SAN FRANCISCO — Former Vice President Kamala Harris used a high-profile speech Wednesday to sharply criticize President Donald Trump amid speculation about whether she will mount another presidential campaign or opt to run for California governor.
In her most extensive public remarks since leaving office in January following her defeat to Trump, Harris said she's inspired by Americans fighting Trump's agenda despite threats to their freedom or livelihood.
''Instead of an administration working to advance America's highest ideals, we are witnessing the wholesale abandonment of those ideals,'' Harris said a day after Trump reached 100 days in office.
Before Wednesday, Harris had barely mentioned Trump by name since she conceded defeat to him in November.
In a 15-minute speech, she spoke to the anxiety and confusion that have gripped many of her supporters since Trump took office but discouraged despair.
''They are counting on the notion that if they can make some people afraid, it will have a chilling effect on others. But what they have overlooked is that fear is not the only thing that's contagious,'' Harris said. ''Courage is contagious.''
Trump went after Harris in a campaign-style rally Tuesday marking his 100th day in office. He sarcastically called her a ''great border czar" and a ''great candidate," and repeated some of the applause lines he routinely delivered during the campaign.
Until Harris replaced Joe Biden atop the Democratic ticket last summer, Trump said, ''I knew nothing about her."