CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY,
OCTOBER 14, 2025, OR THEREAFTER
BY
THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DID HARRIS WRITE HERSELF OUT OF THE ’28
RACE?”
Two
absolute essentials must accompany any candidate who seeks to make a serious
run for president, or even lesser but still powerful jobs like governor or U.S.
senator:
No
one can make a serious run without serious funding. So multiple sources of big
money are a must. So are major allies. Not only do they go on the road as
surrogates at times, but they recruit other supporters, some of whom provide
the first essential, big money.
For
a candidate to alienate the most powerful individuals in their political party
even before a race gets going seriously is an unheard-of no-no.
But
that is what former Vice President Kamala Harris may have done in her campaign
memoir 107 Days, published in a season when many candidates issue bland
autobiographical tomes that purport to carry important messages aimed to draw
millions of voters. Most don’t attract many voters, while also containing few
important messages.
The
new Harris book is different. It’s almost like a deliberate effort to alienate
potential supporters and snub her nose at the money they might be capable of
raising.
Take
her complaint about Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who she briefly considered as
her vice presidential running mate in 2024: He was initially reluctant or
non-committal when she asked for his endorsement just after ex-President Joe
Biden gave up the Democratic nomination for his office and handed it off to
Harris.
Did
Pritzker want a day or two to determine whether the party would accept Biden’s
edict and quickly anoint Harris as the candidate? Did he want to be offered an
incentive?
Both
would have been reasonable responses to Harris’ quick ascension.
But
his pace did not satisfy Harris, a fact now announced in print. So much for
Pritzker’s support if Harris runs again in 2028.
And
there’s her response to California Gov. Gavin Newsom, her fellow endorsee of
former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown, and her longtime supposed friend and
stablemate (they’ve shared campaign consultants).
She
claims he didn’t take her first call after Biden dropped out, texting back
“Hiking. Will call back.” He didn’t do that. So even though he did issue a full
endorsement within hours, that was too slow for Harris, who apparently expects
her colleagues to ask “how high” the moment she says “jump.”
If
this sounds like minor byplay, that’s what it should have been. It probably
wasn’t worth a mention in her book, or any other, but reflects an irritability
that hasn’t worked well for any modern presidential candidate except Donald
Trump. The rest have all tried to appear universally amiable.
Harris
sprinkled other, similar, bon mots though her book. Pennsylvania Gov. Josh
Shapiro, whom she considered for vice president, is “overly ambitious (and)
confident,” Harris writes, and “would want to be in the room for every major
decision.” Shouldn’t any veep want that?
Then
there’s Pete Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Ind., and Biden’s
transportation secretary. He would have been “too big a risk,” as she didn’t
believe the electorate was prepared to back both a gay man (Buttigieg) and a
black woman (herself) simultaneously. But she writes Buttigieg was actually her
first choice for vice president, even though she picked Minnesota Gov. Tim
Walz. What now, if Walz is reelected next year?
If
someone wanted to alienate powerful Democrats, it would be difficult to do it
more thoroughly than Harris seems to have tried to do. Mark Kelly, senator from
Arizona, “lacks political battle scars.” Does that mean he’s too popular, for
he certainly has other kinds of scars as the steadfast, supportive husband of
onetime assassination target Gabby Giffords.
All
of which raises the question of whether Harris really wants to run for
president again. Would she have criticized so many powerful Democrats if she
were hungry for both their support and the further backing they could bring
along in 2028?
Harris
plainly didn’t want to be governor of California, or go through the rough
campaign that she’d need to win that job. Now she’s also given voters plenty of
reason to wonder how much she wants to be president.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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