Start with the fleeting time Harris was given to campaign. She had four months while former Donald Trump had been campaigning for president since he left office. Add to this her not standing firm in her polices,
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.
“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.”
Could the VP make a run for California governor in 2026? While Harris hasn't announced what's next for her, a new poll released Wednesday shows she would have the support of some voters.
Trump received 75.9 million votes as of Nov. 14. That's more than the total for Harris and all third-party candidates combined.
Nearly one-quarter of Harris voters, 24%, said Biden is more to blame for the election outcome, according to an Economist/YouGov poll. A far smaller share, 6%, pin more of the blame on Harris. Meanwhile, the majority of Harris voters, 53%, blame neither, saying “it was just a bad year for Democrats.”
The Harris-Walz campaign may have crossed the finish line with tens of millions in debt that may now be the Democratic Party's problem.
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Some critics think Kamala Harris failed sufficiently to “pivot to the center” when the Trump campaign was pounding her as “radical communist”; others believe she erred by failing to go hard-core lefty populist.
Harris won states including Delaware, which requires voters to show valid identification when voting in person.
In an interview, Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin attributed her narrow victory to her efforts in rural Wisconsin.