Knives Out for Kamala Harris as Democratic Blame Game Begins
Democratic figures have hit out against Vice President Kamala Harris , her choice of running mate, and how she ran her campaign following the vice president's crushing election defeat to Donald Trump .
The nature of the presidential election loss, as well as the party losing control of the Senate and possibly the House to the GOP, has left some Democrats angry and questioning the future of the party.
A number of Democratic lawmakers, operatives, and aides have now given their views on why Harris suffered such a heavy loss in the November 5 election. These range from her choosing Minnesota Governor Tim Walz as the vice presidential candidate, failing to distance herself enough from President Joe Biden , to the party abandoning working class voters.
Others have laid the blame purely on Biden for not dropping out of the 2024 race sooner and for giving Harris the difficult job of winning over voters after he recorded at times historically low approval ratings. Biden's term in office saw high levels of inflation and a cost of living crisis, with voters frequently citing the economy as their number one election issue.
Newsweek has contacted the White House and Harris' campaign team for comment via email.
Independent Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders , who ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2016 and 2020, blamed the party and its leadership for ignoring working class voters during the "disastrous" campaign.
"It should come as no great surprise that a Democratic Party which has abandoned working class people would find that the working class has abandoned them," Sanders said in a statement.
"First it was the working class, and now it is Latino and Black voters as well. While the Democratic leadership defends the status quo, the American people are angry and want change. And they're right."
David Sirota, a senior adviser for Sanders' 2020 presidential campaign, expressed a similar sentiment about why Harris and the party had a "very bad night" in the election.
"Some of us spent years warning Dems to take working-class politics more seriously and to not tout neocons," Sirota posted on X, formerly Twitter . "We did so in hopes of avoiding this, and yet we were vilified as traitors by Dem elites and liberal pundits. There's a lesson here."
Lindy Li, a political commentator and Democratic National Committee member, suggested that Harris made a mistake in picking Walz over Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro as her running mate.
Shapiro was seen as one of the front-runners for the vice presidential candidate position to help Harris win the crucial battleground state of Pennsylvania. Trump managed to flip the Keystone State, as well as the other key blue wall battleground states of Wisconsin and Michigan, which were crucial for Harris' hopes of election victory.
"I know a lot of people are probably wondering tonight what would have happened had Shapiro been on the ticket," Li, who is also Pennsylvania commissioner, told Fox News . "And not only in terms of Pennsylvania. He's famously a moderate. So that would have signaled to the American people that she is not the San Francisco liberal that Trump said she was."
"In the eyes of the American people, [Walz] was the governor who oversaw the [George Floyd] protests in Minnesota and probably let it go on longer than he should have. So that has been seared in the minds of the American people," she added.
Li also said Harris made a mistake during her appearance on ABC 's The View in October. When the vice president was asked what she would have done differently over the past four years compared to Biden, she replied: "Not a thing comes to mind."
Li told Fox News: "That was the opener for her to show Americans that she's going to get tough on the border, that she's going to take drastic measures to bring down inflation. That was her chance."
Others also suggested Harris failed to distance herself enough from Biden and attempt to offer a change of direction for the country going forward.
Biden was considered an unpopular president among voters who spent months seeking reelection despite concerns about the 81-year-old's ability to run for a second term in office. By the time Biden ended his 2024 bid and endorsed Harris, the vice president had around 100 days to convince voters to support her own campaign.
"We ran the best campaign we could, considering Joe Biden was president," one unnamed Harris aide told Politico. "Joe Biden is the singular reason Kamala Harris and Democrats lost."
Massachusetts Representative Seth Moulton, who was one of the first Democrats to urge Biden to end his reelection bid after the president's disastrous CNN debate performance, said it "would have been better" if Harris had taken part and won the 2024 Democratic primary.
"[I]t was necessary for the Democratic nominee to separate him or herself from an unpopular incumbent, as much as we love Joe Biden," Moulton told Politico. "None of those things happened."
Jamal Simmons, the vice president's former communications director, said Harris fully breaking from Biden for her campaign would have been a "trap" and seized upon as another Republican attack line.
"You can't really run away from the president who chooses you," Simmons told the BBC .
MSNBC's Joy Reid defended Harris, suggesting the vice president had a "historic flawlessly run" campaign which included the endorsement of several high-profile celebrities such as Taylor Swift and Beyoncé.
"You could not have run a better campaign in that short period of time," Reid said.
Harris formally conceded the election to Trump during a speech at Howard University in Washington, D.C, on Wednesday, urging her supporters "do not despair" at the results.
"This is not a time to throw up our hands. This is a time to roll up our sleeves," Harris said. "This is a time to organize, to mobilize and to stay engaged for the sake of freedom and justice and the future that we all know we can build together."