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Harris launched 'dark-arts operation' against opponents for VP spot in 2020, new book claims

Harris launched 'dark-arts operation' against opponents for VP spot in 2020, new book claims

Fox News09-04-2025

Former Vice President Kamala Harris engaged in a "dark-arts operation" to undercut other potential running mates for former President Joe Biden in the 2020 election, according to a new book.
The book, "Fight: Inside the Wildest Battle for the White House," published April 1 by William Morrow and Company, claims that Harris spread unfavorable information about other possible vice presidential picks for Biden.
"In 2020, when she beat out a crowded field to join Biden's ticket, Harris advisers ran a dark-arts operation to undermine the competition, circulating negative information on her rivals," write political journalists Jonathan Allen of NBC News and Amie Parnes of The Hill.
Specifically, the book singled out Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice, former Democratic Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, and Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.
"'We stabbed Karen Bass a little bit. We stabbed Susan Rice a little bit. We stabbed Stacey Abrams a little bit," one adviser said of the effort four years earlier. 'We stabbed Gretchen Whitmer.'"
The book did not delve into the specifics Harris took to undercut her opponents as they all vied for the vice presidential nomination.
But any steps Harris took to undermine those women didn't damage their relationships enough to stop them from backing her in the 2024 election.
Bass endorsed Harris, and both Whitmer and Abrams appeared at Harris campaign events in 2024. Additionally, Rice also defended Harris in July after Rep. Ted Burchett, R-Tenn., described Harris as a "DEI hire." Rice described the comment as "incredibly insulting," in an interview with CNN.
Harris, who previously served as a senator from California, has signed with CAA Speakers, which represents high-profile celebrities. CAA did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.
"Fight" chronicles how President Donald Trump secured the White House for a second term. Allen and Parnes conducted interviews with more than 150 political insiders for the book, according to the book's description.
The book also details how former President Barack Obama remained wary of supporting Harris in the 2024 election to replace Biden, amid concerns about his mental fitness. Likewise, the book shares that Obama doubted Biden's political abilities as the race dragged on.

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Watch Live: Blue state governors testify on "sanctuary" policies amid L.A. protests over immigration raids
Watch Live: Blue state governors testify on "sanctuary" policies amid L.A. protests over immigration raids

CBS News

time7 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Watch Live: Blue state governors testify on "sanctuary" policies amid L.A. protests over immigration raids

Washington — Three Democratic governors are defending their states' policies toward migrants and dispute claims of failing to cooperate with federal authorities, according to prepared remarks that will be delivered Thursday before a House oversight panel. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz are among the witnesses testifying before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on so-called "sanctuary policies." "Let me be clear: Sanctuary policies don't protect Americans. They protect criminal illegal aliens," Oversight Chair James Comer, a Kentucky Republican will say in his opening statement. The governors' appearances come as President Trump and California Gov. Gavin Newsom remain embroiled in a legal and political standoff over the deployment of the National Guard troops and Marines to quell immigration protests in Los Angeles. Demonstrations have spread to other U.S. cities, including New York and Chicago, following a series of deportation raids. The hearing "Minnesota is not a sanctuary state," Walz will tell lawmakers. "It is ridiculous to suggest that Minnesota — a state that is over 1,500 miles away from the Southern border and a thousand miles from lawmakers in Washington, D.C., who decide and implement border policy — is somehow responsible for a failure of immigration enforcement." The former vice presidential candidate has drawn intense scrutiny not only over immigration policy but also for his handling of social justice protests that broke out in Minneapolis following the death of George Floyd in 2020. Trump administration officials have cited Walz' actions to justify the president's decision to federalize troops in California. While Walz does not appear to directly address the controversy in his testimony, he says he is "disappointed" in the federal government's overall approach. "As governor of Minnesota, it is incumbent on me to use the state's resources to help Minnesota families—not turn those resources over to the administration so they can stage another photo-op in tactical gear or accidentally deport more children without observing due process," Walz is set to say. Ahead of the hearing, the GOP-led panel released a video compilation of various news clips accusing the governors of "shielding" undocumented immigrants and "causing chaos" in their states. A memo from Hochul's office suggested the hearing could be "derailed by wild accusations" and "twisted characterizations" but noted the governor's position is "clear" when it comes to supporting strong borders and comprehensive immigration reform. "New York state cooperates with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in criminal cases," Hochul says in her prepared testimony. "And our values as New Yorkers demand that we treat those who arrive here in search of a better life with dignity and reject policies that tear law-abiding families apart." Hochul also addresses the influx of more than 220,000 migrants to New York City since early 2022, many of whom were bussed from border states, calling it "an unprecedented humanitarian crisis." "We have responded to this crisis with both compassion and pragmatism," Hochul states."And as a result, we largely prevented what could have become an additional crisis — one of street homelessness and tent cities." Pritzker says Illinois also stepped up to the challenge, and blamed the lack of federal intervention and cooperation from border states for exacerbating the problem. "As governor, my responsibility is to ensure that all Illinoisans feel safe in their homes, their businesses, and their communities," Pritzker is prepared to say. "That is why my administration continued to make significant investments in public safety, even as our resources were strained because of the lack of federal support during the crisis — expanding our state police force and investing in efforts to reduce gun violence." Congressional focus on "sanctuary" polices Thursday's session follows a March hearing on sanctuary cities with four Democratic mayors: Eric Adams, of New York, Mike Johnston of Denver, Brandon Johnson of Chicago and Michelle Wu of Boston. Comer launched an investigation in January into "sanctuary jurisdictions," including states, counties or cities, to examine their impact on public safety and federal immigration enforcement. President Trump has vowed to crack down on localities that don't back his immigration agenda. Earlier this month, the Department of Homeland Security removed its list of sanctuary jurisdictions after several cities challenged the findings.

Donald Trump's ‘Les Miserables' Appearance Sparks Avalanche of Jokes, Memes
Donald Trump's ‘Les Miserables' Appearance Sparks Avalanche of Jokes, Memes

Miami Herald

time8 minutes ago

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Donald Trump's ‘Les Miserables' Appearance Sparks Avalanche of Jokes, Memes

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Is Gavin Newsom running for president? California governor starting to change his tune
Is Gavin Newsom running for president? California governor starting to change his tune

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Is Gavin Newsom running for president? California governor starting to change his tune

This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. Get ready, America. After years of firm denials, Gov. Gavin Newsom is finally acknowledging his presidential ambitions. Over the past month, the Democratic governor who once insisted that he had 'sub-zero interest' in the White House has begun publicly inching toward the idea. In a profile published in the Wall Street Journal this week, Newsom said he would wait to see if the moment felt right. 'I'm not thinking about running, but it's a path that I could see unfold,' he said. The shift in tone comes, perhaps fortuitously, as all eyes are on Newsom again. With President Donald Trump sending military troops into Los Angeles in recent days to quell sometimes unruly protests against immigration enforcement raids, Newsom has seized the moment to reestablish himself as the leader of resistance. The governor sued to stop the deployments and is now doing nearly endless rounds in the media accusing Trump of slipping into authoritarianism. He has sent daily queries to his fundraising list referencing the situation in Los Angeles and the president advocating for his arrest. On Tuesday evening, Newsom gave a short video address, carried live on CNN, that sought to elevate his fight to national significance, warning that 'other states are next,' and to rally the public behind him to defend democracy. 'This is about all of us. This is about you,' Newsom said. 'It's time for all of us to stand up.' Many people already assume that Newsom is in campaign mode. A poll released last month by UC Berkeley's Institute of Governmental Studies and the Los Angeles Times found that more than half of California voters believe Newsom is more focused on boosting his presidential prospects than governing the state and solving its problems. But the ability to expand his message beyond California could stir voters in the rest of the country to start seeing Newsom as a potential leader, said Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics. He commended Newsom for channeling the growing fear and anger over Trump's actions in his remarks, which Sabato believes may have changed the minds of some skeptics who regarded the governor as just 'another pol with good hair gel.' 'He saw the danger to the American republic,' Sabato said. 'It was a home run.' More: Is Gavin Newsom running for reelection? No, and that's due to term limits Though speculation about a future presidential bid has followed Newsom throughout his career — his family even joked about it in a congratulatory message in his college yearbook — he never would have admitted that he had his eye on the White House even a few years ago. After defeating a recall attempt in 2021, Newsom told NBC's Chuck Todd in an interview that he had 'never' considered running for president and had 'no, no, no, no, no' interest in ever doing so because 'who needs the damn stress?' During an endorsement interview with the San Francisco Chronicle during his re-election campaign for California governor the following year, Newsom said he had 'sub-zero interest' in being commander in chief and that 'it's not even on my radar.' He reiterated to CBS that 'it's not my ambition' and 'I have no interest' in ever running. The question came up again repeatedly last summer as frantic Democrats considered whether to replace President Joe Biden on the ticket, and Newsom always loyally batted it down, emerging as perhaps Biden's most forceful surrogate until the bitter end. Whether those proclamations were sincere is, of course, another matter. 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'But I have to have a burning 'why' and I have to have a compelling vision that distinguishes myself from anybody else. Without that, without both and, I don't deserve to even be in the conversation.' On his own podcast last week, guest Dr. Phil asked Newsom whether he was running for president in 2028 and the governor did not rule it out. 'You're not ruling anything out about your future either, so we'll leave it at that,' he said. If Newsom does ultimately enter the race, voters are unlikely to care about his pivot from past pledges that he would not, Sabato said, because it will be so expected. 'If you're governor of California, the assumption is that you're running for president,' he said. And broken promises seem to matter little in politics anymore, Sabato added, 'The one thing that Trump has done for everyone is eliminate the issue of hypocrisy.' This article originally appeared on Palm Springs Desert Sun: Is California Gov. Gavin Newsom running for president?

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