“In retrospect,” Kamala Harris writes of letting Joe and Jill Biden decide on their own whether the then-president should have tried to run for re-election, “I think it was recklessness.”This is seriously delusional. She was never popular. People did not think she could do the job, if Biden died.That is the assessment that the former vice president makes in her forthcoming memoir of her abbreviated 2024 run, in a significant break from the dutiful stance she took toward her old boss throughout their time in office and since.
“‘It’s Joe and Jill’s decision.’ We all said that, like a mantra, as if we’d all been hypnotized,” Harris writes in the first excerpt of “107 Days” published Wednesday morning by The Atlantic. “The stakes were simply too high. This wasn’t a choice that should have been left to an individual’s ego, an individual’s ambition. It should have been more than a personal decision.”
Part of the problem, Harris writes, was a Biden team so committed to not helping her that she says it ultimately came at his own, and the country’s expense.
“When polls indicated that I was getting more popular, the people around him didn’t like the contrast that was emerging,” Harris writes. “None of them grasped that if I did well, he did well. That given the concerns about his age, my visible success as his vice president was vital. It would serve as a testament to his judgment in choosing me and reassurance that if something happened, the country was in good hands. My success was important for him.”
“His team,” Harris ends the chapter by writing, “didn’t get it.”
Nobody thought Biden had good judgment in picking Harris. It was a deal to win an endorsement for Black votes in S. Carolina.
If it was reckless for Biden to run, it was also reckless for her to support him, and then backstab him to steal the nomination from him.
I look back at all the supposed political leaders who supported Harris. They were either dishonest or hypnotized. We should disregard everything they say in the future.
No comments:
Post a Comment