Washington’s delegates and alternates to the National Democratic Convention voted 79-17 to endorse Vice President Kamala Harris as the Democratic presidential nominee, replacing President Joe Biden at the top of the ticket.
The Washington delegation met over a Zoom call Thursday to conduct the vote. In March, Biden won 83% of the Democratic vote in the Washington state presidential primary, with 9.8% of voters saying they were “uncommitted” and presidential candidates Dean Phillips and Marianne Williamson each getting less than 3% of the Democratic vote.
But Biden threw his support behind Harris on Sunday after he dropped his reelection campaign, requiring the Democratic Party to shift gears one month before its national convention.
The Democratic National Committee plans to hold a virtual vote on Aug. 1 to choose the party’s nominee for president ahead of its Chicago convention, Aug. 19-22. The national party said it had to hold the call, citing an Ohio deadline of Aug. 7 to get a presidential nominee on that state’s general election ballots. The Associated Press reported that its survey of delegates indicated earlier this week that Harris already had enough votes to become the Democratic nominee.
The Democratic nominee will face the Republican nominee, former President Donald Trump and his running mate J.D. Vance, in the general election in November.