Kamala Harris Launches New Plan To Take On GOP

Maxim Elramsisy

Kamala Harris lost the presidential election decisively.

She disappeared for weeks.

She went on a book tour. She gave dating advice on podcasts. She talked about “Friday night” versus “Sunday morning” relationships.

Now she’s back with a new political action committee: “Fight for the People.”

The first order of business? Asking for money.

The Text Blast Reads Like a Plea

Harris sent out a fundraising message under the subject line “My Decision – Kamala Harris.”

“I have tried not to send any fundraising texts since the last election, but I wanted to take a few minutes to tell you about how I have decided to approach this moment in time — and why I hope you’re still with me in this fight.”

She then got to the point:

“Donations are going to be critical. Especially before our first FEC fundraising deadline ends in a few days and we’re legally required to report what we’ve raised. Everyone will be watching, and I hope to file a big report.”

Everyone will be watching. She’s worried about the optics of a weak fundraising number.

She Claims Current Events Aren’t “Chaos” — They’re a “Decades-Long Agenda”

Harris tried to frame the Trump administration’s actions as something sinister:

“Some people are describing what’s been happening in recent months as absolute chaos. And of course, I understand why. But, please let us not be duped into thinking everything is chaos. What we are witnessing is a swift implementation of an agenda that has been decades in the making.”

Translation: Trump is doing what he promised to do, and Harris wants you to be scared about it.

The “decades in the making” framing is meant to invoke conspiracy. In reality, it’s just… a president keeping campaign promises.

The PAC Will Fund Travel, Speeches, and Democratic Candidates

Harris outlined her plans:

“I am going to travel, speak out, and help elect Democrats everywhere and I cannot do this alone.”

Travel. Speaking fees. Supporting candidates.

Standard political infrastructure for someone positioning themselves for future relevance — or another run.

She Still Won’t Say If She’s Running in 2028

Harris has repeatedly dodged questions about a 2028 presidential campaign.

Her book tour focused on her memoir “107 Days” — covering her abbreviated 2024 campaign — rather than future plans.

But launching a PAC, building a fundraising operation, and promising to “travel” and “speak out” nationwide looks exactly like pre-campaign positioning.

She’s running. She just won’t admit it yet.

Her Recent Media Appearances Have Been Bizarre

Since losing, Harris has made headlines for all the wrong reasons.

On the “Rich Little Brokegirls” podcast, she gave dating advice: “Be kind to yourself and choose to be with someone who is kind.”

She talked about “Friday night” versus “Sunday morning” relationships.

She blamed sexism for criticism of her laugh.

This is how a failed presidential candidate spends her time. Podcasts about dating. Complaints about critics.

She Defended Biden’s Handling of the Epstein Files

In a December interview with Jimmy Kimmel, Harris defended the Biden administration’s approach to Epstein documents:

“We strongly and rightly believed that there should be an absolute separation between what we wanted as an administration and what the Department of Justice did.”

The response drew criticism from both left and right.

Progressives wanted Biden to release everything. Conservatives noted the irony of claiming DOJ independence while the department pursued Trump.

Harris managed to satisfy no one — a recurring theme.

She Hasn’t Spoken to Biden in Weeks

Harris acknowledged she hasn’t talked to President Biden in “about three or four weeks.”

She also admitted she didn’t receive support she needed from “certain places in the administration” during her campaign.

The relationship between Harris and Biden appears strained. The party that put them on the ticket together seems eager to move on from both.

“Knowing You Are Still With Me Means a Lot”

The text blast ended with an emotional appeal:

“Knowing you are still with me in this fight means a lot. – Kamala”

It reads like someone who isn’t sure the support is still there.

She lost the popular vote. She spent $1.5 billion. She couldn’t articulate why she wanted to be president.

Now she’s asking if people are “still with her.”

The First FEC Report Will Be Revealing

Harris is right that “everyone will be watching” her first fundraising report.

A strong number suggests she has residual support and donor confidence.

A weak number confirms what the election suggested: The party has moved on.

The deadline is in days. The pressure is on.

“Fight for the People”

That’s the PAC name. It’s generic. It’s focus-grouped. It means nothing.

What people? Which fight?

Harris couldn’t define her campaign message. She couldn’t explain her policy priorities. She couldn’t connect with voters.

Now she has a PAC with an empty slogan and a fundraising deadline.

“Everyone will be watching, and I hope to file a big report.”

So will we. The first report will tell us if “Fight for the People” is a real political operation or a vanity project for a failed candidate who can’t accept the results.


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