US Vice President Kamala Harris has said she is ready to serve as leader, in a Wall Street Journal interview, as voter concerns mount about President Joe Biden's age in an election year.
The 59-year-old has faced growing scrutiny about her own abilities as the first in line to the presidency should Mr Biden, 81, be incapacitated or stand down.
"I am ready to serve. There's no question about that," Ms Harris told the newspaper when asked whether voters' concerns about the president's age meant she must convince them of her credentials.
Everyone who sees her on the job "walks away fully aware of my capacity to lead," said Ms Harris, the first black, south Asian and female vice president in US history.
The interview was carried out two days before a stinging special counsel report portrayed Mr Biden, a Democrat, as elderly and forgetful.
Special counsel Robert Hur's probe into the president's handling of classified documents said the president should not face charges but damningly said he would come across to a jury as a "well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory."
The White House has hit back hard at the report, noting that Mr Hur interviewed Mr Biden when he was under intense pressure the day after the 7 October Hamas attacks on Israel.
Ms Harris also sprang to his defence, describing the special counsel's report as "politically motivated".
Ms Harris has taken on a growing role in Mr Biden's re-election campaign, focusing on subjects including abortion, ahead of November's vote in which he is expected to face a rematch with former president Donald Trump.
Republicans have frequently targeted Ms Harris and polls show the former California senator suffers from low approval ratings, like Mr Biden himself.
Comments