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Harris’s 2028 Dreams Dashed: Voters Can’t Forget Her Failures

Americans saw the same tired act recycled on Newsmax’s The Record with Greta Van Susteren when former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and conservative stalwart Matt Schlapp bluntly called out former vice president Kamala Harris for openly toying with a 2028 bid. Their blunt assessment was simple: after the disastrous 2024 run and a string of public missteps, Harris cannot credibly sell herself as a serious nominee to the middle of the country. This was no polite punditry — it was a warning that Democrats should not underestimate how quickly voters remember failure.

Let’s be honest with hardworking Americans: focus groups and analysts have repeatedly found voters don’t see Harris as distinct from the Biden administration she helped lead, and that’s a political death knell in swing states. Polling and on-the-ground testing shared on conservative outlets showed undecided voters struggling to name meaningful differences between Harris and Biden, which Democrats will struggle to spin into a winning message. If Republicans stay disciplined and continue to highlight record-of-failure narratives on the economy, border, and public safety, Harris’s supposed “comeback” would be an uphill, thankless slog.

Beyond campaign theatrics, Harris carries a heavy baggage rack of policy blunders and embarrassing moments from California to the national stage that conservative voices have mercilessly catalogued. Figures like Ric Grenell and other commentators have pointed out her poor governing record in California and her tendency to pander to the far-left base instead of solving real problems for voters. For ordinary Americans paying the price for high prices, rising crime, and open borders, talk of a Harris revival rings hollow and out of touch with the priorities of working families.

Democrats are also facing an identity crisis: the purge of moderates after big losses has handed the party to its most extreme elements, meaning a Harris-centered ticket could either be a last gasp or a prelude to a more radical nominee. Conservative strategists like Dick Morris have argued the leftward lurch gives Republicans a clear opening in 2028, and a Harris candidacy — if it happens — would likely be opposed by many moderates who want electability over ideology. Patriots who love this country should view any talk of Harris’s comeback as a sign to double down on sensible policies and to remind voters what’s really at stake.

If Harris insists on testing the waters for 2028, Republicans must be ready with a steady, optimistic message that contrasts real-world results with the Democrats’ hollow promises. We should keep spotlighting the failures of the Biden-Harris era, pushing law and order, securing the border, and reviving the economy so that voters see a clear choice between competence and chaos. The American people are hardworking, practical, and done with political theater — if conservatives stay united and focused, Harris’s fantasy of a comeback will remain just that: a fantasy.

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