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Kamala Harris' rousing speech at the Ellipse galvanized Republicans

Kamala Harris' rousing speech at the Ellipse galvanized Republicans

Vice President Kamala Harris gave a speech on Tuesday evening in which she largely exorcised the dark forces that have been hovering over the National Mall since January 6, 2021. It was a strong and lively speech, well delivered to a large and appreciative crowd. It did something unexpected: It tied the vice president securely to a chain linking the last two Democratic presidents, both of whom were elected to undo the enormous damage wrought by the last two disastrous Republican presidencies. Harris, of course, is running to prevent another disastrous Republican presidency. This was most clearly seen in an eloquent passage from the Vice President's address:

Nearly 250 years ago, America was born when we snatched freedom from a petty tyrant. For generations, Americans have preserved this freedom and expanded it, proving to the world that a government of, by and for the people is strong and can endure. And those who came before us, the patriots in Normandy and Selma, in Seneca Falls and Stonewall, on farmland and factory floors, they did not fight, sacrifice and give their lives just to see us defend our basic freedoms sow. They didn't do this just to see us submit to the will of another petty tyrant.

There were echoes of Barack Obama's second inaugural address, as a president added Stonewall, the first detonation of the gay rights movement, to the list of other turning points in American freedom 43 years after the Greenwich Village episode that began with violent resistance to a police crackdown in one Gay bar.

We the people declare today that the most obvious truth of all – that we are all created equal – is the star that still guides us; just as it took our ancestors through Seneca Falls, Selma and Stonewall; Just as hearing a preacher say that we cannot walk alone has guided all the sung and unsung men and women who have left their footprints along this great mall; to hear a king proclaim that our individual freedom is inextricably linked to the freedom of every soul on earth.

One could also hear echoes of President Joe Biden's famous justification for running for office – to restore the soul of America. But “the will of another petty tyrant” Linking El Caudillo del Mar-a-Lago to George III, that was all her.

It was quite a night for the Harris campaign. For Republicans, it was an opportunity to misquote President Biden to distract from Harris' speech and their own hate speech at Madison Square Garden on Sunday. In a video, the president called Sunday's rhetoric “trash,” and the GOP and its flying monkeys insisted the president had called the former president's supporters* “trash.” Oooh! A “deplorable” moment! The political popinjay press –Axios and inevitably Tiger Beat on the Potomac—is enjoying the vicious banter of what the President said. On the front page of the TBOTP There were six stories on the site about what Biden said. Here is a representative example:

As President JOE BIDEN sat about 1,000 feet behind her in the White House, he was busy undoing all that, giving Republicans fuel to undermine that argument exactly a week before the first votes were counted. We don't pretend to know exactly what was going through Biden's mind, but we do know that as Harris, you don't want the tenor of your final days on the campaign trail to be dictated by a fateful apostrophe. “The only trash I see floating out there is that of his supporters — his — his demonization of Latinos is unconscionable and un-American,” Biden said during a call to vote hosted by Voto Latino. “It’s completely contradictory to everything we’ve done, everything we’ve been.”

Time to pretend the Republicans are being taken seriously again.

This interpretation immediately spread throughout the Republican ecosystem—from Biden's mouth to JD VANCE's to down-ballot campaigns (one Senate candidate accused his opponent of hating “half the voters in the country”) and to Trump's own social media accounts ( “You can't lead America if you don't love the American people.”

Ha-ha-ha. Fuck you.

It's certainly debatable whether the commentary really has the power to move votes last week, or whether it's a Beltway media obsession sparked by people telling people just a few days ago we need to stop feeling so insulted all the time.

Yes, they are a bunch of hypocritical bastides. What's the point?

Oops, that's not it.

But no matter where you insert that apostrophe, for Harris it's a distraction before the final six days — and an interesting final test of her relationship with the man who made her vice president and handed her the campaign baton. Harris is campaigning in three swing states today and will be asked about the comment again and again as he begins on the airport tarmac this morning. (Her vice president, TIM WALZ, will no doubt get similar questions on “Good Morning America” ​​in an hour or so.) How she answers those questions will be revealing.

She answered those “insightful” questions quite eloquently on the Ellipse earlier in the evening. For many, it's time to put their heads on their desks until next Wednesday.

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