ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Vice President Kamala Harris worked to fire up college-age supporters at a rally and concert in battleground Michigan on Monday featuring singer-songwriter Maggie Rogers, who told the crowd that doing something like voting is ''greater than fear'' at a time when ''the future feels so uncertain.''
Michigan had the highest youth voter turnout rate nationwide in 2022, with long lines stretching outside polling locations on college campuses. Democrats hope they can recreate that enthusiasm this year, with rallies such as the one Harris held in Ann Arbor, home of the University of Michigan, featuring Rogers.
''You can vote early now through Sunday, Nov. 3, and we need you to vote early, Michigan, because we have just eight days to go,'' the Democratic presidential nominee said at an outdoor rally in 50-degree weather. ''Eight days left in one of the most consequential elections of our lifetime.''
''And we will win,'' she said. ''We have an opportunity to turn the page and chart a new and joyful way forward.''
Thousands packed into Burns Park for the event featuring Rogers, who sang ''Love You for a Long Time'' and some of her other hits. The event also reunited Harris with her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz. The two had not appeared together since a campaign bus tour of Georgia in August.
In between sets, Rogers said the headlines she's been seeing on her phone are ''terrifying.''
''The future feels so uncertain and I don't always know what to do with that feeling,'' she said. Rogers said taking action is greater than fear. ''Voting is the key to the future.''
Early in her remarks, Harris was interrupted by over a dozen pro-Palestinian protesters. Hearing the chants of "Israel bombs, Kamala pays, how many kids have you killed today?' she said, ''Hey, guys, I hear you.''