
Whatâs Kamala Harrisâs secret? In mid-June, she was a political liability for Joe Biden. Now, sheâs running neck-and-neck with Donald Trump. In July, Harris was less popular than either Biden or Trump. Now, sheâs more popular than both of them. In July, Harris was an awkward but loyal soldier in a doddering administration. Now, weâre told that sheâs a cultural phenomenon. The next Obama. Sheâs âbratââwhatever that means.
Harrisâs new status isnât due to her policy proposals. She hardly has any. Her public speeches are fine, but sheâs no Cicero. Oratory isnât her strength. Nor has she become more popular because sheâs often in the public eye. On the contrary: Harris has limited her campaign appearances. She hasnât had an official press conference or a solo interview since Biden dropped out. Thereâs something guarded about Harris, a part of herself that sheâs reluctant or unwilling to reveal. Many voters like her anyway.
Harris has benefited from adulatory media, for sure. According to the Media Research Center, she received 84 percent positive coverage in her first month as a candidate, a far cry from Trumpâs 89 percent negative coverage during the same period. She faced few tough questions, and even fewer follow-ups, during her joint interview with running mate Tim Walz on CNN last week. The Trump campaign has found it difficult to cut through the thicket of stories that celebrate Harrisâs joy and vibes, her passion for cooking, and her adoring fans.
Worshipful press coverage doesnât fully explain the reversal of Harrisâs fortunes. A politicianâs favorability usually trends in one direction: downward. There are times when events cause an elected officialâs or a candidateâs popularity to spike, such as the public rallying behind President George W. Bush after 9/11 or John Kerry riding pro-veteran sentiment to win the 2004 Democratic primary. But the sweet feelings eventually turn sour.
This makes Harris unique. Her reputation has crashed and burned not once but twiceâafter her 2019 presidential campaign debacle, then after her 2021 interview with NBCâs Lester Holtâonly to respawn for reasons out of her control. The word for that is luck.
My theory is Democrats and Democrat-leaning independents were so happy to see Joe Biden off the ticket that they would have fallen in line behind anyone. Harris was savvyâand well-placedâto lock up the nomination before rivals entered the ring. Sheâs been riding a wave of positive energy since July that has boosted her favorability, upped her game, and deluged her with fundraising. The energy is psychic: relief and excitement that Democrats have a chance to keep Trump from returning to the White House. The surprise, unbidden possibility of victory endowed Harris with a mystique. Sheâs made the most of it, but the effect may be starting to fade.
The Harris mystique depends on ignorance of her past. Most Americans donât know or care who the vice president isâa June YouGov poll found that just 33 percent of Americans knew the Democrats had announced Bidenâs running mate. As a consequence, Harris had an opportunity to refashion herself for the 2024 electorate. She presented herself as warm, friendly, and nonthreatening while aides revised history. They convinced friendly reporters that no, Biden hadnât put her in charge of the border crisis in the spring of 2021. They told reporters that Harris had abandoned positions such as decriminalizing illegal immigration, banning fracking, gun buybacks, and eliminating plastic straws. Presto: The second-most liberal senator in the 21st century became Mamala. The left-wing governor of Minnesota became Coach Walz.
The Harris mystique also shields the candidate from easy definition. Her campaign appropriates GOP symbols, tropes, and rhetoric to such an extent that, if you ignore the blue hair in the crowd, it can be hard to distinguish Harris rallies from Romney rallies 12 years ago. Her speech Wednesday in North Hampton, N.H., was a case in point. Audience members held up signs reading âOpportunity Economyâ and âA New Way Forward.â Harris praised freedom, patriotism, small business, and the Constitution. She attacked Trumpâs tariffs as âin effect a national sales tax.â Listening to Harris extol the virtues of enterprise, youâd have no idea that she cast the deciding vote on the spending splurge that drove historic inflation, that her administration has imposed almost $1.4 trillion in regulations, that she wants to weaken right-to-work laws, and that she wants Congress to pass $5 trillion of new taxes over 10 years.
In New Hampshire, Harris touted a hike in the capital gains tax rate to 28 percent from 20 percent. She didnât mention that her tax plan also includes a surcharge on millionaires of 5 percent, bringing the top rate to 33 percent. Thatâs a 65 percent increase, yet Harrisâs speech was treated by the press as a sign of pro-business moderation. Plus, Harris hasnât spelled out her position on taxing unrealized capital gainsâassets that have increased in price but havenât been sold. Meaning youâd have to use cash to pay the tax bill for changes in the value of paper assets. Which is insane.
Reparations for slavery? Harris is coy. Universal Basic Income? Sheâs demure. Abolishing private health insurance? The Harris whisperers say sheâs no longer interested. But she hasnât said so herself. And Dana Bash didnât ask her about the neo-socialist Medicare for All on CNN. The Harris mystique was too powerful.
Powerful, at least, among Democrats and the press. There are signs the voting public may be developing some immunity to Harrisâs obfuscations. Sheâs made progress, but the race is a tossup. The polls are too close to draw firm conclusions. Each policy rollout raises more questions. The Sept. 10 debate with Trump looms. He could use the moment to dispel the Harris mystique by defining her as a lefty weakling unsuited to lead the United States. A blown opportunity would allow Harrisâs campaign of concealment, misdirection, amnesia, and euphemism to continue through Election Dayâand into the White House.
Original News Source â Washington Free Beacon
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