The harpies on The View are starting to get nervous about the election.
Hot takes are flying on the daytime talk show.
And Joy Behar was speechless when The View made this awful claim about Kamala Harris.
The View co-hosts argue over Kamala’s flailing campaign
Vice President Kamala Harris’ handlers gave their clearest sign to date that their strategy isn’t working.
She was sent on a media blitz after she avoided the press like the plague for the first two and half months of her campaign.
One of the stops on the friendly tour was at ABC’s The View for a softball interview.
Kamala said on the show that she couldn’t think of anything she would have done differently than President Joe Biden on the daytime talk show.
In the aftermath of Kamala’s media blitz, Democrats are starting to panic as the polls continue to shift against her.
The co-hosts on The View quarreled over Kamala’s strategy.
Co-host Sunny Hostin – who, it’s important to note, has zero experience with Presidential campaigns, or any political campaigns for that matter – claimed that Kamala could do no wrong by suggesting that she was running a ‘flawless” campaign.
Her fellow co-host Sara Haines had to give a reality check about Kamala.
Haines pushed back by saying that the Vice President wasn’t prepared to answer some questions on her media blitz and that she dropped the ball by not being able to separate herself from Biden.
“I think the criticism of people who it’s not resonating with, she went on a media blitz and it was mostly friendly interviews, Haines said. “There were some questions, but she didn’t seem prepared.”
She noted that Kamala’s answer on The View about not being able to think of anything she would have done differently than Biden received widespread attention.
“These are the questions you’re going to get, and so what I’m confused about is either she wasn’t prepared, which I don’t think so. I think she over-prepares, or she doesn’t have a difference to sell,” Haines said.
Kamala wants to put as much distance as possible between her and Biden.
She’s running as the “change” candidate and doesn’t want to be seen as another four years of him.
Kamala’s campaign takes a turn for the worst
“There were missed opportunities,” Haines explained. “They know why she’s not Donald Trump, but they don’t know why she’s not President Biden, and I think she needs to be both of those things in an election of change, and I also think, aside from beating Donald Trump, she has to be clear to voters why she wants the job.”
Co-host Alyssa Farah Griffin said that the race could swing on whether Kamala could successfully distance herself from Biden – which is obviously difficult to do when the candidate herself is fully admitting they’re one-in-the-same.
“We each have one vote, but Republicans are outpacing Democrats in registering new voters in key battleground states and that’s what can make all the difference,” Griffin said. “To Sara’s point, I think this idea of change really matters, because whether you guys love Joe Biden or not, the public was turning on his policies.”
Kamala’s campaign strategy of avoiding the press and not laying out an agenda is backfiring on her.
Not being Trump and having the media serve as her cheerleaders isn’t enough to win the election.
Kamala is stuck trying to figure out how to convince voters she’s not Biden’s second term with time running out.