
Kamala Harris is back in the news, but not for the reasons she might hope. After her crushing defeat in the 2024 presidential election, she’s now touring the country to promote her new book, “107 Days.” But instead of rebuilding her image, Harris seems to be making things worse—much worse.
Political commentator Joe Concha recently called her book tour an “absolute disaster.” And he’s right. Harris lost big in 2024. She didn’t just lose the presidency. She lost every swing state. She lost the popular vote. She lost the confidence of the American people. In fact, 89% of counties shifted more Republican than Democrat. That tells us everything we need to know: voters rejected the radical left-wing policies she tried to push.
Yet now, Harris is on a book tour, acting as if her failed campaign was something to celebrate. She’s trying to sell a story of strength and resilience, but the facts don’t lie. Her campaign was disorganized, full of missteps, and out of touch with everyday Americans. She skipped key events like the Al Smith Dinner and avoided tough interviews like one with Joe Rogan. Those are not the actions of a serious leader—they’re signs of someone hiding from real questions.
Even worse, Harris has managed to anger people in her own party. In her book, she explains why she didn’t choose Pete Buttigieg as her running mate, saying he would have been a good pick “if I were a straight white man.” That kind of comment doesn’t unite people—it divides them. It’s identity politics at its worst. Buttigieg was reportedly shocked by the remark, and others like Richard Grenell called her out as a hypocrite. She also took shots at Democratic Governor Josh Shapiro, which only adds to the growing list of people she’s alienated.
This is not how someone builds a political comeback. This is how someone buries any chance of future office.
Some Democrats, like Senator Mark Kelly, are still floating her name for 2028. But Joe Concha doesn’t think that will happen. He says we’ll never see her in elected office again. And frankly, he’s probably right. When you lose that badly and then go on a tour that blames everyone but yourself, you lose credibility. You don’t look like a leader—you look like someone who refuses to learn from failure.
Let’s be honest: Harris’s book isn’t about helping the country or offering new ideas. It’s about protecting her political brand. It’s about rewriting history. She even claimed her election loss was the “closest” of the 21st century, which is simply not true. That’s not leadership—that’s deception.
While Harris focuses on selling books and rewriting the past, President Trump is focused on fixing the future. He’s restoring the Constitution, protecting our borders, and putting American families first. That’s the kind of leadership voters chose in 2024, and that’s the kind of leadership we need now.
Harris’s tour reminds us of something important: character matters. When leaders fail, they should take responsibility and reflect. But Harris is doing the opposite. She’s pointing fingers, playing identity politics, and pretending her massive loss was something heroic. That’s not the path back to office—that’s a one-way ticket to political irrelevance.
In the end, this is not just about Kamala Harris. This is about a deeper truth in American politics. Our leaders must be honest, humble, and grounded in the Constitution. When they forget that, the American people notice—and they vote accordingly.
So as Harris travels from city to city, trying to sell her version of the story, remember what really happened. The people spoke loud and clear in 2024. They chose liberty over control, truth over spin, and results over excuses. That’s the real story. And that’s the one that will shape our future.


