A political bombshell is about to drop on the Democratic Party with the release of a tell-all memoir, 107 Days, penned by former Vice President Kamala Harris. The book pulls no punches, aiming not only at rising Democratic stars like Josh Shapiro, Gretchen Whitmer, and J.B. Pritzker, but even at Joe Biden himself. Harris blames Biden’s last-minute decision to abandon his reelection bid for the collapse of her own short-lived campaign, suggesting she never had the time she needed to organize, fundraise, or outmaneuver Republican challengers. For a party that insists it’s unified, this is a bitter pill to swallow.
The revelations go beyond finger-pointing. Harris reportedly considered Pete Buttigieg as a running mate but ultimately rejected him over fears that voters would balk at an openly gay candidate. That detail alone has shaken the Democratic establishment, painting the party’s “party of inclusivity” messaging as nothing more than a hollow catchphrase. While Democrats lecture voters about tolerance, even their own internal calculations show they don’t fully trust the American people with their progressive social experiments at the ballot box.
What’s more, Harris includes the strange story of a pre-debate phone call from Biden, who warned that he heard her aides were bad-mouthing him to wealthy donors. Whether true or not, the anecdote feeds the growing perception of dysfunction and betrayal behind the scenes of the Biden-Harris ticket. Instead of presenting a united front, Democrats were fighting each other like crabs in a bucket. Americans who watched the economy falter, the southern border collapse, and foreign adversaries grow bolder under Biden’s watch now see what was really going on: a White House consumed with power struggles and paranoia.
Unsurprisingly, Harris’s move to air all this dirty laundry is dividing Democrats. Some see it as laying the groundwork for a 2028 presidential run, while others warn it could tarnish her credibility permanently. Historically, political parties rarely rally behind losers, and Harris already failed once when handed the vice presidency on a silver platter. If she believes this book will make Americans forget skyrocketing inflation, disastrous border policies, and cratering approval ratings during her tenure with Biden, she may be setting herself up for another humiliation.
For Republicans, though, 107 Days is a gift. It exposes Democrats as fractured, hypocritical, and out of touch with the very voters they claim to champion. Instead of producing solutions, they’re producing memoirs filled with finger-pointing and blame-casting. Harris might think she’s strengthening her case for 2028, but all she’s really done is remind Americans why the Biden-Harris era was one best left in the rearview mirror. With the Democratic Party eating its own, the path toward a Republican White House looks stronger than ever.