Column: Kamala Harris won’t cure what ails the Democratic Party
William Henry Harrison, the ninth president of the United States, was the last commander in chief born a British subject and the first member of the Whig Party to win the White House. He delivered the longest inaugural address in history, nearly two hours, and had the shortest presidency, being the first sitting president to die in office, just 31 days into his term.
Oh, there is one more bit of trivia about the man who gave us the slogan โTippecanoe and Tyler Too.โ Harrison was the last politician to lose his first presidential election and then win the next one (Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson managed that before him). Richard Nixon lost only to win way down the road. (Grover Cleveland and Trump are the only two to win, lose and then win again.)
Everyone else since Harrisonโs era who lost on the first try and ran again in the next election lost again. Democrat Adlai Stevenson and Republican Thomas Dewey ran twice and lost twice. Henry Clay and William Jennings Bryan each ran three times in a row and lost (Clay ran on three different party tickets). Voters, it seems, donโt like losers.
These are not encouraging results for Kamala Harris, who announced last week she will not be running for governor in California, sparking speculation that she wants another go at the White House.
But history isnโt what she should worry about. Itโs the here and now. The Democratic Party is wildly unpopular. Itโs net favorability ( 30 points) is nearly triple the GOPโs (11 points). The Democratic Party is more unpopular than any time in the last 35 years. When Donald Trumpโs unpopularity with Democrats should be having the opposite effect, 63% of Americans have an unfavorable view of the party.
Why? Because Democrats are mad at their own party โ both for losing to Trump and for failing to provide much of an obstacle to him now that heโs in office. As my Dispatch colleague Nick Cattogio puts it, โEven Democrats have learned to hate Democrats.โ
Itโs not all Harrisโ fault. Indeed, the lionโs share of the blame goes to Joe Biden and the coterie of enablers who encouraged him to run again.
Harrisโ dilemma is that she symbolizes Democratic discontent with the party. That discontent isnโt monolithic. For progressives, the objection is that Democrats arenโt fighting hard enough. For the more centrist wing of the party, the problem is the Democrats are fighting for the wrong things, having lurched too far left on culture war and identity politics. Uniting both factions is visceral desire to win. Thatโs awkward for a politician best known for losing.
Almost the only reason Harris was positioned to be the nominee in 2024 was that she was a diversity pick. Biden was explicit that he would pick a woman and, later, an African American running mate. And the same dynamic made it impossible to sideline her when Biden withdrew.
Of course, most Democrats donโt see her race and gender as a problem, and in the abstract they shouldnโt. Indeed, every VP pick is a diversity pick, including the white guys. Running mates are chosen to appeal to some part of a coalition.
So Harrisโ problem isnโt her race or sex; itโs her inability to appeal to voters in a way that expands the Democratic coalition. For Democrats to win, they need someone who can flip Trump voters. She didnโt lose because of low Democratic turnout, she lost because sheโs uncompelling to a changing electorate.
Her gauzy, often gaseous, rhetoric made her sound like a dean of students at a small liberal arts college. With the exception of reproductive rights, her convictions sounded like they were crafted by focus groups, at a time when voters craved authenticity. Worse, Harris acquiesced to Bidenโs insistence she not distance herself from him.
Such clubby deference to the establishment combined with boilerplate pandering to progressive constituencies โ learned from years of San Francisco and California politics โ makes her the perfect solution to a problem that doesnโt exist.
Her choice to appear on Stephen Colbertโs โThe Late Showโ for her first interview since leaving office was telling. CBS recently announced it was terminating both Colbert and the show, insisting it was purely a business decision. But the reason for the broadcast networkโs decision stemmed in part from the fact that Colbert narrow-casts his expensive show to a very small, very anti-Trump slice of the electorate.
โI donโt want to go back into the system. I think itโs broken,โ Harris lamented to Colbert, decrying the โnaรฏveโ and โfecklessโ lack of โleadershipโ and the โcapitulationโ of those who โconsider themselves to be guardians of our system and our democracy.โ
Thatโs all catnip to Colbertโs ideologically committed audience. But thatโs not the audience Democrats need to win. And thatโs why, if Democrats nominate her again, sheโll probably go down in history as an answer to a trivia question. And it wonโt be โWho was the 48th president of the United States?โ
@JonahDispatch
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Ideas expressed in the piece
- The Democratic Party faces historic unpopularity, with a net favorability 30 points lower than Republicans, driven by widespread dissatisfaction among its own base over losses to Trump and perceived ineffectiveness in opposing his policies[1].
- Kamala Harrisโ political challenges stem from internal Democratic factions: progressives blame her for insufficient fight while centrists view her as emblematic of leftward shifts on cultural issues, both detractors united by a desire to win[1].
- Harrisโs VP selection was viewed as a diversity-driven symbolic gesture by Biden, limiting her ability to build broader appeal beyond traditional Democratic coalitions, as seen in her 2024 loss[1].
- Her communication style is criticized as overly generic and focus-group-driven, lacking authenticity required to attract Trump voters, while her ties to Biden and reluctance to distance herself from his leadership are seen as electoral liabilities[1].
- Historical precedents suggest candidates who lose once rarely regain viability in subsequent elections, with Harrisโ potential 2028 bid viewed skeptically in light of this pattern[1].
- Democratic messaging under Harris risks pandering to niche progressive audiences (e.g., her Colbert interview appeal) rather than expanding outreach to swing voters, exacerbating perceptions of elitism[1].
Different views on the topic
- Harris remains a strong potential front-runner in the 2026 California governorโs race, with analysts noting her viability despite a crowded field and lingering questions about Bidenโs health influencing her decision-making[1].
- The Democratic Party is actively reassessing its strategy post-2024, focusing on reconnecting with working-class voters and addressing core issues like affordability and homelessness, suggesting a shift toward pragmatic problem-solving[1].
- Harrisโ announcement to forgo the governorโs race has been interpreted as positioning for a 2028 presidential bid, reflecting her ability to navigate political calculations with long-term ambition[2].
- Internal criticisms, such as Antonio Villaraigosaโs demand for transparency on Bidenโs health, reflect broader party debates about leadership accountability rather than a rejection of Harrisโ Senate or VP legacy[1].
- Other rising Democratic voices, like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Gov. Tim Walz, embody alternatives to Harrisโ messaging, indicating the partyโs capacity to diversify leadership beyond established figures[2].