<p>Indian-American Congressman Ro Khanna has said that he is weighing a Senate bid in California, sparking speculation among Democrats in several key US states that he may be eyeing to run for the White House in the future, according to a media report.</p>.<p>Those close to Khanna, 46, say he is keeping his options open ahead of a potential presidential run in 2028 or beyond. But others in his orbit are talking about an even more compressed timeline: running in 2024 if President Joe Biden, 80, decided not to, according to Politico, a political newspaper company based in Arlington County in the US.</p>.<p>“I think he would be a great United States senator,” said Mark Longabaugh, a Democratic strategist whose firm did media consulting for Khanna last year.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/white-house-says-classified-documents-found-at-bidens-residence-1180462.html" target="_blank">White House says classified documents found at Biden's residence</a></strong></p>.<p>“But I also think, should Biden decide not to run, I think he’s a very plausible candidate for president of the United States. So I think that those decisions are yet to be made.”</p>.<p>Khanna, who is a US representative from California's 17th congressional district since 2017, for his part, denied in an interview that he would go for the White House should Biden ultimately forgo a reelection bid, saying “I’ll rule that out definitively.”</p>.<p>He has also said he would support Biden if he were to run.</p>.<p>More immediately, he has begun talking openly about a possible run for the Senate as his next step, Politico reported.</p>.<p>“There are a lot of Bernie [Sanders] supporters and progressives who have reached out to me to encourage me to look at the race and what I’ve told them is I will do so over the next few months,” Khanna told Politico of a Senate bid.</p>.<p>But recent moves have sparked a new round of speculation among Democrats in several key states that the California congressman continues to have his eye on a higher office.</p>.<p>Some consultants whose firms have worked with the Congressman in early primary states say they have a different impression about the extent of his political ambitions.</p>.<p>“I would just have to assume that while Ro has been incredibly interested in the great state of Iowa for a number of reasons, that perhaps it had to do with laying the groundwork for any potential future national bids,” said Stacey Walker, the former Iowa campaign co-chair for Sanders and founder of the Iowa-based firm Sage Strategies, which Khanna paid $8,000 last year.</p>.<p>“If President Biden didn’t seek reelection, his name would have to be on the list of top contenders."</p>.<p>Just before and during the 2022 campaign cycle, Khanna showered money far afield from his district in Silicon Valley — and even his would-be Senate territory.</p>.<p>He paid $22,000 last year to Sanders’ former New Hampshire state director, Shannon Jackson; $25,000 to the Sanders-founded progressive group Our Revolution for digital advertising; and $8,000 each to political firms in Nevada and Iowa. Walker said the payment to the Iowa firm was for help setting up meetings with labour leaders in the state.</p>.<p>Jackson, who is close to Sanders, said he has been working with Khanna to help him build relationships with Sanders activists nationally as well as in states such as New Hampshire.</p>.<p>He said Khanna is not running in 2024, but further down the line.</p>.<p>"I believe he is one of the progressives who can build on Bernie’s work in the future,” Jackson was quoted as saying.</p>.<p>Khanna, meanwhile, said his payments to the Nevada firm were related to “building support in the Latino community around the country around a new economic patriotism, particularly focused on the Southwest.”</p>.<p>Khanna was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, into a Punjabi Hindu family. His parents immigrated to the US from Punjab.</p>.<p>Prior to holding elected office, Khanna was a Lecturer in the Department of Economics at Stanford University and an Adjunct Professor at Santa Clara Law School.</p>
<p>Indian-American Congressman Ro Khanna has said that he is weighing a Senate bid in California, sparking speculation among Democrats in several key US states that he may be eyeing to run for the White House in the future, according to a media report.</p>.<p>Those close to Khanna, 46, say he is keeping his options open ahead of a potential presidential run in 2028 or beyond. But others in his orbit are talking about an even more compressed timeline: running in 2024 if President Joe Biden, 80, decided not to, according to Politico, a political newspaper company based in Arlington County in the US.</p>.<p>“I think he would be a great United States senator,” said Mark Longabaugh, a Democratic strategist whose firm did media consulting for Khanna last year.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/white-house-says-classified-documents-found-at-bidens-residence-1180462.html" target="_blank">White House says classified documents found at Biden's residence</a></strong></p>.<p>“But I also think, should Biden decide not to run, I think he’s a very plausible candidate for president of the United States. So I think that those decisions are yet to be made.”</p>.<p>Khanna, who is a US representative from California's 17th congressional district since 2017, for his part, denied in an interview that he would go for the White House should Biden ultimately forgo a reelection bid, saying “I’ll rule that out definitively.”</p>.<p>He has also said he would support Biden if he were to run.</p>.<p>More immediately, he has begun talking openly about a possible run for the Senate as his next step, Politico reported.</p>.<p>“There are a lot of Bernie [Sanders] supporters and progressives who have reached out to me to encourage me to look at the race and what I’ve told them is I will do so over the next few months,” Khanna told Politico of a Senate bid.</p>.<p>But recent moves have sparked a new round of speculation among Democrats in several key states that the California congressman continues to have his eye on a higher office.</p>.<p>Some consultants whose firms have worked with the Congressman in early primary states say they have a different impression about the extent of his political ambitions.</p>.<p>“I would just have to assume that while Ro has been incredibly interested in the great state of Iowa for a number of reasons, that perhaps it had to do with laying the groundwork for any potential future national bids,” said Stacey Walker, the former Iowa campaign co-chair for Sanders and founder of the Iowa-based firm Sage Strategies, which Khanna paid $8,000 last year.</p>.<p>“If President Biden didn’t seek reelection, his name would have to be on the list of top contenders."</p>.<p>Just before and during the 2022 campaign cycle, Khanna showered money far afield from his district in Silicon Valley — and even his would-be Senate territory.</p>.<p>He paid $22,000 last year to Sanders’ former New Hampshire state director, Shannon Jackson; $25,000 to the Sanders-founded progressive group Our Revolution for digital advertising; and $8,000 each to political firms in Nevada and Iowa. Walker said the payment to the Iowa firm was for help setting up meetings with labour leaders in the state.</p>.<p>Jackson, who is close to Sanders, said he has been working with Khanna to help him build relationships with Sanders activists nationally as well as in states such as New Hampshire.</p>.<p>He said Khanna is not running in 2024, but further down the line.</p>.<p>"I believe he is one of the progressives who can build on Bernie’s work in the future,” Jackson was quoted as saying.</p>.<p>Khanna, meanwhile, said his payments to the Nevada firm were related to “building support in the Latino community around the country around a new economic patriotism, particularly focused on the Southwest.”</p>.<p>Khanna was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, into a Punjabi Hindu family. His parents immigrated to the US from Punjab.</p>.<p>Prior to holding elected office, Khanna was a Lecturer in the Department of Economics at Stanford University and an Adjunct Professor at Santa Clara Law School.</p>