Kamala Harris may have her sights on a second presidential run.
The former U.S. Vice President, who stepped in when ex-president Joe Biden dropped out last July, told the BBC that she may "possibly" make another bid for the nation's top office.
"I am not done," Harris said to Laura Kuenssberg. "I have lived my entire career as a life of service and it's in my bones."
Elsewhere in the sit-down, Harris said that her grandnieces would see a female president in their lifetime. She also called current U.S. president Donald Trump a "tyrant" who stuck to his promise to "weaponize the Department of Justice."
The interview comes nearly a month after the release of Harris' new memoir 107 Days, where she chronicled the short timeframe she was given to establish her campaign. Harris became the presumptive Democratic nominee after Biden withdrew from the race, but in 107 Days, she was critical of the former commander-in-chief, calling it "recklessness" for him to run for reelection.
Harris hasn't bitten her tongue since Trump got back in office, and during an event in Los Angeles earlier this month, she recalled the feeling of losing the election.
"I couldn’t articulate anything else—I kept saying over and over again, ‘My God, my God,'" she said during the A Day of Unreasonable Conversation summit. "I had never felt that level of pain and grief except when my mother died, and it was grieving for the country. I knew what was going to happen."