Star-studded Zoom call urging white men to vote for Kamala Harris had nearly 190,000 participants

A woman in a plum-coloured suit speaks at a podium at a political rally. The name
U.S. Vice-President Kamala Harris speaks at the American Federation of Teachers' convention on Thursday in Houston. A fundraising Zoom call billed as 'White Dudes for Harris' raised $4 million US for the presidential hopeful on Monday, organizers say. (Montinique Monroe/Getty Images)

The Dude and Luke Skywalker were among the famous faces on a fundraising call that, according to organizers,raised more than $4 million US on Monday for U.S. vice-president Kamala Harris's presidential campaign.

The three-hour "White Dudes for Harris" call was thelatest in a series of Zoom meetupsorganized by diverse groups of Harris supporters, often along racial or other demographic lines.

It included such celebrities as Mark Hamill, Joseph Gordon-Levitt andJeff Bridges best known to some for playing The Dude in the 1998 comedy The Big Lebowski.

Participants, both famous and not, pledged support and money for the Democratic hopeful including Hamill who delivered his famous Star Wars line: "I'm Luke Skywalker. I'm here to rescue you."

There were some 190,000 people on the call at its peak, say organizers,including U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz. All had been rumoured as Harris's potentialrunning mate, though Cooper withdrew himself from consideration on Monday. He didn't mention it during the call.

WATCH | Hamill speaks during Zoom call:

Harris supporters have organized several such fundraising calls focused onBlack women, Hispanic women, Black men, Asian Americans, Native Americans and the 2SLGBTQ+community since U.S. President Joe Biden dropped out and endorsed her, propelling his vice-president to the forefront of the race and breathing new life into the Democrats' election efforts.

Prior to Biden's departure, there were reports that the Democrats were losing donors, saysLydia Miljan, a professor of political science at the University of Windsor.

A bearded man wearing a ratty cardigan sits at a bar in a bowling alley.
Jeff Bridges, best known to some for this role as The Dude in 1998's The Big Lebowski, was among the celebrities on the 'White Dudes' call. (PolyGram Filmed Entertainment)

"So once he bowed out from the race, then those same donors went flocking to her," she said.

The call focused on white women had about 200,000 people and raised some $2 million US, say organizers.

But the "White Dudes" call was an especially significant shot across the bow of Donald Trump and the Republicans, who campaign heavily to, and have long reliedon votes from,white men.

The Harris campaign wants "to make the case that not only do they have the traditional big donors, but they're going to have new voters, voters who weren'ttypically associated with the Democrats," saidMiljan.

"So 'WhiteDudesfor Harris,' for example, is both a good way to get fundraising, but also a good way to build momentum and try to change the narrative at the polls."

A man with his back to the camera spreads his arms grandly, facing a large crowd of spectators.
Donald Trump speaks to supporters in Sunrise, Fla., on Nov. 16, 2019. Trump and the Republicans campaign heavily to, and have long relied on votes from, white men. (Yuri Gripas/Reuters)

Attacks have ramped up against Harris since Biden dropped out.Some Republicans have referred to her as a "DEI" candidate a derisivereference todiversity, equity and inclusion efforts in the workplace.Others have decried Harris for not having biological children, echoinga comment Trump's running mate J.D. Vance made in 2021, when he called Harris and other Democrats "a bunch of childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives."

In response, some Harris supportersare now calling for a "Cat Ladies for Kamala" fundraiser.

Republicans and other critics have condemned theHarrisfundraising calls as racistor sexistfor focusing on gender or race.

Miljan, however, says she's not surprised by them.

The Harris campaign is "very attuned to, not just geographically where their votes are, but sort of what are the demographics about. So it's not surprising that they would, be also fundraising in the same vein."

Miljan notes this doesn't occur in Canada because of the strict laws around campaign fundraising.

"[In Canada] we can't accept corporate donations. We can't accept union donations. So money isn't this big a factor during the campaign. And we're also restricted in how we can spendour money during an election campaign," she said.

Prior to the latest Zoom call, Harris's campaign said it had raised $200 million US and signed up 170,000 new volunteers since she became the Democrats' likely presidential candidate.

Harris, 59, would be the first Black woman and first South Asian woman to secure a major American party's nomination for president. Harris has already gained the backing of enough delegates needed to win the nomination.

The official nomination will take place at the Democratic National Convention in August.

WATCH | Kamala Harris and J.D. Vance hit the U.S. campaign trail:

J.D. Vance and Kamala Harris campaign in battleground states

1 month ago
Duration 2:27
Kamala Harris and J.D. Vance hit the campaign trail on Tuesday, looking to start making their cases to voters with Vance throwing insults and Harris focusing on her experience as a prosecutor and vice-president.