There’s losing, and then there’s Kamala Harris losing. After her historic 2024 blowout loss to President Donald Trump, you’d think the former vice president might opt for a period of reflection, humility, or at the very least, silence. Instead, Harris is taking her grievances—and her revisionist history—on the road in what’s quickly becoming known as her election loss therapy tour, thinly disguised as a promotional campaign for her new book, 107 Days.
The title refers to the brief, ill-fated duration of her 2024 presidential campaign—a campaign so poorly run, so disconnected from the electorate, that it was effectively over before it began. And yet, in Harris’s retelling, it’s a tale of near-victory, misunderstood genius, and of course, the villainy of Donald Trump. That may play well with sympathetic audiences in university auditoriums and progressive bookshops, but the broader electorate isn’t buying it. They already voted—resoundingly.
Kamala: “2024 was the closest race of the century!! HE HAS NO MANDATE!!! NOT A MANDATE!!!! NO MANDATE!!” pic.twitter.com/Pf1nHsH3f2
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) October 5, 2025
Trump didn’t just beat her; he obliterated her. What was initially billed as a close, contentious election ended in a decisive mandate for Trump and Vice President JD Vance, a ticket that not only capitalized on policy success but on Harris’s glaring weaknesses: vacuous messaging, lack of leadership presence, and her chronic inability to connect with anyone beyond the Democratic donor class.
She is ALWAYS drunk.
At this point I am curious as to what she looks like sober.
— Cancel Me Gently (@CenteredRight) October 5, 2025
Still, Harris is doubling down. Instead of confronting her own failures—her awkward, rambling speeches, her record-breaking staff turnover, or her abysmal approval ratings—she’s pointing fingers and playing victim. She insists the race was “closer than people think,” conveniently ignoring the final tallies, the wiped-out swing states, and the millions of voters who simply had enough of platitudes and posturing.
Even left-leaning figures are throwing in the towel. Bill Maher, never one to shy away from slamming Republicans, has grown openly critical of Harris’s post-election tantrums and refusal to accept political reality. Her behavior, he says, borders on childish—and for once, even her defenders aren’t rushing to disagree.
Bill Maher about Kamala Harris’s new memoir of the 2024 election, 107 days pic.twitter.com/DCD9QDwI9Q
— Aryan (@chinchat09) October 5, 2025
107 Days isn’t so much a memoir as it is a printed therapy session—an attempt to rewrite the past before the ink on her electoral obituary has even dried. And yet, even that strategy is backfiring. With every promotional stop, Harris is not rebuilding her brand but burning the last bridges she had within her own party. Democrats, quietly and not-so-quietly, are distancing themselves from her as 2028 looms.
The rest is herstory! Genius!
— G.Valois ️ (@GValois4) October 5, 2025
And speaking of 2028—if Harris believes she’s mounting a comeback, she may be the only one. By then, JD Vance will have served a full term as Vice President, likely positioned as the frontrunner for the GOP nomination. His resume will include a strong economy, border enforcement, and global stability. Harris, meanwhile, will be known as the candidate who lost big and then spent the next four years complaining about it in paperback form.