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3 reasons why Kamala Harris still can’t define her vision
October 15, 2024

3 reasons why Kamala Harris still can’t define her vision

Liz Peek Articles

Who is Kamala Harris?

Despite an uptick in interviews, several weeks on the stump, three years as vice president, months spent campaigning for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2019, four years as a senator and seven as California attorney general, many Americans still don’t think they know the “real” Kamala Harris.

How can that be? Remaining undefined after all this time as a public figure is astonishing. Equally shocking is Harris’ obvious terror of being in the spotlight. That’s the only plausible explanation for the “word salads” that are tossed to interviewers when a teleprompter goes missing. Or the ill-timed bursts of laughter meant to cover her anxiety.

As Maureen Dowd wrote recently in The New York Times, “Even when getting softballs from supportive TV hosts, Harris at times seemed unsure of how to answer.”

True, she did well during her debate against former President Donald Trump, but that performance required weeks of rehearsal and memorization, a giant assist from partisan moderators and – let’s be honest – an inexpert opponent.

Why is Harris so insecure? One possibility is that it is because she knows she is not qualified, and that she has landed on this lofty perch for all the wrong reasons. That she became V.P., because Joe Biden had promised to pick a woman of color, and not because of her accomplishments. And that she was tapped to be the 2024 nominee because Democrat pooh-bahs realized a diminished Biden could not beat Donald Trump and ran out of time to find someone better.

Another explanation is that Kamala Harris is pretending to be something she is not: a moderate politician. She may be struggling to mask her progressive beliefs, the ones she ran on unsuccessfully in 2019. Her father was a Marxist economist and her mother a liberal activist; both presumably had some influence on their daughter as she grew up in San Francisco.

Harris has said her core values have not changed, but that would suggest that her flip-flopping on important issues like fracking and Medicare-for-All are political gambits, meant to reassure critical centrist voters. After all, she didn’t hold leftist opinions in college; she held them just five years ago.  To broaden her appeal, she may be lying about a great many things; that would make anyone uncomfortable.

A third possibility is that the vice president has no core beliefs, no central well of values that would inform her policies. The late President Reagan believed in small government and peace through strength; Donald Trump echoes those ideas and in addition believes in putting America first. The Times’ David Brooks suggests that Harris “needs to show the American people her strongest, most acute and controlling desire, the ruling passion of her soul.” It’s quite possible she doesn’t have one.

Her party is panicking as the inadequacies of their candidate become more obvious. Like sports fans tossing water bottles to a bedraggled marathoner, Democrats are bombarding Kamala with advice. Recent polls suggest she may lose to Donald Trump, they are desperate to help. 

Maureen Dowd, writing in the New York Times, says Harris must “distance herself from Biden when she needs to…” and “make the case for herself more assertively.” Harris does not know how to make the case at all, much less “assertively.”

James Carville, the wily old Democrat kingmaker, says the VP “should scare the crap out of voters.” That’s hard to do that when you’re scared yourself.

New York Times Opinion columnist and author Charles Blow hilariously opines that Harris doesn’t need to “pull back from conveying joy” but quotes a pollster as saying she must “layer specific issues like housing affordability and health care “under the overarch of joy.” Blow says, “The campaign doesn’t need a post-joy strategy, but it definitely needs an “in- addition-to-joy strategy.” Imagine an adult actually writing those words.

My favorite advice to Harris, though, comes from Jonathan Martin, who writes in Politico that Kamala “ought to consider preemptively naming Mitt Romney as her Secretary of State,” asking “what better way to convey to middle-of-the-road voters that you mean what you say about putting Republicans in your government?” That, despite Romney refusing to endorse Harris.

Dowd is puzzled that Kamala, “Didn’t sit down with a yellow pad or laptop long ago and decide why she wanted to be president, what her top priorities would be and how she would get that stuff done. The Vision Thing.” Dowd must know there’s a good chance that Harris doesn’t have a vision.

Democrats are anxious but have only themselves to blame. After pushing Joe Biden out of the race and seeing their party rush to embrace the usurper, party leaders thought they had the Oval Office in the bag. Trump, after all, was a convicted felon who threatened democracy and wanted to ban abortions nationwide. That was their (dishonest) story and they were  convinced it was enough to repeat the 2020 win.

Voters, though, wanted more. And especially… more from Kamala Harris. For a while, the excitement of the convention and her inaugural appearances masked frustration with her unrevealing campaign. But very soon her refusal to take interviews and shunning of non-scripted moments of any kind grew stale; while COVID made it easy for Joe Biden to hide in his basement, similarly avoiding scrutiny, Harris has no such excuse.

With polls tightening, her team is trying anything and everything to regain her momentum. They set her up for a flurry of interviews, most of which were so bad they ended up featured in Trump-Vance ads. 

Her admission to the hosts of the View that she would not change a single policy or action of Biden’s over the past three and a half years was the corker; even former Obama senior adviser David Axelrod called it the worst of all possible responses. 

Given her vow that “We’re Not Going Back,” he is right. Sticking with the policies that have delivered so many failures over the past three years shows Harris is also not inclined to move forward.

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/3-reasons-why-kamala-harris-still-cant-define-her-vision

Published on Fox News

Desperate Democrats cry “misinformation” to silence criticism of Kamala Harris Trump’s closing argument: It doesn’t have to be this way   

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Liz Peek

2 hours ago

Liz Peek

My Morning Rant:
I am alternately peeved and sympathetic with Chip Roy, Ralph Norman and the others who torpedoed Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill. But after reading the fine print this morning and realizing that reforms to Medicaid don’t kick in until 2029 !!!! I am disgusted. I get that states need some time to adjust to a change in rules regarding Medicaid eligibility – maybe a year or 18 months — but do they really need four years? No, they do not. The extended timeframe is an obvious play to put political repercussions off until after the midterms. Legislators from swing districts fear losing their seats because able-bodied adults lose their free ride. They want to put off any change as long as possible.
On the other hand, those vulnerable legislators will almost certainly get canned if the 2017 tax cuts don’t get extended and Trump’s agenda crashes. We need both to get the bill passed, and to make it tougher.
The conservatives calling for bigger spending cuts are completely correct. Just ask Moody’s, which in recent days downgraded U.S. debt. Imagine, the United States of America has lost its triple-A status. (The other two major ratings agencies had already made this downgrade.) This would be a wake-up call except that most of our country is asleep, lulled into a false sense of complacency by hours spent on Tik-Tok or watching the NFL. We all need downtime, for sure, but we also need to pay attention to what’s happening with our country’s fiscal outlook. It isn’t good. Even the Fed, no friend to the Trump administration or to fiscal austerity, has announced it will cut staff and overhead. Of course, why the Fed has a headcount of 24,000 is a mystery. How can they employ so many people and still get it wrong most of the time? This is the group that never spoke out against Biden’s reckless spending; it’s quite the switch.
Simply put, the country endorsed a huge surge in government spending to compensate for the wrong-headed directives during Covid that shut down schools, businesses and churches. The government under Trump wanted to keep Americans employed and the economy ready to rebound, which it did. Biden kept the spending at max level, refusing to let a crisis go to waste. Democrats in Congress and the Fed went along, spurring the highest inflation in decades.
Now we have to go back to the trend-line pre-Covid spending; the bill on the table doesn’t do that. Republicans must do better if they want to keep the majority.
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Nailed it

We need a balanced budget amendment! Deficit spending needs to end!

Just sick of BOTH parties. Neither are there for the Working Americans. BOTH parties responsible for the theft going on. Repubs should have read the bills that gave away money..

Honestly you should be somewhere in Trumps administration Liz.. Just sayin

Convention of States is looking better everyday.

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Liz Peek

1 day ago

Liz Peek

What happened to DOGE???
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DOGE isn’t meeting its goals — you can thank the political establishment

DOGE chief has been thwarted at every turn — by judges, Democrats and their media allies, even Republicans.

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The Uniparty doesn't want their gravy train turned over.

Democrats are Americas virus.

Liz Peek

3 days ago

Liz Peek

My Morning Rant:
John Hawley, Senator from Missouri, is out with a blistering attack on Republicans in Congress who want to “cut” Medicaid spending. He declares those in favor of Medicaid reforms contained in the House bill “a noisy contingent of corporatist Republicans — call it the party’s Wall Street wing” who are not on board with working-class Americans and who want to “build our big, beautiful bill around slashing health insurance for the working poor”. www.nytimes.com/2025/05/12/opinion/josh-hawley-dont-cut-medicaid.html
What rot. Working Americans of all classes are sick and tired of an ever-growing amount of their hard-earned taxes going to fund those who are not working. This is not a Wall Street issue- it’s a fairness issue. Though some groups say most Medicaid recipients are working, that is not true. A study by AEI showed that “In December 2022, 44 percent of non-disabled working age Medicaid recipients without children worked at least 80 hours” per month, compared to 72% not receiving Medicaid. Focusing on “prime working ages of 25 to 54, the share working at least 80 hours was 51 percent among Medicaid recipients and 84 percent among non-Medicaid recipients.” So why would 49% not be working?
Here’s the problem: the Medicaid changes that GOP legislators want to make don’t target “the working poor”, they target able-bodied men and women who are not working, and who historically would not have qualified for Medicaid benefits. Only when Obama rescinded the work requirements for Medicaid did the program blow up entirely and become the drain on the fiscal purse that we see today. As he states in his op-ed, Hawley’s problem is this: “Today [Medicaid] serves over 70 million Americans, including well over one million residents of Missouri, the state I represent.” Hawley, who was elected last fall by a 14-point margin, fears he’ll lose ground with those million recipients if he embraces fiscal common sense. Or maybe he fears losing the support of healthcare professionals, who donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to his campaign. www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/josh-hawley/summary?cid=N00041620
Our country has seen a long-term decline in able-bodied men working. The labor participation rate for that group is 89.1% which sounds high until you realize that it was 97.1% in 1960. That’s a huge slide, with troubling implications for U.S. productivity. If you believe, as I do, that work is healthy, it is also bad news for the individuals who are, at least in some cases, gaming the system.
Instead of railing about sincere efforts to reform an out-of-control entitlement, why doesn’t Hawley turn his attentions to improving job opportunities and training in his state? Or attracting more employers? And, where are his ideas for cutting federal spending, which is too high and which is hurting our nation? Some $50 billion in Medicaid outlays funds fraud or constitutes “improper payments.” What is Hawley doing to confront that?
Maybe I would be more impressed with his arguments but for his having published his screed in the New York Times- is that the most efficient way to speak to working-class Americans? Bernie Sanders probably thinks so, and so does Josh Hawley.
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Sen. Josh Hawley – Campaign Finance Summary

Fundraising profile for Sen. Josh Hawley – Missouri

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We have to end the idea that working for McDonalds at the counter is the end game career wise. It’s what you do in high school and college to pay your bills. If you want to be in that industry, you need to think manager then owner as that is the career.

Uniparty in action. They are there to Take money, not help The People.

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