Kamala Harris is wearing ‘The Emperor’s New Clothes’

'See if you can spot the parallels to the Harris campaign' in the classic fairy tale

Nov 5, 2024 - 19:28
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Kamala Harris is wearing ‘The Emperor’s New Clothes’
(Harris for President campaign photo)

Vice President Kamala Harris is finishing up a fairy-tale campaign. Unfortunately for her, the story is “The Emperor’s New Clothes.”

You’re likely familiar with Hans Christian Andersen’s classic tale. A king is obsessed with his clothes. Two con men convince him that they can weave an outfit with a special property: The garments are invisible to anyone who is stupid or unfit for their position.

The king sends a trusted advisor to check on the progress. Because it’s a scam, he can’t see anything. Fearing for himself, he tells the king that the robes are beautiful. When the king goes to see the progress, he’s worried because he can’t see anything.

Eventually, the con men help the king into his “robes.” As the king proudly walks through the streets naked, the people stay silent. They’re afraid of being exposed as the only fool in the crowd. Finally, a young boy shouts out the obvious, “But the Emperor has nothing at all on.” His words pierce the mass denial of reality, and all the townspeople soon acknowledge the truth.

See if you can spot the parallels to the Harris campaign.

Start with the con. Throughout most of the last four years, Harris has been widely viewed as a subpar politician. In June 2021, a three-byline piece in Politico reported on “dysfunction inside the VP’s office” and that “it’s emanating from the top.” That was shortly after her infamous exchange with NBC’s Lester Holt. She told him, “We’ve been to the border.” When he noted that she hadn’t, she replied, “And I haven’t been to Europe.” In January 2022, the BBC wrote a story entitled “Kamala Harris one year: Where did it go wrong for her?”

At the beginning of the year, her favorability rating was nearly 20 percentage points underwater. Her unfavorable rating topped 55%. In March, Washington Post columnist Kathleen Parker called her a “burden to the Democratic ticket” and urged Harris to step aside as the VP nominee.

But after Harris became the de facto Democratic nominee, the media coverage changed. Suddenly, Harris was full of “joy” and enjoying a “brat” summer – a good thing in this case. “Kamala Harris is dressing to be president,” a New York Times headline declared in late July.

Her approval rating jumped more than 10 percentage points, even turning positive in September.

But then came the unspeakable problem. The emperor didn’t have anything on. Harris doesn’t have any substance. She can’t explain how she’d fix the economy. She can’t explain why the Biden-Harris administration left the border wide open for years. She can’t even explain how she’s different than President Joe Biden.

Her record is extremely liberal. She supports taxpayer-funded sex-change operations for prisoners. She supports decriminalizing border crossings. She supports a de facto ban on gas cars.

Finally, there’s intimidation to keep up the illusion. In the story, people are afraid of what others will think if they state the obvious. During this campaign, leftists have unleashed a slew of hyperbolic insults at Trump and his supporters. Harris recently called Trump “a fascist.” Biden called Trump supporters “garbage.” Vice presidential nominee Tim Walz tried to paint Trump as a Nazi for having a rally at Madison Square Garden.

The left’s goal is to make it socially unacceptable to not support Harris. It’s why so many Washington Post staffers melted down when the paper refused to endorse her.

The fury didn’t stem from the belief that the paper’s endorsement would have swayed key undecided voters. The fury is that it’s now OK to point out that Harris has long been wearing the “Emperor’s New Clothes.”

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Fibis I am just an average American. My teen years were in the late 70s and I participated in all that that decade offered. Started working young, too young. Then I joined the Army before I graduated High School. I spent 25 years in, mostly in Infantry units. Since then I've worked in information technology positions all at small family owned companies. At this rate I'll never be a tech millionaire. When I was young I rode horses as much as I could. I do believe I should have been a cowboy. I'm getting in the saddle again by taking riding lessons and see where it goes.