Everything about Kamala Harris campaign is fake, JD Vance says
On Wednesday, Republican vice presidential candidate J.D. Vance said about the Kamala Harris presidential campaign that “Everything about her campaign is fake."
Harris has been disavowing many of President Joe Biden's policies and flip-flopping on policies she has supported in the past in an attempt to distance herself from Biden, who was unpopular before stepping down last month.
She has also been putting out talking points emphasizing "fun" and "joy" as well as making up dances during rallies.
She recently copied a Trump campaign promise to stop taxing tip income and has been talking about inflation even though her administration under President Joe Biden was instrumental in causing it.
Flip-flopping
“It wasn’t called Harrisflation,” one of her campaign operatives said to the New York Post.
The operative predicted that she won't be held accountable for being deliberately vague about her policy positions because of the short time frame until the election.
Friday, Harris is expected to address "corporate price-gouging" and give some details about plans to lower prices on food, housing and health care for the middle class at a campaign rally in Raleigh.
She also apparently plans to pitch herself as coming from humble beginnings, the child of a single mother in California.
Schizophrenic voters
The voters have become schizophrenic about the presidential candidates, according to a recent poll by the Financial Times and the University of Michigan Ross School of Business.
A plurality of voters believe they will be better off under President Trump than Harris (42% to 32%), but a slight plurality trust Harris more than Trump on economic issues (42% to 41%).
Only a quarter of voters thought the economy was good or excellent.
Even more telling, only 19% said they were better off under Biden than they had been under Trump.
Scary
It's scary to think that Harris could get away with hiding who she really is long enough to get elected, but this may be the way it goes with today's electorate.
How much worse will it have to get before voters learn?