Willie Brown's Woman 😉 On Sunday's episode CNN's "State of the Union," co-hosted by Jake Tapper and Dana Bash, regular contributor Scott Jennings absolutely destroyed former Kamala Harris communications director Jamal Simmons's narrative of where he sees the Harris presidential campaign, in a matter of seconds. It was not only a beautiful thing to see; it was also a textbook example of how to take it to Harris over the next roughly 100 days before the November 5 election. The festivities kicked off with Tapper asking the now-CNN commentator Simmons to weigh in on where he thought "we" (the Harris campaign) are right now. That exchange went like this:
Simmons jumped all over the "Kamala is the underdog" notion like a pig on an acorn.
There were multiple things going on in and behind Simmons's comments. Let's decipher. First, the obvious. Simmons said "of course she's the underdog" not only as a message to the Harris faithful that they must work hard to overcome Trump's lead, but also with the knowledge of Biden's failed policies--and that a substantial percentage of the country views those failed policies as Biden-Harris, not just Biden. In other words, Harris is inextricably linked to those failed policies. House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-LA.) is among that "substantial percentage." Last Tuesday, Scalise took it a step further, calling Harris "the architect of Biden's failures":
Scalise, joined by Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-Minn.), Conference Chair Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.), and Congressman Nick Langworthy (R-N.Y.) continued, including Harris' pledge to ban fracking, "raising money for the Minnesota Freedom Fund when radicals were out, protesting and ultimately getting arrested, attacking cops, doing other things," and "embracing the defund police movement." With all of the above in mind, this takes us to Scott Jennings blowing up Simmons's narrative in an instant:
Game over. Jennings with the blowout. Kamala Harris enters the race, between a rock and a hard place. On one hand, she talks often about how proud she is of Joe Biden and working closely with him on his (their) "accomplishments." On the other hand, Harris and her campaign staff know she must also work to separate herself from what most voters view as Biden's miserably failed policies, not only the illegal alien crisis but also Bidenomics, Bidenflation, stubbornly high prices, and a host of issues. Those other issues include writing blank checks to Ukraine, and throwing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu under the bus as the Jewish state continues its war against Hamas. As I suggested earlier, if Donald Trump and the Republican Party do what Scott Jennings did to Jamal Simmons, and keep Harris on her heels, November 5 might be "a beautiful thing," as Trump likes to say. |
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