Vice President Kamala Harris could well be planning a post-inauguration relocation to Manhattan. Her husband, Doug Emhoff, was seen touring a luxury $20,000-a-month apartment on New York 's Upper West Side, sparking speculation that the couple will trade the White House for the Big Apple.
Kamala Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, are rumoured to be looking for a luxury Manhattan apartment after leaving office.
Some years back, I was talking with my dinner companion when a young woman of color interrupted with an excited query. “Are you Senator Kamala Harris?” she asked in that slightly unbelieving tone one uses when meeting a hero in person. With a big smile, Harris said yes. The young woman gushed her admiration and they took a picture.
Kamala Harris's time in Washington, D.C. is coming to an end this month. The Vice President of the United States and her husband, Doug Emhoff, will be leaving Washington, D.C. after the inauguration on Monday.
Vice President Kamala Harris has told her closest confidants that she’s disappointed President Biden claimed in a recent interview that he could have won the 2024 election had he been allowed to face Donald Trump.
As vice president Kamala Harris’s tenure ends, the public finally gets a look at the residence, as decorated by top designer Sheila Bridges in an ode to American artisans.
The veep glanced over her left shoulder to spy Obama and Trum seemingly getting along in the row behind her, before whipping back around and staring straight ahead.
Most failed presidential candidates never seek any office again — but when they do, they often give the presidency one more try.
The outgoing vice president has yet to tell the full story of her 107-day campaign for president in her own words.
Erica L. Green, a New York Times White House correspondent, explains what her emotional and defiant concession speech means to Black women in the country. Vice President Kamala Harris is slated to ...
Kamala Harris is reportedly eyeing a New York City apartment after she leaves her official residence in Washington D.C.
Bill Cotterell is a retired Capitol reporter for United Press International and the Tallahassee Democrat. He can be reached at
[email protected].