Watch CBS News

Katherine Harris Continues Senate Bid

U.S. Rep. Katherine Harris vowed to continue her bid for a Senate seat and pledged to boost the campaign with $10 million she recently inherited from her father.

"I'm staying. I'm in this race. I'm going to win," Harris said Wednesday night on Fox News' "Hannity & Colmes." "I'm going to put everything on the line."

Harris has been under mounting pressure from some Republicans to get out of the race because of concerns that she cannot win and that her role as Florida's secretary of state during the 2000 presidential recount could motivate Democrats and independents to go to the polls.

The decision to put her own fortune on the line at least temporarily puts her on even financial ground with Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson, who began the year with $8 million in his campaign account compared to Harris' $1 million.

Harris had failed to meet fundraising goals, largely because GOP leaders in Washington didn't openly embrace her campaign after she entered the race last summer.

Her campaign became more difficult after a defense contractor involved in a bribery scandal said he gave $32,000 in illegal contributions to her 2004 campaign for the House.

Mitchell Wade, the former president of MZM Inc., also pleaded guilty to bribing former U.S. Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, R-Calif., who was sent to prison earlier this month for bribery.

Harris said she did not knowingly do anything illegal and said she would donate the money to charity.

Her father, wealthy banker George Harris, died in January. After the funeral she dedicated her campaign to him.

"When I lost him, I said I would win this for my father," she said.

Dan McLaughlin, a spokesman for Nelson, said Harris' decision was "just a desperate attempt to deflect attention from a career of blunders and failures."

State Republican Party Chairwoman Carole Jean Jordan said she supports Harris' decision.

"It's an investment in our state, it's an investment in our values, it's an investment in what she believes and what her dad believed and what her granddad believed in," Jordan said.

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue