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440815


Date: September 07, 2024 at 10:41:43
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Kamala Harris Doesn’t Need Policy to Win

URL: https://newrepublic.com/article/185514/kamala-harris-doesnt-need-policy-win


Adam McKay
"It’s actually impressive the human brain can generate something this
twisted and insane."


Kamala Harris Doesn’t Need Policy to Win

"In fact, a detailed platform will hurt her campaign more than it will help.

On Thursday evening, in response to a question from CNN’s Dana Bash
about her shifting—and at times amorphous—policy principles, Vice
President Kamala Harris provided a simple defense: “My values have not
changed.” She then spoke briefly about what she framed as minor but
nuanced evolutions on the Green New Deal and border security, but her
answer was a deft if transparent dodge.

Since Harris became the Democratic presidential nominee in mid-July, the
fledgling Harris-Walz campaign has been dogged by both the right and the
progressive left to define the specific agenda items they will prioritize should
they win the presidency in November. That pressure will remain—and likely
grow—as the election creeps closer. But the Harris campaign would be wise
to ignore it. Their best strategy to win the election isn’t to push out white
papers and hyper-detailed plans for policies; it’s to continue to make the
vibes- and values-based argument that has been working for Harris for the
last six weeks.

For a time, the vice president and her team ignored the pressure to provide
policy specifics, opting instead to merely coast on the sudden, coconut-
pilled consensus within the Democratic Party—even if no one could quite
pinpoint what that consensus centered around beyond a general sense of
exuberance. However, in mid-August their resolve broke.

During a speech in Raleigh, North Carolina, on August 16, Harris outlined how
she would seek to address the high costs of housing, health care, and a host
of other day-to-day expenses for average Americans. Her pitches included
tax breaks for home builders with the aim of constructing three million new
housing units in four years, down-payment aid for first-time homebuyers, an
expanded child tax credit, an increase to the minimum wage, a ban on taxes
on tips for hospitality workers, and a ban on price gouging in the food sector.

It was a sound if uncontroversial slate of economic policies. However, if both
the Democratic National Convention and Thursday’s CNN interview serve as
any indication, the Harris campaign now believes it was a misstep for a host
of reasons.



The policy rollout did not go particularly well, largely because of one key
proposal. While Democrats camped out on cable news to defend Harris’s
economic platform, few dared to fully endorse her price-gouging crackdown.
Delaware Senator Chris Coons and Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer
both dodged the chance to defend it on Fox News Sunday and Meet the
Press. Pushed on Republican criticism of the proposal by Fox News’s
Shannon Bream, Coons played into his opponents’ hands, stating: “I know
Kamala Harris believes in the free market … I don’t think there’s anything
Communist about wanting to make housing more affordable and prescription
drugs more affordable.”

Coons’s invocation of communism touched a third rail. No elected Democrat
should be uttering the C-word at any point in this campaign, especially
considering the Murdoch Cinematic Universe of Fox News, The Wall Street
Journal, and The New York Post has been working tirelessly to paint Harris as
the pinko love child of Joseph Stalin and Mao Zedong. (Relatedly, Elon Musk
shared a bizarre A.I.-generated image of Harris wearing clothing emblazoned
with a hammer and sickle over the weekend.)

To be fair, Harris’s price-gouging crackdown has critics outside of
conservative media. Mainstream, left-leaning economists including Ernie
Tedeshi and Jason Furman panned it as a price-control scheme, while
Washington Post columnist Catherine Rampell wrote a piece with the
subtitle: “It’s hard to exaggerate how bad Kamala Harris’ price-gouging
proposal is.” The pile-on illustrated how there may be more peril than payoff
in future policy rollouts—not only could they leave Harris surrogates
potentially divided and on defense, but they will almost certainly give the
GOP new angles to attack the vice president.



Next, to borrow the words of former Office of Management and Budget
Director Bert Lance, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” The Harris team is currently
ascendent. In just over a month she’s raised a whopping $540 million. The
vice president is currently up by nearly two points nationally in the RCP
average. Fox News swing-state polling from last week shows Harris up by
one point in Arizona and two points in both Nevada and Georgia. What’s
more, Republican efforts to tar and feather Tim Walz have utterly flopped. In
a recent ABC News survey, 39 percent of those polled have a favorable
impression of the Minnesota governor, while only 30 percent see him
unfavorably. Trump’s running mate, J.D. Vance, meanwhile, is underwater at
32 percent–42 percent.

Harris’s vibes-based, personality-based approach to the first six weeks of
this mad dash of a campaign is clearly working. And it’s working in part
because of her reliance on broad, simple messages like “Protect a woman’s
right to choose,” “Lower the cost of health care,” “Secure the border,” and
“We’re not going back,” all of which seem to be enough for the American
people. The campaign should take yes for an answer. There’s no indication
that Harris needs to offer specific, potentially divisive policies on any issue—
and all of the early signs suggest that doing so would be a mistake. Harris
herself is not a wonk—she flopped in 2020 in part because she struggled to
compete in a wonky, policy-heavy primary. And yet, even if she were a policy
dork, there’s little reason to believe that it would necessarily boost her
chances: In 2016, Hillary Clinton offered more than 200 distinct policy
proposals and lost.

Additionally, Harris is unlikely to enjoy a Democratic trifecta, so major policy
has less of a chance of being enacted than Bob Menendez has of being
appointed the next ambassador to Egypt. The rising tide of Kamalamania has
clearly lifted Democrats nationwide, but the prospect of holding onto the
Senate and securing the House is still not strong. The Democrats’ best shot
of holding onto power in either chamber isn’t by releasing a slew of domestic
and foreign policy proposals—these will, moreover, most likely hurt them,
particularly in competitive Senate races in states like Montana and Ohio.
Instead, Harris can continue to push the argument that she is, unlike Donald
Trump, someone who cares about ordinary people—and that her party is
committed to “fairness” in its economic policy.

Last, Harris doesn’t need to run on policy because Trump never has. Sure,
2016 Trump presented a vague slate of action items. He vowed to
renegotiate Nafta, to withdraw the United States from the Trans-Pacific
Partnership, and he tapped Peter Navarro and Wilbur Ross to outline a brief,
largely illiterate economic plan for his campaign website. Fast-forward to
2020, and the GOP opted not to release an official party platform. Now, in
2024, what is Trump even running on? He’s distanced himself from Project
2025’s 900+ page transition playbook but only after it became clear that
most voters were repulsed by it. He’s mused about tariffs but offered few
specifics. He can’t even articulate his thoughts on a federal ban on abortion
or mifepristone or contraception more broadly. The campaign is rage,
retribution, rank misogyny, “bird cemeteries,” and little else. Considering all
this, why get lost in the details? If these last several weeks prove anything,
it’s that the American people don’t care to watch Democrats play chess while
Trump throws the checkers board against the wall.

Harris has been well served by ignoring policy; her selection of Walz as her
running mate suggests that she values keeping the party going and that she
knows she can win by pitting joy against anger and hope against hate. If she
offers a few popular campaign promises (like an expanded child tax credit)
but otherwise stays out of the weeds, she can soar toward November. Harris
should hang out in the coconut tree and not release any economic plans that
can’t fit within a Venn diagram. To win, Harris doesn’t need policy. She just
needs vibes. "


Responses:
[440822] [440840] [440824] [440823] [440841] [440818] [440819]


440822


Date: September 07, 2024 at 12:30:37
From: old timer, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Kamala Harris Doesn’t Need Policy to Win


that does seem to be the strategy, no policy, no interviews. just rallies
and teleprompters, but those pesky independents in swing states are still
looking for a reason to vote for her and they want something more than
kamalamania


Responses:
[440840] [440824] [440823] [440841]


440840


Date: September 07, 2024 at 20:09:39
From: Redhart, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Kamala Harris Doesn’t Need Policy to Win


uh...they just did an interview.
They put out policy.
They have a definite strategy.

The GOP..have a corrupt criminal with delusions of
sharks, threatening to cheat ...again...on this coming
election with his certification schemes, and is older
than dirt and twice as weird.

I'm not sure how you are so surprised voters are
backing away from mrMaga. They're tired of it, his
baggage, his constant lies and self-absorbed schtick.

She's been the vice president, a senator, an state
attorney general...and she's NORMAL and not threatening
civil war and vengence, doom and gloom.

You're astonishment that she's doing better than her
opponent is hard to swallow.

Earlier today in our small town, the republican club
put on a Trump rally. They did this 4 yrs ago,
too..drawing about 200 supporters.

This year: about 50
if you do the math, that's only about 25% of
enthusiastic supporters from last time Trump lost.

My prediction is that the GOP is going to have a voter
turn out problem this time.


Responses:
None


440824


Date: September 07, 2024 at 14:42:33
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Kamala Harris Doesn’t Need Policy to Win


she has shared plenty of policy with lots of details, she has had an interview and answers questions at events, and speaks off the cuff frequently...quit lying!


Responses:
None


440823


Date: September 07, 2024 at 12:41:42
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Kamala Harris Doesn’t Need Policy to Win


"piss off troll"


Responses:
[440841]


440841


Date: September 07, 2024 at 20:10:12
From: Redhart, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Kamala Harris Doesn’t Need Policy to Win


LOL


Responses:
None


440818


Date: September 07, 2024 at 12:11:44
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Kamala Harris Doesn’t Need Policy to Win because




Your article left out that she doesn't need policy
because Trump is such a treasonous POS.

A vote for Trump is a vote for dictators everywhere
because he'd sell us out for a dollar to any one of
them who'd pay.

So it may not even matter what policy because she is
running for any policy vs someone who would deny the
people a voice (last election, Christians, you suckers)
at all.

As far as pedophile, thief, liar, traitor, cheat, etc.,
the specifics have been covered elsewhere. They would
normally have been reasons Kamala wouldn't need policy,
but the above supercedes them. Isn't it nice she has a
policy anyway?






Responses:
[440819]


440819


Date: September 07, 2024 at 12:13:45
From: shadow, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Kamala Harris Doesn’t Need Policy to Win because


Oh, details details, mitra...

...lol...


Responses:
None


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