Dr. Strangelove
New member
The reason Kama has been hidden for the last four years isn't really a mystery. She's deeply unpopular, lacks charisma, isn't that great in interviews and doesn't motivate that many voters.Kamala had her chance with Democrat voters, including a fast start in 2019, a tacit DNC endorsement, and first string campaign operatives in her camp. She never even made it to the primaries. When she dropped out she was trailing Andrew Yang in the polls.
The Dems ignored this, I guess because Harris checked more boxes as a VP than she did as a candidate. But if there was ever a campaign where you looked at the VP nominee as "a heartbeat away from the Presidency" it was the person they chose to back up Joe. Again, the invisibility and irrelevance of Kamala Harris over the last four years is a mystery that requires some explanation.
But she did check important boxes as a VP candidate. Namely, she's a woman and a minority, two key elements of the Democratic Party's coalition. Kamala isn't an effective politician and she would lose a Presidential race in a landslide, but if naming her VP allowed Biden to land a few thousand votes in Georgia and out of Milwaukee than he would've if he had nominated some white guy then it was worth it. It was a business decision. Everybody involved knew that, and it worked!
I would say that Democrats have a problem with the fundamental makeup of their coalition. The reason all of those candidates floundered is because the coalition that makes up the Democratic Party is too different.Also, in fairness, every new, young and/or exciting Dem you could want was in play during those 2020 primaries, including Corey Booker, Beto O'Rourke, Julian Castro, Eric Swalwell, Kristen Gillibrand, Tulsi Gabbard, Amy Klobuchar, and unlikely star Pete Buttigieg. Outside of Mayor Pete, they didn't get any traction from the voters. I don't think the Party itself exerted any influence until Super Tuesday was upon them, and they had to intervene to stop their leading vote-getter, Bernie Sanders.
White college educated female voters from California are much different than southern black male voters from Georgia, who are much different than the blue collar, high school educated union voters of the upper Midwest. But all of those elements are absolutely crucial to the electoral success of Democrats. So while a candidate like Pete Buttigieg is popular with the college educated progressive wing of the party, he is deeply unpopular in the blue collar moderate and minority wings of the party. Unfortunately for Democrats, they have a rock, paper scissors problem in that one factions favorite candidate just so happens to be another factions' least favorite.
Joe Biden was the 2nd or 3rd choice for each of the factions and thus was able to win. Unless Democrats can find a unicorn candidate, they're stuck with candidates everybody is sort of happy with but also has reasons to be unhappy.