Let’s just say it—this election couldn’t have been more humiliating for Kamala Harris. Her party was so certain they had this one in the bag that they didn’t even seem to have a backup plan. She was the heir apparent, the chosen successor, the one who’d “restore” dignity, or whatever they were calling it. But the left couldn’t have been more wrong. Harris didn’t just lose; she got slammed. And now, the aftermath is starting to look brutal.
Enter Megyn Kelly. She didn’t hold back, weighing in on Harris’s future with some biting predictions. To put it mildly, Kelly’s outlook for the vice president isn’t exactly rosy. In a Washington Examiner interview, Kelly called Harris an “avatar” for the Democratic Party—a hollow figurehead with little real power or respect. According to Kelly, Harris has been little more than a placeholder, and now she’s set to take the fall for this entire fiasco.
“She’s not the leader of her party,” Kelly said plainly. “She’s not respected in Democratic circles.” And it doesn’t end there. Kelly bluntly forecasted Harris’s fate, saying, “She will be disposed of. She will be blamed. Her many, many deficiencies will be discussed ad nauseam.” So if Harris thought she’d fade quietly into the background, think again—the press will be out for blood.
Ouch. That’s gotta sting.
Kelly, who openly endorsed Trump in this election, recently spoke at a Pittsburgh rally, where she backed him as a “protector of women.” And she’s not alone in this sentiment. “He will close the border…he will keep the boys out of girls’ sports and where they don’t belong,” she told the crowd. Kelly’s words struck a chord with women who feel sidelined by the current administration’s approach. For years, Democrats have branded Trump as some kind of villain to women. But if Kelly’s speech is any indication, they miscalculated again. Women showed up for Trump—perhaps more than the left expected.
And let’s face it—Kelly’s not wrong about Harris’s shaky reputation. It’s an open secret that she isn’t the most popular figure in her own party. Democrats loved the idea of Kamala as a candidate, but the reality? Not so much. As Kelly hinted, Harris’s biggest challenge has always been… well, Harris. She’s known for long-winded, circular answers that leave viewers wondering if she answered the question at all. And while Joe Biden can blame his frequent gaffes on being, let’s say, “seasoned,” Harris, at 60, doesn’t have that excuse. Her speeches often felt more like word salad than substance, and voters picked up on it.
With Harris’s loss, Democrats now have a dilemma: they can’t easily trust her with the reins again. Her defeat has put a glaring spotlight on her “many, many deficiencies,” as Kelly put it. It’s hard to argue otherwise. The left invested heavily in Harris’s potential, only to watch her stumble in the spotlight time after time. When they needed a strong voice, they got confused soundbites. And when they needed leadership, they got… well, they got Kamala.
In the end, this election could spell the end of Harris’s political ambitions. The Democrats might be rethinking their choice, and Harris? She’s likely in for a long period of self-reflection—or maybe just lying low. Either way, the vice president’s chances of making a comeback look bleak.
So here’s to hoping Harris finds a new calling, somewhere far from the national stage. And for the sake of America’s collective sanity, let’s hope that’s the last we hear of her trademark cackle.