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Kamala Harris is finally opening up about Joe Bidenâs bid for re-election in her new memoir. The book titled 107 Days
features the former Vice Presidentâs unfiltered thoughts about the former Presidentâs decision.
Harris wrote that the Biden administration had undermined her bid for the presidency in the wake of the 2024 election. The former California Attorney General had thought about recommending to Biden that he should not seek reelection, but it put her in a tough position to be his recommended successor. She called the decision, âincredibly self-serving.â âHe would see it as naked ambition, perhaps as poisonous disloyalty, even if my only message was: Donât let the other guy win,â she said.
ââItâs Joe and Jillâs decision.â We all said that, like a mantra, as if weâd all been hypnotized,â Harris wrote in an excerpt published by The Atlantic. âWas it grace, or was it recklessness? In retrospect, I think it was recklessness. The stakes were simply too high. This wasnât a choice that should have been left to an individualâs ego, an individualâs ambition. It should have been more than a personal decision.â
107 Days by Kamala Harris
However, Harris did not see Biden, who was 81 at the time of re-election, as unfit to serve the country. The vice president blamed traveling for his May debate stumble. âAt 81, Joe got tired. Thatâs when his age showed in physical and verbal stumbles,â she wrote. âI donât think itâs any surprise that the debate debacle happened right after two back-to-back trips to Europe and a flight to the West Coast for a Hollywood fundraiser.â
Harris also revealed that Bidenâs team didnât take salacious press stories seriously. âWhen the stories were unfair or inaccurate, the presidentâs inner circle seemed fine with it,â she wrote. âIndeed, it seemed as if they decided I should be knocked down a little bit more.â She learned that Bidenâs staff was âadding fuel to negative narratives that sprang upâ about her.
107 Days chronicles Kamala Harrisâ journey as the Democratic presidential candidate following Bidenâs dropout all the way up to President Donald Trumpâs victory in the November election. The book will be released on Sept. 23.
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Lea Veloso
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LOS ANGELES – Former Vice President Kamala Harris will no longer receive special protection from the Los Angeles Police Department, the Los Angeles Times reports.Â
The protection was temporary and arranged by Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass.
What they’re saying:
Sources first told FOX 11 last week that Metro officers had been pulled from working crime suppression cases in the San Fernando Valley to provide Harris protection after President Donald Trump ended former President Joe Biden’s extension of her Secret Service coverage. An unmarked LAPD vehicle had been sitting around the clock at Harris’ Brentwood home.
PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Kamala Harris getting 24/7 security from elite LAPD Met. Division after Trump revoked Secret Service
The decision drew heavy criticism from the public, including the board of the Los Angeles Police Protective League.Â
“Pulling police officers from protecting everyday Angelenos to protect a failed presidential candidate who also happens to be a multi- millionaire with multiple homes and who can easily afford to pay for her own security is nuts,” the board said in a statement. “The mayor should tell Governor Newsom that if he wants to curry favor with Ms. Harris and her donor base then he should open up his own wallet because LA taxpayers should not be footing the bill for this ridiculousness.”
The backstory:
Former vice presidents are typically granted Secret Service protection for six months after leaving office.Â
However, before his term ended, Biden had extended the period for Harris to 18 months, which would have lasted until July 2026. This order was canceled by Trump in late August.
PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Trump revokes Kamala Harris’ Secret Service protection, spokesperson says
Harris was the subject of elevated threat levels while she was vice president, but The Associated Press reports that recent threat intelligence assessments by the Secret Service found no credible threats.
What we don’t know:
It is currently unclear who will be providing security for Harris, who is scheduled to begin a 15-stop book tour for her memoir.Â
PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Kamala Harris memoir ‘107 Days’: What to know
FOX 11 reached out to her publisher to ask if they are providing security, a step that some taxpayers have suggested she should take.Â
Others are adamant that she is entitled to security at the taxpayer’s expense.
Officer Norma Eisenman stated that the department was “not speaking on the matter of the protective detail.”
Dig deeper:
Harris is not the only public official whose security has been canceled by Trump.Â
He has also ended Secret Service protection for former national security adviser John Bolton and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, even though both had been targeted by Iran.Â
Additionally, in March, he ended the protection for Biden’s children, Hunter and Ashley Biden, which had been granted to them through an extension by their father.
What’s next:
FOX 11 has reached out to the LAPD for comment but has not yet heard back.
The Source: The information for this report is from multiple sources, including a story from the Los Angeles Times, details from a previous FOX 11 report, City News Service, and threat intelligence assessments from The Associated Press. FOX 11 also reached out to Harris’ publisher and the LAPD for comment and are awaiting a response.Â
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FOX.11.Digital.Team@fox.com (FOX 11 Digital Team)
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Los Angeles police Metropolitan Division officers, meant to be working crime-suppression assignments in hard-hit areas of the city, are instead providing security for former Vice President Kamala Harris, sources told The Times.
The department is âassisting the California Highway Patrol in providing protective services for former Vice President Kamala Harris until an alternate plan is established,â said Jennifer Forkish, L.A. police communications director. âThis temporary coordinated effort is in place to ensure that there is no lapse in security.â
A dozen or more officers have begun working a detail to protect Harris after President Trump revoked her Secret Service protection as of Monday. Sources not authorized to discuss the details of the plan said the city would fund the security but that the arrangement was expected to be brief, with Harris hiring her own security in the near future.
Trump ended an arrangement that had extended Harrisâ security coverage beyond the six months that vice presidents are usually provided after leaving office. California officials then put into place a plan for the California Highway Patrol to provide dignitary protection for Harris. At some point, the LAPD was added to the plan, according to the sources, as California law enforcement scrambled to take over from the Secret Service on Monday.
A security detail was captured outside Harrisâ Brentwood home by a FOX 11 helicopter as the station broke the story of the use of L.A. police.
The Los Angeles Police Protective League, the union that represents rank-and-file LAPD officers, criticized the move.
âPulling police officers from protecting everyday Angelenos to protect a failed presidential candidate who also happens to be a multi-millionaire, with multiple homes and who can easily afford to pay for her own security, is nuts,â its board of directors said in a statement to The Times. Mayor Karen Bass âshould tell Governor Newsom that if he wants to curry favor with Ms. Harris and her donor base, then he should open up his own wallet because LA taxpayers should not be footing the bill for this ridiculousness.â
Newsom, who would need to sign off on CHP protection, has not confirmed the arrangement to The Times. Izzy Gordon, a spokesperson for Newsom, simply said, âThe safety of our public officials should never be subject to erratic, vindictive political impulses.â
Newsomâs office and Bassâ office had discussions last week on how best to address the situation, according to sources not authorized to talk about the details.
Bass, in a statement last week, commented on Trump scrapping the security detail for Harris, saying, âThis is another act of revenge following a long list of political retaliation in the form of firings, the revoking of security clearances, and more. This puts the former Vice President in danger and I look forward to working with the governor to make sure Vice President Harris is safe in Los Angeles.â
Her office did not respond to comment on the LAPD deployment on Thursday.
Two law enforcement sources told The Times that the Metro officers had been slated to go to the San Fernando Valley for crime-suppression work before their assignment changed.
Deploying LAPD officers to protect Harris was a source of controversy within the department in years past.
During L.A. Police Chief Charlie Beckâs tenure, when Harris was a U.S. senator, plainclothes officers served as security and traveled with her from January 2017 to July 2018. It was an arrangement that then-Mayor Eric Garcetti said he was unaware of until Beckâs successor ended it. Beck said at the time through a spokesman that the protection was granted based on a threat assessment.
Beckâs successor, Michel Moore, ended the protection in July 2018 after he said a new evaluation determined it was no longer needed. The decision came as The Times filed a lawsuit seeking records from Garcetti detailing the costs of security related to his own extensive travel.
Trump signed a memorandum on Thursday ending Harrisâ protection as of Monday, according to sources not authorized to discuss the security matter.
Former vice presidents usually get Secret Service protection for six months after leaving office, while former presidents are given protection for life. But before his term ended, then-President Biden signed an order to extend Harrisâ protection beyond six months, to July 2026. Aides to Harris had asked Biden for the extension. Without it, her security detail would have ended last month, according to sources.
The Secret Service, the CHP and Los Angeles police do not discuss details of dignitary protection in terms of deployment, numbers, or travel teams. CNN first reported the removal of Harrisâ protection detail.
The curtailing of Secret Service protection comes as Harris is about to begin a book tour for her memoir, titled â107 Days.â The tour has 15 stops, which include visits to London and Toronto. The book title references the short length of her presidential campaign. The tour begins next month.
Harris, the first Black woman to serve as vice president, was the subject of an elevated threat level â particularly when she became the Democratic presidential contender last year. The Associated Press reports, however, a recent threat intelligence assessment by the Secret Service conducted on those it protects, such as Harris, found no red flags or credible evidence of a threat to the former vice president.
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Richard Winton
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The Los Angeles Police Department and the California Highway Patrol provide security to Harris in Los Angeles after her Secret Service security detail was rescinded on the 1st
The Los Angeles Police Department and the California Highway Patrol have provided former Vice President Kamala Harris with a security detail, according to the LAPDâs Metropolitan Division. As many as 14 LAPD officers have been pulled from active cases to provide security for Harris.
On September 1st, Trumpâs directive to end Secret Service protection for Harris went into effect. Throughout his second term so far, Trump has ended Secret Service protections for other former government officials and their children, including John Bolton, Hunter Biden, and Ashley Biden.Â
In 2008, a law was passed that provided vice presidents, their spouses, and their children who are under the age of 16 with Secret Service protection for 6 months after they serve. Biden signed an executive order in early January that extended Harrisâs protections for 18 months after her term ended. Harrisâs legally guaranteed 6 months of protection ended on July 21, but in recent years, vice presidents have been provided with protections for longer than 6 months due to heightened political tensions in the US.
To end Harrisâs protections, Trump ordered Kristi Noem to rescind the protection through an executive order that amended Bidenâs protective directives, according to two senior officials at the Department of Homeland Security.Â
The U.S. Secret Service ran an assessment on Harris and did not find anything alarming that would warrant extending her protection past the six months. Therefore, they are proceeding with the presidentâs directive to end protections for Harris.
Local Los Angeles officials are speaking out against Trumpâs decision to rescind security detail for Harris.
âThis is another act of revenge following a long list of political retaliation in the form of firings, the revoking of security clearances and more,â Democratic LA Mayor Karen Bass told Fox 11 in a statement. âThis puts the former vice president in danger and I look forward to working with the governor to make sure Vice President Harris is safe in Los Angelesâ.
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Ava Mitchell
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The California Highway Patrol on Monday has assigned a protective detail to former Vice President Kamala Harris, according to a report from the Los Angeles Times.
The move comes just days after President Donald Trump abruptly announced he was revoking Harris’s Secret Service protection, which had been extended until July 2026 by former President Joe Biden at her request.
Secret Service protection usually stays in place six months after an official leaves office. Last week, Trump signed a memo ending Harris’s protection as of Monday.
The L.A. Times reported California leaders now have stepped up to provide dignitary protection-service through the CHP.
The CHP did not comment on the new detail.
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NBC Bay Area staff
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Washington â President Trump has revoked former Vice President Kamala Harris’ U.S. Secret Service protection, a senior White House official confirmed to CBS News.
Former vice presidents, their spouses and children younger than 16 typically only continue to receive protection by the Secret Service for up to six months after leaving office under a law passed by Congress in 2008. But for recent administrations, an outgoing vice president’s detail has been extended beyond that allotted time because of a heightened threat environment.
Federal law allows the secretary of Homeland Security to direct the Secret Service to provide temporary protection for a former vice president for longer than six months after leaving the White House “if the Secretary of Homeland Security or designee determines that information or conditions warrant such protection.”
Former President Joe Biden had signed an executive order in early January that extended Harris’ detail to 18 months after she left office, two senior officials at the Department of Homeland Security told CBS News.
But Mr. Trump made the decision Thursday to revoke that continued protection, and an executive memorandum was issued to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem directing her to rescind Harris’ Secret Service detail, effective Sept. 1, the officials said.
The directive was then forwarded to the Secret Service, and the agency will comply with the order, the Homeland Security officials said.
The U.S. Secret Service ran a threat assessment on Harris and did not find anything alarming, nothing that would warrant extending her detail past the usual six months, according to sources familiar with the situation.
“The Vice President is grateful to the United States Secret Service for their professionalism, dedication, and unwavering commitment to safety,” Kirsten Allen, a senior adviser to Harris, said in a statement to CBS News.
The decision by Mr. Trump was first reported by CNN.
Since returning to the White House for a second term, Mr. Trump’s administration has removed Secret Service protection for several people, including John Bolton, who was the president’s national security adviser in his first term, and Hunter Biden and Ashley Biden, the children of former President Joe Biden.
Former presidents and their spouses receive Secret Service protection for life, but that ends for a president’s children who are over the age of 16 when they leave the White House. Biden, however, had signed an executive order before the end of his term that extended protection for his adult children, multiple sources told CBS News in March.
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Washington â President Trump has revoked former Vice President Kamala Harris’ U.S. Secret Service protection, a senior White House official confirmed to CBS News.
Former vice presidents, their spouses and children younger than 16 typically only continue to receive protection by the Secret Service for up to six months after leaving office under a law passed by Congress in 2008. The administration’s decision to pull back Harris’ detail comes seven months after her term as vice president ended.
The U.S. Secret Service ran a threat assessment on Harris and did not find anything alarming, nothing that would warrant extending her detail past the usual six months, according to sources familiar with the situation.Â
“The Vice President is grateful to the United States Secret Service for their professionalism, dedication, and unwavering commitment to safety,” Kirsten Allen, a senior adviser to Harris, said in a statement to CBS News.
The decision by Mr. Trump was first reported by CNN.
Since returning to the White House for a second term, Mr. Trump’s administration has removed Secret Service protection for several people, including John Bolton, who was the president’s national security adviser in his first term, and Hunter Biden and Ashley Biden, the children of former President Joe Biden.
Former presidents and their spouses receive Secret Service protection for life, but that ends for a president’s children who are over the age of 16 when they leave the White House. Biden, however, had signed an executive order before the end of his term that extended protection for his adult children, multiple sources told CBS News in March.
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Kamala Harris posted a special tribute to her husband, Douglas Emhoff, as the pair celebrated their 11th wedding anniversary together. The former Vice President took to the social media app with a super sweet post, calling Doug her âbest partner,â while sheâs glowing in the accompanying selfie. Doug returned the love with a pic and sweet caption of his own.
Yâall, Kamala reached a big milestone on Friday, August 22. The former VP had her followers in their feels when she dropped a cozy pic with her husband. In the snap, Kamalaâs rocking a chic pink shirt, hugging Doug tight, whoâs looking casual in a black polo. Her caption read:
âHappy Anniversary my Dougie. You fill my heart with love and laughter â thank you for being the best partner in this adventure called life.â
Douglas Emhoff kept the same energy for his queen! He also hopped onto Instagram with his own tribute, posting a glam selfie of the couple, with him in a tux. â11 years! Through it all, my love for @kamalaharris has only grown. Iâm so proud of her, looking forward to her book, and excited for whatâs ahead. he wrote, hyping up Kamalaâs upcoming memoir, â107 Days.â
The Roomies wasted no time hopping in the comments section of TSRâs post, sharing their thoughts on the big milestone. Peep some of their reactions belowâŠ
@skindeepby_xena wrote, âShe has so much light in her eyes. I remember Obama had this look when he left the White House.â
@im.sasharenee wrote, âMy other PresidentâŠKamala & Barack are my presidents!!! đđđđđđđâ
@therealmommadee wrote, âHappy anniversary and may you continue to be blessed much love from the palaceâ
@theechosenone_ wrote, âThis is who should be running the country but we failed her đ© We love you Kamala đ«¶đŒđđŒâ
@coolguycarlfy wrote, âHappy anniversary to both of you!đ Taco could never be like this with melania.â
@all4_leblanc joked, âHeâs married to my wife đ€ŠđŸđ. Congratulations to them though! Thatâs my President.â
@____pablo_____x wrote, âDoug just looks like heâs always just happy to be theređâ
@coasterdoll wrote, âWell dang Iâm 13 years in lol congratulations the years go fast but worth it to spend it with the one u love â€ïžâ€ïžâ
While Kamala is celebrating love this week, sheâs been keeping busy and occasionally addressing the nation! Recently, rumors swirled about her possibly running for California governor in 2026. But Harris has since shut those claims down. In a statement, per the Associated Press, the former VP made it clear sheâs not chasing a governorâs seat in her home state at this time.
âI have given serious thought to asking the people of California for the privilege to serve as their governor,â she wrote. âI love this state, its people and its promise. It is my home. But after deep reflection, Iâve decided that I will not run for Governor in this election. I look forward to getting back out and listening to the American people, helping elect Democrats across the nation who will fight fearlessly, and sharing more details in the months ahead about my own plans.â
Itâs worth noting that Kamala has not ruled out another potential run for president. Whateverâs next, though, sheâs proving sheâs still a force, and her love life continues to thrive.
What Do You Think Roomies?
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Maurice Cassidy
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NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
As the 11th member of former President Joe Biden’s administration appeared before the House Oversight Committee this week, Fox News Digital asked senators on Capitol Hill if former Vice President Kamala Harris should testify next.Â
“I think they should take her behind closed doors and figure out what she knows and what she’s willing to talk about,” Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., said.Â
House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer, R-Ky., is leading the investigation into the alleged cover-up of Biden’s cognitive decline and use of the autopen during his tenure as president.Â
Comer said on Fox News’ “The Ingraham Angle” last month that the “odds” of Harris getting a subpoena to appear before the House Oversight Committee are “very high.”Â
INSIDE THE BIDEN COVER-UP PROBE: 8 AIDES QUESTIONED, MORE ON THE WAY
The House Oversight Committee could issue a subpoena for former Vice President Kamala Harris to testify about the alleged cover-up of former President Joe Biden’s mental decline. (Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
While Marshall told Fox News Digital that Harris should testify, he admitted, “I don’t think you need her testimony to show Americans what I knew as a physician a long time ago, that Joe Biden had a neurodegenerative disease of some sort.”
HOUSE REPUBLICANS FLOAT GRILLING JOE, JILL BIDEN AS FORMER AIDES STONEWALL COVER-UP PROBE
Marshall has a medical degree from the University of Kansas and practiced medicine for more than 25 years before running for public office.Â
“All you had to do is look at his very fixed, flat face,” Marshall explained. “Look at his gait, the way he walked. He had a shuffled walk. He didn’t move his arms, hardly at all. When he talked, it was very monotone, a very soft voice. He had malingering thought processes. I don’t think it took much to figure that out.”

Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan. speaks during a news conference at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on March 4, 2021. (Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images )
After listing the former president’s symptoms, the Kansas senator lamented that Biden “turned weakness into war,” creating a national security threat.Â
During Biden’s presidency, the United States’ withdrawal from Afghanistan resulted in the death of 13 U.S. soldiers, Russia invaded Ukraine and Hamas attacked Israel, triggering the ongoing war in Gaza.
But as Republicans demand transparency, Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., told Fox News Digital that he is far more worried about the “challenges we face right now,” particularly on the economy, inflation and the impact of Trump’s tariff policies.Â

Joe Biden reacts to a light display at his debate watch party at Hyatt Regency Atlanta on June 27, 2024, in Atlanta. (Derek White/Getty Images for DNC)
Meanwhile, Sen. John Hoeven R-N.D., defended the accountability argument, telling Fox News Digital that Americans “always want more information and more transparency.”
“If you’re involved in an administration, you [should] always be willing to come in and say what you did and why you did it, and you know what it’s all about. I mean, that’s how it works, and that’s what the American people want,” he said.Â
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Fox News Digital reached out to Biden and Harris for comment but did not immediately receive a response.Â
Fox News Digital’s Elizabeth Elkind contributed to this report.Â
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William Henry Harrison, the ninth president of the United States, was the last commander in chief born a British subject and the first member of the Whig Party to win the White House. He delivered the longest inaugural address in history, nearly two hours, and had the shortest presidency, being the first sitting president to die in office, just 31 days into his term.
Oh, there is one more bit of trivia about the man who gave us the slogan âTippecanoe and Tyler Too.â Harrison was the last politician to lose his first presidential election and then win the next one (Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson managed that before him). Richard Nixon lost only to win way down the road. (Grover Cleveland and Trump are the only two to win, lose and then win again.)
Everyone else since Harrisonâs era who lost on the first try and ran again in the next election lost again. Democrat Adlai Stevenson and Republican Thomas Dewey ran twice and lost twice. Henry Clay and William Jennings Bryan each ran three times in a row and lost (Clay ran on three different party tickets). Voters, it seems, donât like losers.
These are not encouraging results for Kamala Harris, who announced last week she will not be running for governor in California, sparking speculation that she wants another go at the White House.
But history isnât what she should worry about. Itâs the here and now. The Democratic Party is wildly unpopular. Itâs net favorability ( 30 points) is nearly triple the GOPâs (11 points). The Democratic Party is more unpopular than any time in the last 35 years. When Donald Trumpâs unpopularity with Democrats should be having the opposite effect, 63% of Americans have an unfavorable view of the party.
Why? Because Democrats are mad at their own party â both for losing to Trump and for failing to provide much of an obstacle to him now that heâs in office. As my Dispatch colleague Nick Cattogio puts it, âEven Democrats have learned to hate Democrats.â
Itâs not all Harrisâ fault. Indeed, the lionâs share of the blame goes to Joe Biden and the coterie of enablers who encouraged him to run again.
Harrisâ dilemma is that she symbolizes Democratic discontent with the party. That discontent isnât monolithic. For progressives, the objection is that Democrats arenât fighting hard enough. For the more centrist wing of the party, the problem is the Democrats are fighting for the wrong things, having lurched too far left on culture war and identity politics. Uniting both factions is visceral desire to win. Thatâs awkward for a politician best known for losing.
Almost the only reason Harris was positioned to be the nominee in 2024 was that she was a diversity pick. Biden was explicit that he would pick a woman and, later, an African American running mate. And the same dynamic made it impossible to sideline her when Biden withdrew.
Of course, most Democrats donât see her race and gender as a problem, and in the abstract they shouldnât. Indeed, every VP pick is a diversity pick, including the white guys. Running mates are chosen to appeal to some part of a coalition.
So Harrisâ problem isnât her race or sex; itâs her inability to appeal to voters in a way that expands the Democratic coalition. For Democrats to win, they need someone who can flip Trump voters. She didnât lose because of low Democratic turnout, she lost because sheâs uncompelling to a changing electorate.
Her gauzy, often gaseous, rhetoric made her sound like a dean of students at a small liberal arts college. With the exception of reproductive rights, her convictions sounded like they were crafted by focus groups, at a time when voters craved authenticity. Worse, Harris acquiesced to Bidenâs insistence she not distance herself from him.
Such clubby deference to the establishment combined with boilerplate pandering to progressive constituencies â learned from years of San Francisco and California politics â makes her the perfect solution to a problem that doesnât exist.
Her choice to appear on Stephen Colbertâs âThe Late Showâ for her first interview since leaving office was telling. CBS recently announced it was terminating both Colbert and the show, insisting it was purely a business decision. But the reason for the broadcast networkâs decision stemmed in part from the fact that Colbert narrow-casts his expensive show to a very small, very anti-Trump slice of the electorate.
âI donât want to go back into the system. I think itâs broken,â Harris lamented to Colbert, decrying the ânaĂŻveâ and âfecklessâ lack of âleadershipâ and the âcapitulationâ of those who âconsider themselves to be guardians of our system and our democracy.â
Thatâs all catnip to Colbertâs ideologically committed audience. But thatâs not the audience Democrats need to win. And thatâs why, if Democrats nominate her again, sheâll probably go down in history as an answer to a trivia question. And it wonât be âWho was the 48th president of the United States?â
L.A. Times Insights delivers AI-generated analysis on Voices content to offer all points of view. Insights does not appear on any news articles.
The following AI-generated content is powered by Perplexity. The Los Angeles Times editorial staff does not create or edit the content.
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Jonah Goldberg
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At Bloomberg Opinion, Patricia Lopez writes that âLatinos were motivated by the same concerns that drove other voters in the new Trump coalition: an economy that has eroded working-class buying power and a flood of immigrants who were feared as competitors for jobsâ:
Trump shrewdly played on those fears with his âBlack jobsâ riff, which he later expanded to include âHispanic jobs.â His anti-immigrant rhetoric drew a bright line between Hispanics on the one hand and migrants on the other. âTheyâre going to be attacking â and they already are â Black population jobs, Hispanic population jobs, and theyâre attacking union jobs too,â Trump said. âSo, when you see the border, itâs not just the crime. Your jobs are being taken away, too.â Never mind data that shows the claim is untrue.
The pitch drew Latinos into a universe where many longed to be, included in the mainstream, and allowed them to participate in otherizing the new enemy â recent immigrants. Trumpâs attacks also exploited tensions within the Latino population itself. Mexicans by far represent the largest and most well-established group of Latino Americans and occupy all rungs of society, from entrepreneurial billionaires on down. Puerto Ricans are American citizens by birth and some â though by no means all â resent being associated with those here illegally.
Trump gave permission for each group to look down on newer waves of immigrants that now arrive mostly from Central and South America and have proved as much a headache to Mexico as to the US.
In a prescient X thread on Tuesday night, Jack Herrera made a number of other important points, summing up his (excellent) election year reporting. He noted that Republican organizers paid more attention to low-turnout Latino communities:
Republicans [were] organized, funded, and ambitious in Latino neighborhoods this year, especially in South Texas, Pennsylvania, and Florida. Democrats, meanwhile, keep prioritizing the most likely voters, in whiter, college educated suburbs. In low-turnout communities, door knocking and in-person outreach makes a huge difference.
And he explained that Latinosâ perceptions of Trump didnât outweigh their basic economic concerns as a group that is 80 percent working class:
Iâve spoken with pro-Trump Latinos who arenât shy about calling out his racist comments. They donât have rose-colored goggles for the man. Still, many tend to assume his xenophobia is directed at undocumented immigrants, not them personally. Polling still find that most Latinos consider Democrats the more welcoming party. Republicans get read as racist. But Latinos vote strategically â the economy ranks as their #1 issue; racism trails far behind. And some think Democrats are also racist.
Thereâs another dynamic this year. In the past, the taboo for voting for Trump was intense. After Trumpâs surprising success in 2020, however, the social consequences for openly supporting him are less severe. Do not underestimate how powerful this interpersonal element is.
He says that Democrats are losing Latinos in part because they are choosing not to court them:
Latino dealignment is a symptom of broader class dealignment. My argument, however, is that this transformation comes from electoral strategy as much as ideological shift. Democrats *could* win; but theyâre not trying as hard as the GOP to win working class voters.
Bloomberg Opinionâs Patricia Lopez also concluded that Democrats are going to have take long hard look at how to appeal to this enormous and diverse group of voters:
Ronald Reagan used to joke that Latinos were Republicans, âthey just donât know it yet.â Democrats have long sought to make Latinos part of their coalition â fighting for Dreamers, a path to citizenship, and better wages and working conditions.
But they may have lost a step in recognizing that Latinos are no more a monolith than Black voters or any other identity group. The Latino red shift could be a fluke or a permanent realignment. But expect the priorities of this multi-faceted community to come into a much higher profile as the two parties battle over them.
Equis Researchâs Stephanie Valencia and Carlos Odio, meanwhile, are pushing back on the idea that Latinos voters can be blamed for Trumpâs victory, as his swing-state wins and the shift of the Latino vote are in fact two distinct stories:
The magnitude of the gains Trump made in places like New York, New Jersey, and Texas â states that donât decide the presidential race – were surprising and point to deeper discontent and broader trends.
But the support Trump received among Latinos in the battleground states should not have been a surprise to anyone who was paying attention. Those shifts were present in polling throughout the cycle and since the early days of the Biden presidency. Harris ultimately had the support she needed with Latinos to win, if all else held according to plan. Yes, Trump did make big gains with Latinos, but those gains are not what decided his victory. What happened in this election is larger than Latinos – Trumpâs win came from a broader erosion of support in key battleground states. Latinos in the battleground states are a critical part of winning but they do not alone determine the outcome.
They also argue that Trump âTrump should not misread any gains in Latino votes as support for his full agenda â in fact quite the oppositeâ:
The Latinos who did move to Trump were clear: they want him to bring down prices. They rejected Project 2025, and told us repeatedly in focus groups and polling that they didnât believe he would do any of the things his opponents said he would, from banning abortion to repealing Obamacare to deporting long-term immigrants like Dreamers. They voted for Trump because they believed he would prioritize the economy over all else, just as they did in voting for him.
UCLA political psychologist Efrén Pérez adds that based on his research, Latinos and other people of color are simply becoming more polarized, just like everybody else already is:
What I think weâre seeing is polarization catching up to people of colr. We get two parties and two choices and all of the internal heterogeneity of various people of color must be channeled and expressed through these two (!) parties. Both parties currently âownâ different identities. Eg, Democrats are the party of people of color while Republicans are the party of ârealâ Americans. Many people of color have clear identity priorities. Among Asian and Latino individuals, about 27 percent of them value their American identity over their racial identity.
Part of what is happening with party identity among these groups is that they are sorting into the âcorrectâ party that they see reflecting how they view themselves.
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Intelligencer Staff
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Liberals and Democrats ate a double-decker shit sandwich on Tuesday night, and the truth and reconciliation committee is still deliberating on what went wrong. Maybe Vice President Kamala Harris will follow in Secretary of State Hilary Clintonâs footsteps and write a tell-all book explaining how it all happened, but before the dust settles, we would be remiss not to point out how poorly Harris weaponized pop cultureâŠ
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Garrett Gravley
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Go ahead and inject this into my veins. Former Democrat Senator Claire McCaskill, now an MSNBC contributor, was left in tears while discussing Kamala Harrisâs landslide defeat to Donald Trump.
And man, was it ever glorious.
The emotional breakdown occurred following Harrisâ concession speech delivered Wednesday on the campus of Howard University. Harris vowed to keep up the fight.
âThe outcome of this election is not what we wanted, not what we fought for, not what we voted for,â Harris said. âBut hear me when I say ⊠the light of Americaâs promise will always burn bright as long as we never give up and as long as we keep fighting.â
That, it seems, is what moved McCaskill to tears.
During MSNBCâs coverage of the speech, anchor Nicole Wallace noticed that her colleague, Claire McCaskill, was struggling to keep it together.
âI mean, in that mission and that purpose, Claire McCaskill, will determine,â Wallace began, before noticing something was amiss. âUm, you okay?â
Those three words might as well be slapped to our foreheads as we all try to navigate around our liberal friends during this very difficult time for them.
âI think Iâm okay,â McCaskill replied.
She wasnât. And Wallace, probably wishing she had a couch for the former Senator to lay down on, responded, âTell me what youâre thinking.â
Ya know, some psychiatrists get paid $375/hour for that kind of therapy.
McCaskill is falling apart on live TVđđđ
Let those tears flow girl! Im thirsty!
â Spitfire (@DogRightGirl) November 6, 2024
Claire McCaskill, like many Harris supporters, is struggling to cope with Donald Trumpâs massive, historic victory. Whereas theyâve spent the past two years genuinely believing the man was going to jail, he is instead the President-Elect, heading back to the White House.
Not since Grover Cleveland in 1893 has America had a President get elected to non-consecutive terms.
What a time to be alive!
Claire though, wants people to know just how great Kamalaâs campaign was. So great, that she had to repeatedly wipe tears away while recalling its greatness.
âWell, Iâm so proud â ah, Iâm so proud of her,â she said fighting off the vapors. âI donât think people realize how hard it is to get to where she was.â
âUm, as a woman, getting elected DA, itâs not easy, guys. People donât trust women to be in charge of making decisions about life and death and crime and being, frankly, a supervisor in some ways over police.â
âHer fighting through the primary thicket of California politics to become Attorney General, really hard,â McCaskill continued. âI mean, this is really hard stuff.â
âPeople donât trust women to be in chargeâ â Ah, the olâ misogyny angle. Where would Democrats be without it and its close sister, âeveryoneâs a racist.â
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Rusty Weiss
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The glass ceiling remains unbroken when it comes to the United States’ highest office. One expert explains to WTOP why that is.
Listen live to 103.5 FM for WTOPâs team coverage of national and local race results and visit WTOPâs Election 2024 page for comprehensive coverage. Click here for more on Virginiaâs election results.
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Vice President Harris delivers concession speech at Howard
The glass ceiling remains intact when it comes to the United Statesâ highest office. Kamala Harris conceded the presidential election and Donald Trump will return to the White House. But data shows most voters see gender as less important to a politicianâs standing than other factors.
In the summer of 2023, the Pew Research Center conducted a survey about women in leadership. At the time, there was not a specific female candidate on the presidential ballot. Biden was running for reelection, and although Nikki Haley was in the race, the conversation was mostly following Trump.
âWe really wanted people to just react to the notion of having a female president and what that means to them,â said Juliana Horowitz, the senior associate director for social trends research at the Pew Research Center.
They asked voters whether a woman would be better at handling certain policy areas than a male president. For the most part, Americans said they donât think the gender of the candidate matters.
âPeople do tend to say that itâs really not about the candidateâs gender, that itâs more about the different things they stand for,â she said. âWe donât see a lot of evidence in our work that being a woman or that being a man, for that matter, is necessarily whatâs driving peopleâs decisions.â
Horowitz said 46% of respondents overall said many Americans are not ready to elect a woman to such a high office. Only a quarter of Americans said itâs extremely or very likely theyâll see a female president in their lifetime.
âOne of the things that we found is that most Americans did not think it was important to them, personally, for the United States to elect a woman president in their lifetime,â she said.
Early data from the 2024 election does show a gender gap, with women voting primarily for Harris at higher rates than men did. But Horowitz said the gender gap is not wider than what theyâve seen in previous elections.
Imani Cheers is an associate professor of mass communications and media studies at George Washington University in D.C. Cheers said America has always grappled with dichotomies, and the country can be progressive in some ways but traditional in others.
âAmerica has a racism and a patriarchy problem,â she said. âWill there ever be a woman president? I think so. Iâm just not sure when.â
Harris could not maintain the support in battleground states that President Joe Biden earned in 2020. Cheers said she believes the economy and religious views influenced many female voters to support Trump.
Harris and other Democrats campaigned on protecting abortion rights following the Supreme Courtâs ruling to overturn Roe v. Wade. In Cheersâ opinion, she said it was âincredibly dishearteningâ to not see backlash to the courtâs decision.
Cheers talked about âmoments of joyâ on election night, such as Prince Georgeâs County Executive Angela Alsobrooks being elected as Marylandâs first Black senator.
Cheers said noted the Harris campaign was put together in 100 days, while Trump had campaigned for reelection for years.
When it comes to electing the next president in 2028, she said, whether itâs a woman or a man elected, remember, âWe are currently setting up for ramifications (that are) going to last generations.â
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© 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
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Linh Bui
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WASHINGTON (AP) â The story of how Donald Trump won the emerging swing state of Georgia is one of margins.
Four years ago, he lost the state by just under 12,000 votes. He reclaimed it by notching microscopic but difference-making improvements in his vote totals in dozens of deeply red counties, many of them small and rural. It was still enough to put him over the top with 50.8% of the vote when The Associated Press called the state for him at 12:58 a.m. Wednesday.
Though the race is likely to narrow as more ballots are counted, there were not enough votes to be tabulated in Democratic-leaning areas for Vice President Kamala Harris to overtake Trumpâs lead, which would have required her to get 56.1% of the remaining vote. She also narrowly underperformed Joe Biden in some population-dense counties in the Atlanta metro area. For example, in Fulton County Biden got 72.59% of the vote in 2020. This year Harris got 71.89% when the race was called.
Those small differences were enough to secure Georgiaâs 16 electoral votes for Trump. But they are also another salient data point that suggests Georgia will be a fiercely contested battleground for years to come.
CANDIDATES: President: Harris (D) vs. Trump (R) vs. Chase Oliver (Libertarian) vs. Jill Stein (Green).
WINNER: Trump
POLL CLOSING TIME: 7 p.m. ET.
Georgia was long considered a Republican stronghold. But in 2020, Bidenâs squeaker victory made him the first Democratic presidential contender since Bill Clinton in 1992 to carry the state, an emerging political battleground made more competitive by changing demographics and the booming Atlanta metro area.
Still, there was little guarantee 2024 would be a repeat.
Harris aggressively campaigned in the state, but Georgia had appeared to be a bit more of a reach for her than other battlegrounds.
Still, Georgiaâs political dynamics are volatile. And the state was still up for grabs going into Election Day because the Republican partyâs grip loosened as older, white GOP voters died. They have often been replaced by a younger, more racially diverse cast .
But just because many moving to the booming Atlanta area brought their politics with them didnât mean the fundamentals dramatically changed. Biden beat Trump by only 11,779 votes in 2020. Trump got all of the stateâs 16 electoral votes.
WHY AP CALLED THE RACE: At the time the race was called, Trump was leading by 125,000 votes. Almost all advance votes in Georgia had been reported. His lead was larger than what Harris could be expected to make up from the remaining votes in Democratic strongholds. Trump was slightly ahead of his 2020 performance in enough counties to erase the deficit of less than 12,000 votes by which he lost Georgia four years ago.
Learn more about how and why the AP declares winners in U.S. elections at Explaining Election 2024, a series from The Associated Press aimed at helping make sense of the American democracy. The AP receives support from several private foundations to enhance its explanatory coverage of elections and democracy. See more about APâs democracy initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
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VALDOSTA, Ga. (AP) â Donald Trump repeatedly spread falsehoods Monday about the federal response to Hurricane Helene despite claiming not to be politicizing the disaster as he toured hard-hit areas in south Georgia.
The former president and Republican nominee claimed upon landing in Valdosta that President Joe Biden was âsleepingâ and not responding to Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, who he said was âcalling the president and hasnât been able to get him.â He repeated the claim at an event with reporters after being told Kemp said he had spoken to Biden.
âHeâs lying, and the governor told him he was lying,â Biden said Monday.
The White House previously announced that Biden spoke by phone Sunday night with Kemp and North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, as well as Scott Matheson, mayor of Valdosta, Georgia, and Florida Emergency Management Director John Louk. Kemp confirmed Monday morning that he spoke to Biden the night before.
âThe president just called me yesterday afternoon and I missed him and called him right back and he just said âHey, what do you need?â And I told him, you know, weâve got what we need, weâll work through the federal process,â Kemp said. âHe offered if there are other things we need just to call him directly, which I appreciate that.â
In addition to being humanitarian crises, natural disasters can create political tests for elected officials, particularly in the closing weeks of a presidential campaign in which among the hardest-hit states were North Carolina and Georgia, two battlegrounds. Trump over the last several days has used the damage wrought by Helene to attack Harris, the Democratic nominee, and suggest she and Biden are playing politics with the storm â something he was accused of doing when president.
While the White House highlighted Bidenâs call to Kemp and others, the president faced questions about his decision to spend the weekend at his beach house in Delaware, rather than the White House, to monitor the storm.
âI was commanding it,â Biden told reporters after delivering remarks at the White House on the federal governmentâs response. âI was on the phone for at least two hours yesterday and the day before as well. I commanded it. Itâs called a telephone.â
AP Washington correspondent Sagar Meghani reports Donald Trump is touring Hurricane Heleneâs damage in Georgia, while blasting the Biden administrationâs response to the deadly storm.
Biden received frequent updates on the storm, the White House said, as did Harris aboard Air Force Two as she made a West Coast campaign swing. The vice president cut short her campaign trip Monday to return to Washington for a briefing from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Trump, writing on his social media platform Monday, also claimed without evidence that the federal government and North Carolinaâs Democratic governor were âgoing out of their way to not help people in Republican areas.â Asheville, which was devastated by the storm, is solidly Democratic, as is much of Buncombe County, which surrounds it.
The death toll from Helene has surpassed 100 people, with some of the worst damage caused by inland flooding in North Carolina.
Biden said he will travel to North Carolina on Wednesday to get a first-hand look at the devastation, but will limit his footprint so as not to distract from the ongoing recovery efforts.
During remarks Monday at FEMA headquarters, Harris said she has received regular briefings on the disaster response, including from FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell, and has spoken with Kemp and Cooper in the last 24 hours.
What to know about the 2024 election:
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âI have shared with them that we will do everything in our power to help communities respond and recover,â she said. âAnd Iâve shared with them that I plan to be on the ground as soon as possible without disrupting any emergency response operations.â
When asked if her visit was politicizing the storm, she frowned and shook her head but did not reply.
The Trump campaign partnered with the Christian humanitarian aid organization Samaritanâs Purse to bring trucks of fuel, food, water and other critical supplies to Georgia, said Karoline Leavitt, the Trump campaignâs national press secretary.
Leavitt did not immediately respond to questions about how much had been donated and from which entity. Samaritanâs Purse also declined to address the matter in a statement.
Trump also launched a GoFundMe campaign for supporters to send financial aid to people impacted by the storm. It quickly passed its $1 million goal Monday night.
âOur hearts are with you and we are going to be with you as long as you need it,â Trump said, flanked by a group of elected officials and Republican supporters.
âWeâre not talking about politics now,â Trump added.
Trump said he wanted to stop in North Carolina but was holding off because access and communication is limited in hard-hit communities.
When asked by The Associated Press on Monday if he was concerned that his visit to Georgia was taking away law enforcement resources that could be used for disaster response, Trump said, âNo.â He said his campaign instead âbrought many wagons of resources.â
Katie Watson, who owns with her husband the home design store Trump visited, said she was told the former president picked that location because he saw shots of the business destroyed with the rubble and said, âFind that place and find those people.â
âHe didnât come here for me. He came here to recognize that this town has been destroyed. Itâs a big setback,â she said.
âHe recognizes that we are hurting and he wants us to know that,â she added. âIt was a lifetime opportunity to meet the president. This is not exactly the way I wanted to do it.â
Trump campaign officials have long pointed to his visit to East Palestine, Ohio, the site of a toxic trail derailment, as a turning point in the early days of the presidential race when he was struggling to establish his footing as a candidate. They believed his warm welcome by residents frustrated by the federal governmentâs response helped remind voters why they had been drawn to him years earlier.
During Trumpâs term as president, he visited numerous disaster zones, including the aftermaths of hurricanes, tornadoes and shootings. But the trips sometimes elicited controversy such as when he tossed paper towels to cheering residents in Puerto Rico in 2017 in the wake of Hurricane Maria.
It also took until weeks before the presidential election in 2020 for Trumpâs administration to release $13 billion in assistance for the territory. A federal government watchdog found that officials hampered an investigation into delays in aid delivery.
In another 2019 incident, Trump administration officials admonished some meteorologists for tweeting that Alabama was not threatened by Hurricane Dorian, contradicting the then-president. Trump would famously display a map altered with a black Sharpie pen to indicate Alabama could be in the path of the storm.
Fernando reported from Chicago, and Amy reported from Atlanta. Associated Press writers Jill Colvin in New York, Chris Megerian and Aamer Madhani in Washington, and Will Weissert in Las Vegas contributed to this report.
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