Kamala Harris wrote down her memoirs of her lost campaign. It's a book named "107 days." It's baffling Democrats and GOP alike. It's her reckoning with the Democrats, campaign managers and Joe Biden. It's just one big excuse about why she failed.
First and foremost she thinks she made no mistakes, but many people around her. No suprise here.
For example Tim Walz was not her first choice as running mate.
It was Pete Buttigieg. In the end though Harris thought that the combination of black woman running with gay white male running for presidency would be too much for America to handle, which is why she went with Walz instead.
To quote Harris: "He would have been an ideal partner – if I were a straight white man. But we were already asking a lot of America: to accept a woman, a Black woman, a Black woman married to a Jewish man. Part of me wanted to say,
Screw it, let’s just do it. But knowing what was at stake, it was too big of a risk.
“And I think Pete also knew that – to our mutual sadness.” Buttigieg was surprised to hear about this, also the reason why he didn't make it and made a statement that he thinks Americans are wiser than that.
Also Harris was not very pleased about the outcome of the discussion between Vance and Walz, asking Walz what he did there. It almost looked like he tried to become friends with Vance.
Also Harris was not too fond about the idea of Josh Shapiro being vice president. Shapiro once stated that Harris will have to answer for why she did not publicly alert people to Joe Biden's declining ability to serve during his term in the White House.
In the book, Harris questions her decision to not confront Biden, explaining that “of all the people in the White House, I was in the worst position to make the case that he should drop out” and feared that, if she did, it would be seen as “incredibly self-serving” and “poisonous disloyalty”.
In Harris’s account she writes that Shapiro, before she had interviewed him, had asked how many bedrooms were in the vice-president’s residence and if the Smithsonian would lend Pennsylvania art for display. This destroyed her trust into Shapiro, because in her opinion at that time how to fight Trump should have been the top priority, and not how to redecorate the White House.
Harris writes that she “mused that he would want to be in the room for every decision” and told him that was “an unrealistic expectation” and “a vice-president is not a co-president.”
Also Harris is sure that Benjamin Netanyahu undermined Joe Biden in the hope that Donald Trump would return to the White House and ensure his political survival. Netanyahu wanted a president willing to embrace "very extreme proposals", so Trump not Biden nor Harris.
“The war in Gaza is not a binary issue, but too often the conversation about it is,” Harris writes. “I wanted to acknowledge the complexity, nuance and history of the region, but it seemed very few people had the appetite for that or the willingness to hold two tragic narratives in their mind at the same time, to grieve for human suffering both Israeli and Palestinian.”
Harris is also criticising the power hungry advisors of Biden, who pushed him to run for a second term instead to step down and make the way free for a successor. Harris' own advisor David Plouffe warned her: "The people hate Joe Biden." Now Harris is asking herself, why she didn't enough during the campaign to present herself as not the status quo candidate?
Harris was also pissed about how the GOP framed her for the border wall to Mexico and lack of Democrats' support. She told her husband about it: "They hide you for four years, give you impossible, shitty tasks, don't correct you when those tasks are misrepresented, never defend you when you are attacked, never praise your achievements."
She's also bitter about Biden's team, because she feels that they didn't support her run after Biden stepped down, instead stabbed a knife into her back.
Harris makes no statement, if she's running in 2028 again or not. Many people see the book as bad blood and really doubt that it will enable Harris to run again for the Democrats. According to "The Atlantic" however Harris is considering it again.
In her new memoir, Kamala Harris takes on the issue that has haunted Democrats for more than a year.
www.theatlantic.com