Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) speaks to the media after the Democratic presidential debate on Nov. 20 in Atlanta. Morning Consult data indicates Harris' decision to drop out is unlikely to change the state of the race. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

22% of Harris supporters said their second choice was Biden; 21% said Warren and 14% said Sanders.

51% of Democratic primary voters said they had a favorable view of Harris, higher than all other candidates except Sanders, Biden and Warren.

As California Sen. Kamala Harris ends her campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination, her supporters look set to go their separate ways, doing little to alter the state of the race. The latest Morning Consult poll tracking the Democratic race found that just 5 percent of Democratic primary voters — those who indicated they may vote in the Democratic caucus or primary in their state — identified Harris as their first choice. Of those voters, 22 percent said their second choice was former Vice President Joe Biden, the race’s national front-runner, while 21 percent picked Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren and 14 percent said Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders (I).

If voters held true to that, it could amount to an increase of roughly 1 percentage point each for those candidates, inside the poll’s typical 1-point margin of error. In a Medium post detailing her decision, Harris — who entered the race viewed as a top-tier contender of historic nature as a woman of color — cited the lack of money as her reasoning and made no mention of a potential endorsement. Harris’ supporters are more likely to be younger and black than those who support Biden and Warren, and are more likely to be black than the supporters of Sanders and South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg. Compared to supporters of the top four candidates, a Harris supporter is less likely to identify as liberal than those who back every candidate not named Biden. And notably as the race moves closer to the nominating contests, the greatest concentration of her supporters by state (20 percent) hailed from California, a key battleground on Super Tuesday.