logo
The View host reveals wild new details about Kamala Harris interview that 'took down the Democratic Party'

The View host reveals wild new details about Kamala Harris interview that 'took down the Democratic Party'

Daily Mail​6 hours ago

Sonny Hostin said she feels 'terrible' that she 'took down the Democratic Party ' by asking Kamala Harris to name what she would have done different to Joe Biden in the White House.
Harris infamously told the liberal gabfest that there was nothing she would change from how her boss governed.
'There is not a thing that comes to mind,' Harris said.
Harris justified her reason for keeping to Biden's record by noting: 'I've been a part of most of the decisions that have had impact.'
Speaking to the show's producer Brian Teta on its 'Behind the Table' podcast, Hostin claimed she was right to ask the question but hated the impact it had on the election.
Teta asked if she expected it to become a viral moment, to which Hostin answered: 'I knew it instantly when she answered it.'
The left-leaning host admitted she desperately flailed to try and save Harris with another question on the subject.
'Which is why I asked the follow-up question, 'is there one thing?' Because I knew, I could see the soundbite and I knew what was going to happen, but I thought it was a really fair question and I thought it was a question that she would expect.'
Hostin, who was openly rooting for Harris, felt even worse when she learned the anecdote ended up in Jake Tapper's bombshell book about the cover-up of Biden's senility.
'And now Jake Tapper wrote it in his book? I feel terrible.'
Hostin refused to say it cost Harris the election but Alyssa Farah Griffin, one of the show's conservative panelists, disagreed.
'The Trump campaign put so much ad money behind that specific clip and what they were trying to do is tie her to Biden's unfavorabilities, but more than that, just simply the right-track, wrong-track of the election… They used it to say, 'Well, she's not going to do anything different,'' Griffin said.
Appearing on the popular daytime show just a month before the elections during her truncated campaign, Harris was unsteady in several of her media appearances.
Her comments were made to the hosts of ABC's The View when she appeared on the show in October for a softball interview where she was fawned over. Whoopi Goldberg introduced her as 'the next president of the United States.'
The Democratic nominee was just as friendly, posing for pictures with the hosts during commercial breaks.
On the view, her advisor Stephanie Cutter was floored when Harris got asked if there was anything she would have done differently than Biden.
'What the hell was that?' Cutter said she thought at the time. 'That's not what we practiced.'
Her response was also chronicled in the new book Fight: Inside the Wildest Battle for the White House, by reporters Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes.
It also tells of other key moments, like a 'cringe' video clip where Harris had to feign surprise at picking up the endorsement of Barack and Michelle Obama.
Failing to identify a single issue where she parted with Biden yoked her even more to the president, who had bowed out after his debate disaster but was also unpopular in opinion polls going back years.
It denied her the opportunity to hold up a policy difference that might define her as something different beyond being a younger alternative.
'It provided the money shot' for negative ads that would tie link Harris and Biden. 'And it was her own bad moment.'
'When she gave us the gift of the View interview, we were able to anchor her to the Biden administration in her own words, which is something we were trying to do anyway,' a Trump advisor told the authors.
Donald Trump, Jr. was even more forceful, as DailyMail.com reported at the time.
'And just like that, Kamala's entire bull**** campaign about being a 'change agent' collapses. You can't call yourself a change agent when you not only agree with every single disaster Joe Biden is responsible for, but you brag about being involved in all those decisions!,' he wrote on X.
Aides had given Harris a list of items that made her 'proud of her work with Biden.'
It came as party leaders were in a bind, feeling the need to build up Biden for having relinquish power, even while racing to build up Harris's bio for her run on her own after a brief and unsuccessful primary campaign in 2020.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Business news live: FTSE opens higher but retail sales fell sharply in May
Business news live: FTSE opens higher but retail sales fell sharply in May

The Independent

time28 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Business news live: FTSE opens higher but retail sales fell sharply in May

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging. At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story. The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it. Your support makes all the difference.

Thai PM faces call to step down to avert coalition revolt
Thai PM faces call to step down to avert coalition revolt

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Thai PM faces call to step down to avert coalition revolt

BANGKOK, June 20 (Reuters) - Thailand's embattled Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra was facing the prospect of losing her government's majority on Friday as a vital coalition partner looked set to demand her resignation after just 10 months in power. Paetongtarn, the politically inexperienced daughter of divisive tycoon and former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, is fighting fires on multiple fronts, struggling to breathe life into a stagnant economy facing steep U.S. tariffs and under pressure to take a tougher stand on a territorial row with Cambodia that has seen their troops mobilise at the border. The United Thai Nation party, the second-largest partner in her alliance, will demand Paetongtarn, 38, step down as a condition for it to remain in the Pheu Thai Party-led coalition, two UTN sources told Reuters, requesting anonymity because they were not authorised to speak to media. "If she doesn't resign, the party would leave the government," one source said. "We want the party leader to tell the PM as a courtesy." Though Paetongtarn received a boost on Friday with another coalition partner, the Democrat Party, pledging its support, Thailand's youngest premier is still in an untenable position, with her majority hinging on UTN staying in the alliance following Wednesday's exit by the larger Bhumjaithai Party. UTN has not said when it will announce its position. Asked about its decision, UTN spokesperson Akaradej Wongpitakroj declined to provide details. "We have to wait for the party leader to inform the prime minister first," he said. Reflecting concerns in financial markets, the Thai baht THB=TH, opens new tab weakened for a fifth consecutive session on Friday and was on course to log its worst week since late February. Paetongtarn's battle to stay in power demonstrates the declining strength of Pheu Thai, the populist juggernaut of the billionaire Shinawatra family that has dominated Thai elections since 2001, enduring military coups and court rulings that have toppled multiple governments and prime ministers. But Paetongtarn is facing domestic anger and the prospect of an internal revolt over Wednesday's embarrassing leak of a phone call between her and Cambodia's influential former leader Hun Sen - once seen as a Shinawatra family ally - which her critics say posed a threat to Thailand's sovereignty and integrity. During the conversation, Paetongtarn called for a peaceful resolution of the border dispute and disparaged an outspoken Thai army general who she said "just wants to look cool", a red line in a country where the military has a high profile and significant political clout. Political activists met on Friday to schedule a major protest in Bangkok starting on June 28 to demand Paetongtarn resign and coalition partners leave the government. Those included groups with a history of crippling rallies against Shinawatra administrations. Paetongtarn has not commented on the turmoil in her government and has tried to present a united front on the Cambodia issue, appearing on Thursday alongside military chiefs and vowing to defend sovereignty. The premier will make a morale-boosting visit to military units at the Cambodia border on Friday, where she is due to meet Lieutenant General Boonsin Padklang, the regional commander whom she criticised in the leaked call. Paetongtarn's options for staying in power are limited unless her allies can succeed in behind-the-scenes horse-trading to keep her alliance from crumbling. A snap election could damage Pheu Thai at a time of dwindling popularity and play into the hands of the progressive opposition People's Party, the largest force in parliament. Two Pheu Thai sources told Reuters the party is confident Paetongtarn can avoid resigning or dissolving parliament and her government is considering a major cabinet reshuffle to fill vacant positions.

Major update for Florida condo owners in midst of crisis
Major update for Florida condo owners in midst of crisis

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Major update for Florida condo owners in midst of crisis

Fed-up Florida homeowners just scored a rare win after years of skyrocketing costs. Starting July 1, a new law will rein in homeowners associations (HOAs) long accused of slapping residents with surprise fees and fines for petty infractions. Governor Ron DeSantis signed HB 1203 into law earlier this month, ushering in sweeping reforms aimed at making HOA boards more transparent and less intrusive. Under the new rules, any HOA with more than 100 homes or condos must post key documents — including budgets, covenants, and bylaws — on a publicly accessible website by January 1. Board members and property managers will also have to complete 4 to 8 hours of state-approved education each year. And homeowners must now get at least 14 days' notice, along with an agenda, before any board meeting. The changes are being welcomed by property owners who say they've been blindsided with arbitrary violations and ballooning fees with little warning or recourse. And this could be just the beginning of nitpicky HOAs. Lawmakers have signaled more limits may be on the way, in Florida and other states. A new law Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed with the aim of tighter regulations over Homeowner Association Fees will go into effect July 1 They can no longer ban residents from parking non-commercial, personal or work vehicles on the property. Also exempted now are first responder vehicles. HOAs can no longer create rules for the interior of a home that is not visible from the street. Now, plans for central air conditioning, refrigeration, heating or ventilation systems and changes or upgrades to adjacent common area or community golf courses require a review and approval. HOAs can no longer prevent homeowners from having a vegetable garden that can't be seen from the street, and they can't fine residents for leaving garbage cans at the curb or end of their driveway within 24 hours of a scheduled trash collection. Residents will no longer be fined for leaving up holiday decorations or lights longer than indicated in the HOA's governing documents without prior notice. Homeowners will have one week to take their decorations down after a written warning. Florida lawmakers unanimously passed HB 1203 in March before DeSantis signed it. 'This bill comes from a lot of listening to owners talk about how they know their building needs to be safe but pleading that the process be fair and workable,' state Sen. Jennifer Bradley (R-Fleming Island), said at a press conference. The law comes as a relief to Floridians who have seen their HOAs skyrocket in the wake of the Surfside condo collapse in June 2021. Laws now require structural inspections for condos and additional money to be set aside for repairs, leading to an increase in required payments. More frequent natural disasters such as hurricanes and flooding have also led homeowners associations to raise fees in anticipation of repairs and mitigation needs. Several retirement hotspots in Florida in particular have been hit with high spikes on their HOA fees on their condos. Tampa, Orlando and Fort Lauderdale have all seen HOA rises of more than 15 percent in the last year, according to Redfin. In Tampa, the median monthly HOA fee jumped 17.2 percent over the year to July 31, according to Redfin. In Orlando, the fees soared by an average of 16.7 percent, and in Fort Lauderdale they rose by 16.2 percent, it found. This is compared to an average hike of 6 percent across the 43 most populous metro areas which Redfin analyzed. HOA fees also rose in West Palm Beach by 12.8 percent, by 7.6 percent in Jacksonville and by 5.7 percent in Miami. 'Many buildings - even those without amenities - now have HOA dues north of $1,000 a month,' Rafael Corrales from Redfin said. The HOA problem had gotten so out of hand in the Sunshine State that South Florida's pandemic property boom has officially reversed. After years of surging demand, the region's real estate market is now flooded with listings as desperate homeowners rush to sell amid soaring costs and vanishing buyers. According to a report from Cotality, the number of homes for sale across Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties has quadrupled since 2022 — hitting the highest level in nearly a decade. 'The last 25 years have seen home prices, homeowners' insurance, and property taxes surge in Florida,' explains Cotality chief economist Selma Hepp. 'When you add in the unflagging migration that is straining the state's public services and inflated costs across the board, the pressure on the quality of life has become so great that it is beginning to tip the balance. Many households are finding it increasingly difficult to stay in the state.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store