It's Kamala

spaminator

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Where Kamala Harris stands on key issues
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Patrick Svitek, Amber Phillips, Joshua Partlow, Brady Dennis, Jeff Stein, The Washington Post
Published Jul 22, 2024 • 6 minute read

Vice President Harris, whom Democrats have quickly endorsed to replace President Biden in this year’s election, has been a loyal Democratic foot soldier, rarely straying from party orthodoxy. But at times she has also struggled to articulate what policy positions drive her, a vagueness that helped doom her 2020 presidential campaign.


Harris has also been in the public eye a long time, and especially since becoming vice president she has become increasingly vocal – and effective, Democrats say – when it comes to campaigning against Republicans. They argue she is carving out a profile on issues that could grow the Democratic Party’s appeal, such as embracing abortion rights and distancing herself ever so slightly from supporting Israel’s war in Gaza. And if she is the Democrats’ nominee, she can carry the mantle of the popular accomplishments under Biden.

“She has been the most effective voice when it comes to abortion justice … health-care justice, student debt cancellation, the racial wealth gap,” Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) said Sunday on MSNBC. “I am confident that Kamala Harris can unite this party and build the coalition necessary for us to win in November.”


Here’s what we know about her policy positions on five major issues.

1. Abortion
By far, Harris’s best-known policy position is that women should have access to abortion care.

It is one of Democrats’ strongest issues, but Biden, an 81-year-old Catholic man, has been somewhat of an awkward messenger on it. By contrast, Harris has shined, from the perspective of the Democrats’ base, by forcefully and unapologetically championing abortion rights as reproductive rights – and framing Republicans’ attempts to limit abortion as an attack on Americans’ freedoms.

“This is a fight for freedom – the fundamental freedom to make decisions about one’s own body and not have their government tell them what they’re supposed to do,” she said at an event in Florida this spring.


Democrats have yet to win a presidential election by championing abortion rights. But abortion rights allies have won several major battles at the ballot box since the Supreme Court eliminated national abortion protections by overturning Roe v. Wade two years ago.

Democrats say this is where Harris has the opportunity to draw the sharpest contrast against Donald Trump.

“In a post-Dobbs world,” said Democratic strategist Rebecca Kirszner Katz, “it could be remarkable to have a national candidate who unequivocally understands reproductive justice.” She referred to the Supreme Court ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization.

2. The border
Early in Biden’s presidency, Biden asked Harris to try to address the root problems of migration at the border by focusing on countries in Central and South America.


“Do not come. You will be turned back,” Harris told potential migrants heading to the U.S.-Mexican border during a Latin American trip in June 2021.

It is not clear what she accomplished. She came under criticism from border Democrats for not visiting the border sooner, and migrant crossings, until recently, have been at record highs under the Biden administration, though administration officials have emphasized that her purview was those underlying causes, not what to do with people once they arrived in the United States.

There’s a hot debate about why border crossings have been so high and whether Biden or Harris could do much about it. But polls and voter groups show voters blame Biden rather than Republicans, even though Biden has cast Republicans as unhelpful when they scuttled a bipartisan border security bill because Trump wanted to run on the issue.


“We will skewer her for her border performance,” said Stephen Moore, a Trump adviser.

3. Israel and Gaza
A large part of a president’s job is dealing with foreign policy, and Harris is remarkably undefined on this front. But that could be to Democrats’ benefit, said Democratic strategist Matt Duss, because Biden’s low points in polling have come from issues largely tied to foreign policy. Biden’s staunch support for Israel, especially at the start of the war in Gaza, has been a particular wedge in the Democratic Party coalition.

In foreign policy circles, Harris is believed to have a more critical view of the Israeli government’s handling of the war in Gaza than Biden, even pushing to get lines about the need for humanitarian aid to Gaza in key speeches.


“We have also been clear that far too many innocent Palestinians have been killed, that Israel must do better to protect innocent civilians,” she said at an address earlier this year.

Harris has been “pushing for a more sympathetic policy toward Palestinians,” Rep. Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.) said after Biden’s announcement Sunday, adding that she can “build a broad coalition around the issue.”

“Even if she doesn’t announce an intention to dramatically shift foreign policy, I think she’s going to have an easier time than Biden, because she hasn’t been the one driving it,” Duss said.

4. The economy
When Harris was running for president in 2020 against Biden, she campaigned on major tax cuts for the working class, tax credits for renters and a major expansion of Medicare.


But for now, many observers expect Harris’s campaign to largely pick up where Biden left off on the economy. The United States has the world’s best economic recovery from the pandemic: consumer spending has been high; more Americans are employed than in half a century; and wages have grown to help keep up with inflation. Two senior Democrats, speaking on the condition of anonymity to speak candidly, said that Harris has been supportive of Biden’s agenda even in private conversations, rarely objecting on controversial ideas among Democrats such as rent caps or mass student debt relief.

Some policy experts who have worked closely with her office expect her to emphasize her commitment to improving “the care economy” through federal investments to improve child care, elder care and home care for people with disabilities.


But to beat Trump, Harris will probably need to communicate the administration’s economic wins better than many Democrats think Biden did. A majority of Americans – including Democrats – incorrectly said inflation is rising, an April Washington Post-Schar School poll found. Price increases are easing compared to inflation’s height in 2022.

“The challenge now is she needs to present a policy vision that has to be in line with the administration she served in, while also being unique to her,” said Kenneth Baer, who served as a budget official during the Obama administration.

5. Climate
Harris has long focused on fighting climate change in her political career.

She created an environmental justice office as the district attorney in San Francisco. As California attorney general, she sued oil companies to curb pollution. And in the Senate, she signed on to the Green New Deal, the ambitious plan to speed up the transition to a clean-energy economy.


When Harris ran against Biden for the Democratic nomination in 2020, she positioned herself to the left of him on climate. She advocated for banning fracking, while Biden did not go that far.

As Biden’s running mate, however, Harris synced up with him on the issue, asserting during the 2020 vice-presidential debate: “Joe Biden will not end fracking. He has been very clear about that.”

While the Biden administration has not lived up to some of Harris’s campaign promises, environmental groups have nonetheless been pleased with its record. They cite as the biggest achievement the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, a sweeping spending package that included $370 billion to curb greenhouse gas emissions and promote clean-energy initiatives.
 
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spaminator

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JD Vance slams Kamala Harris during his solo campaign debut as GOP vice presidential nominee
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Leah Willingham, Michelle L. Price, Julie Carr Smyth And Bill Barrow
Published Jul 22, 2024 • Last updated 1 day ago • 5 minute read

RADFORD, Va. — Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance used his first solo campaign rallies Monday to throw fresh barbs at Vice President Kamala Harris a day after President Joe Biden threw the presidential election into upheaval by dropping out and endorsing his second-in-command to lead Democrats against Donald Trump.


The Ohio senator campaigned at his former high school in Middletown before an evening stop in Radford, Virginia, two venues intended to play up his conservative populist appeal across the Rust Belt and small-town America that he said the Biden-Harris administration has forgotten.

“History will remember Joe Biden as not just a quitter, which he is, but as one of the worst presidents in the history of the United States of America,” Vance said in Virginia. “But my friends, Kamala Harris is a million times worse and everybody knows it. She signed up for every single one of Joe Biden’s failures, and she lied about his mental capacity to serve as president.”

Vance sought to saddle Harris with the administration’s record on inflation and immigration, clarifying the lines of attack that the Trump campaign will use even with the change at the top of the Democratic ticket. Harris still must be formally nominated but has quickly consolidated commitments from top party leaders and is now backed by more than half of the delegates needed to win her party’s nomination vote, according to an Associated Press survey.


“The border crisis is a Kamala Harris crisis,” Vance said, accusing Biden and Harris together of rolling back immigration policies that Trump enacted in his White House term. He added Harris is “even more extreme than Biden” because, Vance alleged, she has designs on abolishing federal immigration enforcement and domestic police forces.

Vance, 39, drew biographical contrasts with Harris, as well, comparing his service in the Marine Corps and small business ownership to Harris “collecting a government paycheck for the last 20 years.”

Harris, 59, was a local prosecutor, then California attorney general and a U.S. senator before she ran for president unsuccessfully in 2020 and became Biden’s running mate. Vance was elected to the Senate two years ago.


Vance also fulfilled his role as Trump’s biggest cheerleader, promising the former president would lead an era of peace and prosperity in a White House encore, while helping Republicans dominate House, Senate and state contests.


“We’ve got an opportunity to win races up and down the ballot,” he said.

He promised: “You’re going to see more and more products stamped with that beautiful logo: ‘Made in the USA.”‘ He also asked the crowd: “Who is sick of sending America’s sons and daughters into foreign lands they have no business in?”

The senator carefully stopped short of outright isolationism, however, pledging the U.S. would “punch back hard” when necessary. Vance did not detail any policy approach to the wars that have most vexed the Biden administration: Vladimir Putin’s Russian invasion of Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.


Those arguments are at the core of Trump’s “America First” brand and highlight Vance’s electoral strengths as the son of Appalachia who first came to national prominence with his memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy.” Trump’s campaign intends to use him heavily across the Rust Belt and swaths of small town America where voters have moved to the right and remain especially frustrated over decades of what Vance called “bad trade deals.”

Earlier Monday in Ohio, Vance tried to deflect the criticism that Trump, who has refused to accept his 2020 loss to Biden and tried to overturn the results, is a threat to democracy. The senator claimed that the real threat came from the push by “elite Democrats” who “decided to throw Joe Biden overboard” and then have the party line up behind a replacement without primary contests.


Democrats, he said in Virginia, lied “for three-and-a-half years” only to “pull a switcheroo.”

While Republicans promoted a unifying message at the Republican National Convention where Vance was nominated last week and decried inflammatory language in the wake of the assassination attempt against Trump, one of the first speakers to introduce Vance in Ohio suggested the country may need to come to civil war if Trump loses in November.

“I believe wholeheartedly, Donald Trump and Butler County’s JD Vance are the last chance to save our country,” said George Lang, a Republican state senator. “Politically, I’m afraid if we lose this one, it’s going to take a civil war to save the country and it will be saved. It’s the greatest experiment in the history of mankind.”


Lang later apologized after Harris’ team highlighted his remarks on a post on X.

“I regret the divisive remarks in the excitement of the moment on stage,” he said on the same social network. “Especially in light of the assassination attempt on President Trump last week, we should all be mindful of what is said at political events, myself included.”

Vance still has work to do raising his profile. A CNN poll conducted in late June found the majority of registered voters had never heard of Vance or had no opinion of him. Just 13% of registered voters said they had a favorable opinion of Vance and 20% had an unfavorable one, according to the poll.

During brief political career, he has has morphed from being a harsh Trump critic, at one point likening him to Adolf Hitler, to becoming a staunch defender of the former president.


After Vance was named as Trump’s running mate, a startling number of Republican delegates, who are typically party insiders and activists, said they did not know much about the senator.

In his hometown in Ohio, though, he was welcomed as a local star.

Darlene Gooding, 77, of Hamilton, said Vance will provide a welcome contrast to Trump.

“Trump doesn’t always come off the best. It’s all about him,” she said. “JD is wonderful. He gives you the idea he really cares about people.”

In Virginia, Trump backers were warming quickly to his new running mate.

Pamela Holloway, who came to see Vance in Radford, described herself as a former Democrat who has gravitated to Republicans. She said she recently bought Vance’s book to learn more about how his experiences have shaped his political outlook.

“He’s truthful,” she said of his writing. “He talks about his mother being an addict. He talks about the hardships with his grandmother” who raised him. “He talks about things that aren’t fake.”
 

Tecumsehsbones

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“History will remember Joe Biden as not just a quitter, which he is, but as one of the worst presidents in the history of the United States of America,” Vance said in Virginia. “But my friends, Kamala Harris is a million times worse and everybody knows it. She signed up for every single one of Joe Biden’s failures, and she lied about his mental capacity to serve as president.”
Wouldn't that make her "equally bad?" If you agreed with Biden on all that stuff, wouldn't you need to come up with some bad stuff on your own to be "a million times worse?"

Or is the flatbilly relying on his audience's stupidity and emotional instability?
 

petros

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Nov 21, 2008
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Wouldn't that make her "equally bad?" If you agreed with Biden on all that stuff, wouldn't you need to come up with some bad stuff on your own to be "a million times worse?"

Or is the flatbilly relying on his audience's stupidity and emotional instability?
Border
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris' support for Israel's security is "ironclad," her national security adviser Phil Gordon said on Sunday, adding that she has been briefed and is closely monitoring a rocket attack on a football ground in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

“The Vice President has been briefed and is closely monitoring Hezbollah’s horrific attack on a soccer field in Majdal Shams in northern Israel yesterday which killed a number of children and teenagers. She condemns this horrific attack and mourns for all those killed and wounded.

"Israel continues to face severe threats to its security, and the Vice President’s support for Israel’s security is ironclad," Gordon said in a statement.
 
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spaminator

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Harris to be sole Democratic presidential candidate heading into official party vote
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Robert Yoon
Published Jul 30, 2024 • 2 minute read

WASHINGTON — Vice-President Kamala Harris is the only White House hopeful who has qualified to compete for the Democratic presidential nomination, the Democratic National Committee said in a statement on Tuesday.


Although no other major Democrat had indicated any plans to challenge Harris, the DNC’s announcement officially clears the path for the vice-president to seek her party’s nomination uncontested, just nine days after President Joe Biden dropped out of the race and created a vacancy at the top of the ticket.

Harris will now face a vote by the party’s national convention delegates, who will officially ratify the nominee in a new online voting procedure adopted by the party last week. Voting will begin Thursday and will conclude on August 5, the release said. Votes for anyone other than Harris will be tallied as “present.” According to an Associated Press survey, Harris was the overwhelming choice of convention delegates to replace Biden as the party’s standard-bearer and face Republican former President Donald Trump on the ballot in November.


Under party rules, a candidate qualifies to compete for the nomination by submitting a notarized declaration of candidacy, meeting legal requirements to be president and securing the electronic signatures of at least 300 delegates, with no more than 50 signatures from any one delegation counting toward the 300 minimum. The DNC announced that 3,923 delegates had petitioned to nominate Harris.

Despite the early vote to select a nominee, delegates will still convene as planned in late August at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. The party will convene a ceremonial state-by-state roll call vote on the convention floor, followed by acceptance speeches by Harris and her soon-to-be-named running mate.


The release said automatic delegates, also known as superdelegates, will be allowed to vote on the first ballot since rank-and-file delegates were overwhelmingly for Harris. Automatic delegates include Democratic members of Congress and party leadership, and were not pledged to support any candidate even before Biden dropped out.

After the 2016 primary, the DNC scaled back the role of automatic delegates so that in competitive primaries, they generally cannot vote in the first round of voting. However, automatic delegates may vote in the first round if a candidate “has been certified by the DNC Secretary” to have obtained a majority of pledged delegates.
 

spaminator

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Kamala Harris becomes candidate of myth
Author of the article:Ben Shapiro
Published Jul 31, 2024 • 3 minute read

So Kamala Harris is the new Democratic candidate for president.


And, we’ve been told, she is incredible.

Not merely serviceable, a middle-innings relief pitcher brought in when your starter suddenly implodes in the third inning.

She is the Mariano Rivera of politics. She’s lights-out. She’s charismatic, fascinating, quick on her feet, charming.

She is, in the words of the legacy media, a historic candidate — not just because she’s a Black woman, a fact that explains her lightning-fast political ascent but that only Democrats are allowed to mention, and only then in the context of explaining why America requires a Black female president — but because she is, apparently, so good at this. Apparently, Harris was the candidate America needed all along. As in a bad rom-com, all we needed to do was remove her glasses, brush out her hair, put her in a better outfit and she would transform from high school weirdo nerd into prom queen.


The media’s shift in position regarding Harris has been whiplash-inducing. After all, we were told in 2020 that she had run one of the worst campaigns in modern presidential history — mechanical, off-putting, unpleasant, incompetent and arrogant. Then we were told she was one of the worst vice-presidents in modern history — free of accomplishment, running a completely dysfunctional office with extraordinary rates of staff turnover, so wildly unpopular that even U.S. President Joe Biden worried about whether Harris could compete with Donald Trump.

But now all is forgiven. All her oddities — coconut trees and electric school buses, Venn diagrams and the significance of the passage of time — are delightful TikTok memes.


Her strangely incoherent word salads, topped off with a heavy helping of smugness, are now evidence of her rhetorical brilliance. Her wild hand motions, so reminiscent of a drunken tarmac operator attempting unsuccessfully to usher a jumbo jet toward the gateway, are actually enchanting symptoms of her enthusiasm.

And her positional dishonesty — the fact she has now shifted virtually every position she ever held — is not evidence that she is a liar, but that she is astute and clever.

So, precisely what happened to turn Kamala Harris from a deeply disliked politician (35% approval rating) into an Obama-esque talent (44% approval rating)?

Joe Biden dropped out.

That’s it.

That’s the whole thing.

When Biden dropped out, the legacy media could finally end the rock-in-the-shoe discomfort of cognitive dissonance from which they had been suffering since Biden’s debate with Trump. They had been forced by circumstance into doing something they despise — objective journalism, in which Democrats are treated as normal figures subject to cross-examination. Since Barack Obama’s ascent nearly 20 years ago, the media have avoided just this sort of thing. Biden’s performance onstage compelled them to do some journalism. Otherwise, they would have been implicated in his health cover-up.


So they did.

But they didn’t like it.

Now Biden is gone. They can declare victory. And they can go right back to bathing in the warm, urine-filled kiddie pool of Democrat-media co-ordination they so enjoy. They’ve eaten their vegetables. Now it’s time for dessert — a heavy helping of Kamala cake. And they’re going to enjoy it.

The only question is whether the American people will fall for this quite obvious and heavy-handed routine. So far, some have. But presidential campaigns have a way of sanding off the varnish lacquered on by friendly media. After all, at one point, the legacy media gave Hillary Clinton the same treatment. It didn’t work out well.

In the end, politicians tend to stand or fall on their own merit. Which is terrible news for Kamala Harris, since she has none.

Shapiro is host of The Ben Shapiro Show and co-founder of Daily Wire+
 

Ron in Regina

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Although no other major Democrat had indicated any plans to challenge Harris, the DNC’s announcement officially clears the path for the vice-president to seek her party’s nomination uncontested, just nine days after President Joe Biden dropped out of the race and created a vacancy at the top of the ticket.
So, if some other Democrat floats to the surface of the pile, and dances the dance & jumps through the hoops…would Kamala have to split Biden’s $250,000,000.00 war chest she “inherited” or is that hers solely upon the endorsement of the handful of Democrat Royalty & Celebrity Endorsement she’s received so far since Biden stepped down out without stepping out down from the presidency until January 20th, 2025?
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Harris to be sole Democratic presidential candidate heading into official party vote
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Robert Yoon
Published Jul 30, 2024 • 2 minute read

WASHINGTON — Vice-President Kamala Harris is the only White House hopeful who has qualified to compete for the Democratic presidential nomination, the Democratic National Committee said in a statement on Tuesday.


Although no other major Democrat had indicated any plans to challenge Harris, the DNC’s announcement officially clears the path for the vice-president to seek her party’s nomination uncontested, just nine days after President Joe Biden dropped out of the race and created a vacancy at the top of the ticket.

Harris will now face a vote by the party’s national convention delegates, who will officially ratify the nominee in a new online voting procedure adopted by the party last week. Voting will begin Thursday and will conclude on August 5, the release said. Votes for anyone other than Harris will be tallied as “present.” According to an Associated Press survey, Harris was the overwhelming choice of convention delegates to replace Biden as the party’s standard-bearer and face Republican former President Donald Trump on the ballot in November.


Under party rules, a candidate qualifies to compete for the nomination by submitting a notarized declaration of candidacy, meeting legal requirements to be president and securing the electronic signatures of at least 300 delegates, with no more than 50 signatures from any one delegation counting toward the 300 minimum. The DNC announced that 3,923 delegates had petitioned to nominate Harris.

Despite the early vote to select a nominee, delegates will still convene as planned in late August at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. The party will convene a ceremonial state-by-state roll call vote on the convention floor, followed by acceptance speeches by Harris and her soon-to-be-named running mate.


The release said automatic delegates, also known as superdelegates, will be allowed to vote on the first ballot since rank-and-file delegates were overwhelmingly for Harris. Automatic delegates include Democratic members of Congress and party leadership, and were not pledged to support any candidate even before Biden dropped out.

After the 2016 primary, the DNC scaled back the role of automatic delegates so that in competitive primaries, they generally cannot vote in the first round of voting. However, automatic delegates may vote in the first round if a candidate “has been certified by the DNC Secretary” to have obtained a majority of pledged delegates.
I thought Trump was supposed to be the unopposed dictator? I know a coup when I see one. Well, the US is halfway there at this point.

They were really banking on that iggy on the roof to make a clean shot. That failed so plan B kicked in.

“Today is today, and yesterday was today yesterday. Tomorrow will be today, tomorrow. So live today, so the future today will be as the past today, as it is tomorrow mmmkay".
 
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pgs

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I thought Trump was supposed to be the unopposed dictator? I know a coup when I see one. Well, the US is halfway there at this point.

They were really banking on that iggy on the roof to make a clean shot. That failed so plan B kicked in.

“Today is today, and yesterday was today yesterday. Tomorrow will be today, tomorrow. So live today, so the future today will be as the past today, as it is tomorrow mmmkay".
I was therefor I am and what I was is what I was and today I am what I am . Can we have some spinach .
 
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Dixie Cup

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Harris to be sole Democratic presidential candidate heading into official party vote
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Robert Yoon
Published Jul 30, 2024 • 2 minute read

WASHINGTON — Vice-President Kamala Harris is the only White House hopeful who has qualified to compete for the Democratic presidential nomination, the Democratic National Committee said in a statement on Tuesday.


Although no other major Democrat had indicated any plans to challenge Harris, the DNC’s announcement officially clears the path for the vice-president to seek her party’s nomination uncontested, just nine days after President Joe Biden dropped out of the race and created a vacancy at the top of the ticket.

Harris will now face a vote by the party’s national convention delegates, who will officially ratify the nominee in a new online voting procedure adopted by the party last week. Voting will begin Thursday and will conclude on August 5, the release said. Votes for anyone other than Harris will be tallied as “present.” According to an Associated Press survey, Harris was the overwhelming choice of convention delegates to replace Biden as the party’s standard-bearer and face Republican former President Donald Trump on the ballot in November.


Under party rules, a candidate qualifies to compete for the nomination by submitting a notarized declaration of candidacy, meeting legal requirements to be president and securing the electronic signatures of at least 300 delegates, with no more than 50 signatures from any one delegation counting toward the 300 minimum. The DNC announced that 3,923 delegates had petitioned to nominate Harris.

Despite the early vote to select a nominee, delegates will still convene as planned in late August at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. The party will convene a ceremonial state-by-state roll call vote on the convention floor, followed by acceptance speeches by Harris and her soon-to-be-named running mate.


The release said automatic delegates, also known as superdelegates, will be allowed to vote on the first ballot since rank-and-file delegates were overwhelmingly for Harris. Automatic delegates include Democratic members of Congress and party leadership, and were not pledged to support any candidate even before Biden dropped out.

After the 2016 primary, the DNC scaled back the role of automatic delegates so that in competitive primaries, they generally cannot vote in the first round of voting. However, automatic delegates may vote in the first round if a candidate “has been certified by the DNC Secretary” to have obtained a majority of pledged delegates.
If I was one of the 14M people who voted for Biden, I'd be pissed. She's the only person running for President that hasn't received one bloody vote! But the elites must have their pick, screw the supporters. Laughably they said she was chosen from the "ground up" Say what???
 
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spaminator

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'Bully' Kamala Harris cursed at, berated staff, 2019 opinion piece claims
The op/ed was written by the father of an intern while Harris was California AG

Author of the article:Eddie Chau
Published Aug 02, 2024 • Last updated 17 hours ago • 2 minute read

Did the current vice-president of the United States previously act like a diva to her staff?


According to a recently unearthed opinion piece published in 2019 in The Union newspaper, the presidential hopeful used to constantly snap at her staff while throwing F-bombs when she was the attorney general for California.

The op/ed — entitled “Another Side to Kamala Harris” and penned by Prof. Terry McAteer — discusses the “eye-opening” month that his son Gregory had while interning for Harris. McAteer wrote his son has seen a side of Harris “which the general public does not know.”

The opinion piece also alleged that staff didn’t introduce Gregory to Harris because they were fearful of her when she was attorney general between 2011 and 2017, per New York Post.

While the professor said he had nothing against Harris, he said the politician didn’t show quality leadership skills nor was she a decent boss that a summer intern might expect. The Post noted Gregory’s now-deleted LinkedIn page stated he worked as a public policy intern under Harris from June-August 2011.


Previous reports had called Harris a “bully” by a staff member who had worked for her after she became vice-president in 2021. The ex-staffer told the Washington Post that it’s “clear that you’re not working with somebody who is willing to do the prep and the work” and that with Harris staff “have to put up with the constant amount of soul-destroying criticism and also her own lack of confidence.

“So you’re constantly sort of propping up a bull and it’s not really clear why,” said the staffer.

McAteer’s 2019 opinion piece resurfaced after government watchdog organization Open The Books reported Harris had a 91.5% staff turnover rate while serving in the White House, which surpasses President Joe Biden’s 77% turnover rate and Donald Trump’s 72% turnover rate while he was president.

Using payroll records as of March 31, 2024, Open the Books noted about four of the original 47 staff employed during Harris’ first year as vice-presidnet are still working for her. Harris currently has 50 staff as she campaigns to become the next president of the United States.
 

spaminator

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Harris has enough delegate votes to be party’s nominee, Democratic chair says
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Will Weissert And Chris Megerian
Published Aug 02, 2024 • Last updated 16 hours ago • 3 minute read

WASHINGTON (AP) — Vice President Kamala Harris has secured enough votes from delegates to become her party’s nominee for president, Democratic National Committee Chair Jaime Harrison said Friday.


The announcement was made before the online voting process ends on Monday, reflecting the breakneck speed of a campaign that is eager to maintain momentum after President Joe Biden ended his reelection bid and endorsed Harris as his successor less than two weeks ago.

Harris is poised to be the first woman of color at the top of a major party’s ticket, and she joined a call with supporters to say she is “honored to be the presumptive Democratic nominee.”

“It’s not going to be easy. But we’re going to get this done,” she added. “As your future president, I know we are up to this fight.”

Harrison pledged that Democrats “will rally around Vice President Kamala Harris and demonstrate the strength of our party” during their convention in Chicago later this month.


The Democratic National Committee did not provide details of the delegate vote count, including a number or state-by-state breakdowns, during a virtual event that had the flavor of a telethon, with campaign officials keeping tabs on a delegate-counting process whose result is a foregone conclusion.

No other candidate challenged Harris for the nomination, and she swiftly solidified Democratic support in the days after Biden endorsed her.

Democrats still plan a state-by-state roll call during the party’s convention, the traditional way that a nominee is chosen. However, that will be purely ceremonial because of the online voting.

As Harris prepares to face off with Republican nominee Donald Trump, her campaign is reorganizing its senior staff and bringing on a coterie of veterans of President Barack Obama’s successful campaigns.


David Plouffe will serve as a senior adviser focused on Harris’ pathway to the 270 Electoral College votes she needs to win the election. To take the role, he will stop consulting for TikTok, the social media app, as well as a podcast that he was hosting with Kellyanne Conway, the former Trump campaign manager, according to a person familiar with his plans.

In addition, Stephanie Cutter will advise on messaging and strategy, while Mitch Stewart will serve as senior adviser for battleground states. Brian Nelson, who until recently was an undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence at the Treasury Department, has shifted to the campaign to advise Harris on policy.

Despite the new additions, many aspects of the campaign remain the same from when Biden was the candidate. Jen O’Malley Dillon still serves as chairwoman and will oversee the entire staff structure.


Other unchanged senior roles include Julie Chavez Rodriguez as campaign manager, Quentin Fulks as principal deputy campaign manager and Michael Tyler as communications director.

Sheila Nix will continue as Harris’ senior adviser and chief of staff on the campaign. Former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Marcia Fudge, who was recently brought on as a campaign co-chair, is expanding her portfolio to include outreach and strategy.

Brian Fallon, who had been Harris’ campaign communications director when Biden was still on the ticket, will now serve as senior adviser of communications.

Elizabeth Allen, most recently an undersecretary at the State Department, will be chief of staff for Harris’ running mate, who has not yet been chosen. Harris is expected to interview candidates over the weekend.

Democratic officials have said the accelerated roll call process was necessary because of an Aug. 7 deadline to ensure candidates appear on the Ohio ballot.

Ohio state lawmakers have since changed the deadline, but the modification doesn’t take effect until Sept. 1. Democratic attorneys said that waiting until after the initial deadline to determine a presidential nominee could prompt a legal challenge.
 

bob the dog

Council Member
Aug 14, 2020
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"We will work together, and continue to work together, to address these issues…and to work together as we continue to work, operating from the new norms, rules, and agreements, that we will convene to work together...we will work on this together."