Democrats are pinning blame for Vice President Kamala Harris' election loss on a bevy of issues, stretching from the party shifting away from working class voters to Harris' VP pick.
Vice President Harris sought to bring together the coalition that had elected President Biden. But an array of challenges proved to be insurmountable.
Democratic strategist James Carville said Saturday that Vice President Kamala Harris' campaign could be reduced to her failure to differentiate herself from President Biden during an interview on "The View." "I think if this campaign is reducible to one ...
Not just conservatives but even some Democratic operatives say 'celebrity endorsements are dead' after the election. But we need artists' voices.
CNN commentator Bakari Sellers suggested on Friday that Justice Sonia Sotomayor should step down immediately and be replaced by Vice President Kamala Harris.
"I do believe in the future of this country because I have no choice but to," radio host Charlamagne tha God said in a new interview.
Working-class voters, people of color and immigrants voted in lower numbers or moved to Trump, and national party leaders ignored local organizers.
The former House Speaker also seemed to reject any analysis blaming Democrats for their election loss on a failure to win over working families.
Half of voters identified democracy as the single most important motivating factor for their vote. That was higher than the share of voters who answered the same way about inflation, the situation at the U.S.-Mexico border, abortion policy or free speech, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of more than 120,000 voters nationwide.