Kamala Harris tells Stephen Colbert the American system is ‘broken’

In her first interview since losing the election to President Trump and leaving office, former Vice President Kamala Harris told Stephen Colbert on βThe Late Showβ that her decision not to run for California governor was more βbasicβ than saving herself for a βdifferent officeβ β which is to say, another run for president in 2028.
After years of being a βdevout public servant,β Harris said in the interview, set to air Thursday night, she just doesnβt want to be βin the systemβ right now.
βRecently I made the decision that I just β for now β I donβt want to go back in the system,β she said. βI think itβs broken.β
She said that was not to take away from the important work being done every day by βso many good people who are public servants,β such as teachers, firefighters, police officers and scientists.
βItβs not about them,β she said. βBut you know, I believe, and I always believed, that as fragile as our democracy is, our systems would be strong enough to defend our most fundamental principles. And I think right now that theyβre not as strong as they need to be.β
She said she instead wants to travel the country and talk to Americans in a setting that isnβt βtransactional, where Iβm asking for their vote.β
Colbert said to hear Harris β whom he called βvery qualified for the presidencyβ β say that the American system is broken was βharrowing.β
βWell, but itβs also evident, isnβt it?β Harris replied, to applause from the studio audience.
The interview came on the heels of Harrisβ announcements this week that she is not running for California governor and is releasing a memoir about her short, whirlwind presidential campaign following President Bidenβs decision to drop from the race, and it was a big get for Colbert in what appears to be his final chapter on late-night TV.
CBS, blaming financial concerns across late night, announced July 17 that the 2025-2026 season of βThe Late Showβ would be its last.
The announcement followed Colbert sharply criticizing Paramount Globalβs $16-million settlement with Trump over a CBS News β60 Minutesβ interview with Harris during the presidential campaign, which Trump accused the venerable news show of manipulating to make her look better.
Paramount Global was at the time seeking a major merger with Skydance Media and needed the Trump administrationβs approval, which it ultimately got. Just days before the announcement that his show would be ending, Colbert described the β60 Minutesβ settlement as a bribe to get the merger deal done.
All that caused many observers and allies of Colbert to speculate that the cancellation of the show was political in nature. The Writers Guild of America, for example, said the company appeared to be βsacrificing free speech to curry favor with the Trump Administration.β
Trump said it was βnot trueβ that he was βsolely responsible for the firing of Stephen Colbert,β and that the βreason he was fired was a pure lack of TALENTβ and that Colbertβs show was losing Paramount millions of dollars a year.
βAnd it was only going to get WORSE!β Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
Paramount has said the decision was βnot related in any way to the showβs performance, content or other matters happening at Paramount,β though some polling has suggested many Americans donβt believe the company.
Itβs unclear whether Harris considered any of that in granting Colbert her first interview since leaving office. However, it would almost certainly not have been her only reason.
Colbert is liberal and seen as a friendly interviewer by Democrats.
During Thursdayβs interview, the late-night host heaped praise on Harris. After saying it was βharrowingβ to hear she feels the system is broken, he asked whether she was giving up fighting.
Harris said she was not.
βI am always going to be part of the fight,β Harris said. βThat is not going to change.β