Kamala Harris Just Reignited a Fire Her Party Wanted to Forget — And It’s Not Going Out Quietly
It’s been more than six months since Kamala Harris lost the 2024 election. The campaign is over, the votes are in, and Donald Trump is back in the White House. But now, with the release of her new memoir “107 Days,” Harris has done something most politicians wait years to do.
She’s reopening the wounds. And the timing? It’s hard to ignore.
On national TV this week, Harris defended her decisions, reshaped key moments, and took aim at the very campaign many in her party are still trying to understand. But what’s stirring the pot isn’t just what she said — it’s why she said it, and when.
Just as Democrats are trying to regroup, rebrand, and move on, Harris is back — and so is the division.
Her media blitz kicked off Monday night with MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow. Then came Good Morning America. And by Tuesday, she was back on The View, the same place where, nearly a year earlier, she refused to publicly challenge Joe Biden’s decision to run again — a moment critics now say was a major misstep.
After having called President Trump a communist, Kamala Harris now says she supports Zohran Mamdani, a communist.
You can’t make this stuff up.pic.twitter.com/7IAhwtHlwP
— Paul A. Szypula
(@Bubblebathgirl) September 23, 2025
That interview, once seen as a fumble, has become the centerpiece of a storm that just won’t fade.
But Harris doesn’t see it that way.
She told Maddow that her choices were about timing, not weakness. She said her decision not to run with Pete Buttigieg — whom she once considered as a running mate — wasn’t about prejudice, but political calculation. In her words: “Maybe I was being too cautious.”
But caution, it seems, hasn’t followed her onto this book tour.
In fact, her own words are fueling a backlash within her own ranks. Democratic strategists, former staffers, even potential 2028 candidates — many are shaking their heads. Quietly, and sometimes not so quietly, they’re asking: What’s the endgame here?
Scott Bessent just ENDED both Kamala Harris and Pete Buttigieg’s careers in one fell swoop.
Bessent, who is gay, was asked to respond to Kamala’s recent claim that she didn’t choose Buttigieg as a running mate because he was gay.
He laid out three reasons why that excuse is… pic.twitter.com/HnaxkS5L1e
— Vigilant Fox
(@VigilantFox) September 24, 2025
Michael Hardaway, a senior Democratic strategist, said Harris had a real chance to be a “critical voice in the resistance.” But instead, he says, her book feels “unhelpful and divisive.”
An adviser to another top Democrat didn’t hold back either, calling it “a gossip book” that put pettiness over vision. They added, “It’s embarrassing… considering she was the leader of the party less than a year ago.”
It’s not the first time Democrats have felt whiplash from a post-election memoir. Hillary Clinton’s “What Happened” drew similar frustration in 2017. Now, with Joe Biden reportedly working on a memoir of his own, some in the party are starting to feel the weight of too much reflection — and not enough rebuilding.
MUST WATCH: Kamala Harris is on her “BOOK TOUR”… and she’s recycling the SAME SCRIPT for EVERY SINGLE INTERVIEW
pic.twitter.com/U25FpS9695
— Jesse Watters (@JesseBWatters) September 24, 2025
Harris did take some responsibility. She told The View that “many factors” led to their loss — but ultimately, “we just didn’t have enough time.”
Still, her critics say it’s not just what’s in the book — it’s how it’s landing with voters. Some public polling shows Harris’ favorability has dipped since October 2024, and there’s growing concern that appearances like this week’s are reinforcing a narrative that she’s struggling to shake.
Even former Obama adviser David Axelrod weighed in, saying if the book was meant as a comeback — “it didn’t get off the pad.”
Others warn of a different risk — that she’s coming off not as a fighter, but a sore loser.
NEW: Kamala Harris appears to think she almost beat President Trump in the 2024 election, says it was the “closest presidential race in the 21st century.”
“It’s important to me that when history is written, that my voice be present.”
Harris lost the Electoral College 312-226… pic.twitter.com/mOQ1yXnCrs
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) September 23, 2025
And then there’s the matter of Biden.
In her book and again on TV, Harris says she regrets not confronting him sooner. She even called his decision to run again “reckless.” That word, more than any other, echoed across media rooms and D.C. offices all week. Her supporters say it’s honesty. Her critics call it fuel for Republicans.
Harris has not said whether she’ll run again. On Good Morning America, she brushed off the question, saying, “I’m not focused on that right now.”
But the silence around 2028 may be just as loud as anything she’s said on camera.
For now, the party seems unsure how to respond. One former campaign staffer said the risk is simple: If Harris continues to be seen as someone still litigating the past, the future — for her, and possibly for the party — gets harder to write.
CNN forced to admit that no one likes Kamala Harris
“She is not well liked…The American people, they don’t want this.”
— Derrick Evans (@DerrickEvans4WV) September 23, 2025
And whether this is a new beginning or a final chapter for Kamala Harris? That’s the question no one’s ready to answer.












(@Bubblebathgirl)
(@VigilantFox)
MUST WATCH: Kamala Harris is on her “BOOK TOUR”… and she’s recycling the SAME SCRIPT for EVERY SINGLE INTERVIEW 
Continue with Google