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Former Vice President Kamala Harris says she’s “not done” with politics, giving the strongest indication yet that she may consider running for president in 2028. In a BBC interview partially published Saturday, Harris, 61, said her grandnieces would “for sure” see a female president in their lifetime despite her heavy loss to President Donald Trump in 2024. “Could it be you?” interviewer Laura Kuenssberg asked. “Possibly,” Harris replied, while clarifying that she has not yet decided whether she’s running for president in the upcoming election. "I am not done. I have lived my entire career as a life of service, and it's in my bones,” she said. Harris’s new book, 107 Days, recounts her brief presidential campaign after former President Joe Biden dropped out amid concerns over his health. In the full BBC interview airing Sunday, Harris is expected to face questions about whether she should have urged Biden to step aside sooner, and if that might have changed the election outcome. In the clips already released, Harris dismissed polls that rank her as an underdog, even behind actor Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, claiming she’s never listened to them. "If I listened to polls, I would have not run for my first office, or my second office – and I certainly wouldn't be sitting here,” Harris told the BBC. Harris’ career in politics led her to consider running for California governor in 2026, but in July, she revealed she ultimately decided against it. "For now, my leadership — and public service — will not be in elected office," Harris explained at the time. In her BBC interview, Harris labeled Trump a “tyrant,” saying her warnings of his fascist behavior had been proven true. She accused him of weaponizing the Justice Department and federal agencies, pointing to Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension after he mocked Republicans’ reaction to influencer Charlie Kirk’s death as an example of Trump silencing critics. "You look at what has happened in terms of how he has weaponised, for example, federal agencies going around after political satirists… His skin is so thin he couldn't endure criticism from a joke, and attempted to shut down an entire media organisation in the process,” Harris said.