NewNow you can listen to Fox News articles!
Former vice president Kamala Harris broke his silence in chaos after the decision of former President Joe Biden to leave the 2024 race only three and a half months before election day.
Harris observed his next book “107 Days” with Rachel Maddow from MSNBC on Monday night describing the Biden movement as “Recsyness” and admits that he regrets not pressing him anymore to reconsider it.
“So, when I write this, it is because I realize that I have and had a certain responsibility that I should have followed,” Harris told Maddow. “So, when I talk about recklessness, as much as anything, I am talking about me. There was a lot at stake, and at that moment I worried that it seemed completely selfish.”

The then Vice President Kamala Harris comments together with the then President Joe Biden on August 15, 2024 in Largo, Maryland. (Anna MoneyMaker/Getty images)
Kamala Harris reveals what Biden told him just before the crucial debate with Trump who left her “angry”
The comments marked the first time Harris admitted doubts about how he handled the political earthquake.
Harris says that the decision was left with approximately 100 days for strategy and will face President Donald Trump again. She says the stage was “unprecedented.”
The last minute entry left the Democrats fighting while Trump caused the legs to build their war chest for months and had their opponent in the campaign.

Vice President Kamala Harris presents President Joe Biden Duration for a campaign demonstration at the Girard College in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on May 29, 2024. (Andrew Harnik/Getty images)
Kamala Harris admits that there are things that would do differently in 2024, does not make it elaborate
He recalled how “people who apparently had nothing in common joined by thousands with a level A of optimism and, I dare to say, joy for the possibilities of the United States.”
Critics among their own political party questioned if they could unite the Democrats and win about the independents with such a short time.

Senator Chuck Schumer, D-NY, the nominated Democratic presidential former vice president Kamala Harris, former President Joe Biden, Michael Bloomberg, President Donald Trump and Republican Senator JD Vance, R-OHIO. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)
Click here to get the Fox News application

