Struggling Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris received a standing ovation at a “Justice For The People” event in South Carolina on Veterans Day, right after she motioned for the small crowd to stand.

Video of Harris closing out her remarks illustrated both the effectiveness of her body language and seemingly weak support in The Palmetto State.

The 10-second clip features Harris standing alongside a placard on a stool that instructed followers to “TEXTFEARLESS to 70785,” as she said her good-byes.

“I thank you all so very much,” Harris said as she raised her right arm with a palm-up motion, prompting the crowed to raise from their seats.

“Thank you, thank you,” she said, quickly retracting her arm.

The video concludes with a wide pan view of the Phillis Wheatley Community Center, where many of the seats in the back of the room remained empty.

WYFF’s coverage of the event showed rows of empty seats, as well.

“I do believe in 2020 that justice is on the ballot, and that’s why I’m running,” she told the crowd of several dozen, according to the Greenville News.

Harris said she wants to cut taxes on the middle class by up to $6,000 a year and reverse tax cuts for the “top 1 percent.” Harris also claimed she’d close immigration detention centers and private prisons, if elected.

“Frankly right now we’re scared with this administration,” Harris said. “We need a leader that would make sure everyone is treated equally.”

Harris’ concerns about reforming the criminal justice system comes just a couple weeks after she refused to attend a “20/20 Bipartisan Justice Center” event because of the group opted to give President Trump its coveted Bipartisan Justice Award this year. Harris received the award in 2016, but doesn’t believe the president deserves the same honor.

“Donald Trump is a lawless President,” Harris said in a statement explaining her objections. “Not only does he circumvent the laws of our country and the principles of our Constitution, but there is nothing in his career that is about justice, for justice, or in celebration of justice.”

Nothing except the First Step Act, legislation initiated by the Trump administration that authorized early release for thousands of nonviolent offenders in federal prisons.

Tanesha Bannister, a South Carolina woman freed in May, was one of several who attended the 20/20 Bipartisan Justice Center event at the historically black Benedict College to explain how the reforms changed her life tremendously.

If not for the First Step Act, Bannister said she’d still be in prison serving another five years.

“I want to thank the president for giving me another lease on life.”

Trump graciously accepted the Bipartisan Justice Award, and said he can relate to blacks who argue the criminal justice system is unfair, citing the “Witch Hunt” in Congress he said is “an investigation in search of a crime,” The Associated Press reports.

“In America, you’re innocent until proven guilty and we don’t have investigations in search of that crime,” Trump said. “Justice, fairness and due process are core tenets of our democracy. These are timeless principals I will faithfully uphold as president.”

The most recent polls in South Carolina put Harris in third place in the Democratic field, behind former vice president Joe Biden and Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, according to Real Clear Politics.