Newly unemployed Kamala Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff are slinking back to Los Angeles Monday — where they will pass out food to wildfire victims after all but ignoring their plight for two weeks.
Kamala Harris wasn’t on-stage at the FireAid concerts tonight in LA, but the former VP was certainly a star attraction. The Democrats’ 2024 candidate for president and former Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff entered a box seat at the Intuit Dome Thursday to cheers as some of the biggest musicians around turned it up to 11
Following the inauguration, former VP Kamala Harris and her husband Doug Emhoff traveled to Los Angeles to visit the Eaton Fire area and thank firefighters for their work.
Harris and former Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff met with Los Angeles County firefighters and volunteers distributing free meals in Altadena.
Following President Donald Trump's inauguration on Monday, former Vice President Kamala Harris returned to Los Angeles County to help distribute food and to thank fire crews in Altadena.
The former vice president’s first acts as a nonelected official for the first time in decades could be a sign of what comes next.
Immediately following Donald Trump ’s inauguration, former Vice President Kamala Harris boarded a flight ... under an evacuation order due to the Palisades fire. “We are some of the lucky ...
Former President Kamala Harris was spotted Thursday night in California with her husband Doug Emhoff at the 2025 FireAid concert
“Kamala Harris is serving the food ... She said at least a dozen firefighters had lost their homes during the Eaton and Palisades fires. “California firefighters, time and time again ...
A new book by Jonathan Allen of NBC News and Amie Parnes of The Hill has details about the Harris campaign's botched attempt to schedule an interview with Joe Rogan.
So far, many clues to the origins of the deadly Eaton fire, which started in the area just after 6 p.m. that evening and went on to kill 17 people, have pointed to the brushy hillside where a tangle of electrical lines stretch up Eaton Canyon.
The rain that is expected to hit the scorched Los Angeles landscape this weekend may bring relief to the fire fights, but it could also bring flash floods and mudslides. Although forecasts show that the risk is relatively low, local officials are taking the warnings seriously.