Vice President Kamala Harris spent $1.5 billion in her hyper-compressed 15-week presidential campaign. Now her operation faces questions over where exactly all that cash went.
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Democrats are sending persistent appeals to Harris supporters without expressly asking them to cover any potential debts, enticing would-be donors instead with other matters.
Donald Trump's presidential victory was too big for any ground game operation to overcome, Kamala Harris supporters say.
Frustrated fans on social media noted that Snoop was previously anti-Trump, but he stayed out of the fray this year.
Eight years later, Vice President Kamala Harris assumed the Democratic nomination following President Joe Biden ’s decision to withdraw from the race, meaning another woman was within striking distance of finally winning the White House.
Nate Silver says he has “a lot of sympathy” for Kamala Harris after her loss, saying that Joe Biden “did her no favors”—although he maintained that she was still a “replacement-level candidate” in her own right.
She’s going out on a low note. J. Ann Selzer is retiring from election polling just weeks after her once-respected poll showed that Kamala Harris was leading in Iowa — only for Trump to win the state by more than 13 percentage points on Election Day.
Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign and the Democratic National Committee spent close to $1.5 billion in their unsuccessful presidential bid, but they didn’t go into debt doing so, according to the campaign’s chief financial officer.
MSNBC host Jen Psaki analyzed what Democrats "got wrong" about voters and their priorities while she criticized some of the rhetoric coming from the left.
Ohio, ripped fellow Democrats for thinking celebrity endorsements would propel the party to winning the presidency and other elections this cycle.
“Biden/Harris don’t bear primary blame for the inflation,” said Jeffrey Frankel, a Harvard University economist. “Primary blame, rather, goes to supply constraints as the economy came out of COVID and the acceleration of commodity prices that came with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.”