iBet uBet web content aggregator. Adding the entire web to your favor.
iBet uBet web content aggregator. Adding the entire web to your favor.



Link to original content: https://www.nytimes.com/spotlight/kamala-harris
Kamala Harris - The New York Times

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Kamala Harris

Kamala D. Harris is the Vice President of the United States of America and the first woman of color to hold the office.

Kamala D. Harris is the Vice President of the United States of America and the first woman of color to hold the office.

Highlights

    1. Harris Had a Wall Street-Approved Economic Pitch. It Fell Flat.

      The vice president vacillated on how to talk about the economy, and ended up adopting marginal pro-business tweaks that both corporate and progressive allies agreed made for a muddled message.

       By Nicholas Nehamas and

      Vice President Kamala Harris last month in Madison, Wis. She struggled to strike a balance between competing visions for how to address the economic problems that voters repeatedly ranked as their top issue.
      Vice President Kamala Harris last month in Madison, Wis. She struggled to strike a balance between competing visions for how to address the economic problems that voters repeatedly ranked as their top issue.
      CreditErin Schaff/The New York Times
    2. What’s Next for Kamala Harris? Here Are Six Options.

      Her friends, aides and political allies say it’s too soon for her to even contemplate her next career move. But the speculation has already begun.

       By Reid J. EpsteinKatie Rogers and

      Vice President Kamala Harris will leave office in January at 60 years old, with an uncertain political future but plenty of options.
      Vice President Kamala Harris will leave office in January at 60 years old, with an uncertain political future but plenty of options.
      CreditErin Schaff/The New York Times
  1. Election Highlights: Signs of Change Under Trump Start to Emerge

    Control of the House is still unclear, but President-elect Donald J. Trump and the Republican Party, which has already won a majority in the Senate, are expected to bring significant policy shifts to Congress and cases already before the Supreme Court.

     

    CreditHaiyun Jiang for The New York Times
  2. How Trump Won, and How Harris Lost

    He made one essential bet: that his grievances would become the grievances of the MAGA movement, and then the G.O.P., and then more than half the country. It paid off.

     By Shane GoldmacherMaggie Haberman and

    Donald J. Trump successfully harnessed the anger and frustration millions of Americans felt about some of the very institutions and systems he will now control as the country’s 47th president.
    CreditDoug Mills/The New York Times
  3. Harris Says She Concedes the Election, but Not Her Fight

    Her commitment to a peaceful transfer of power was more than President-elect Trump ever offered to President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris after they defeated him in 2020.

     By Nicholas Nehamas and

    “While I concede this election, I do not concede the fight that fueled this campaign,” Vice President Kamala Harris said. “The fight for freedom, for opportunity, for fairness and the dignity of all people.”
    CreditKenny Holston/The New York Times
  4. A Dark Suit and a Weary Smile

    In her concession speech, Kamala Harris offered an image for a long fight.

     By

    Kamala Harris at Howard University, where she delivered her concession speech on Wednesday. She wore a pantsuit in a muddy burgundy.
    CreditErin Schaff/The New York Times
    critic’s notebook
  5. 10 Takeaways From the Night Trump Marched Back to the White House

    America’s democracy will again be put to the test, and its government will veer sharply to the right. Kamala Harris and Democrats were dealt stunning defeats across the country.

     By

    Former President Donald J. Trump improved on his 2020 performance in states across the country as American voters shifted to the right in this year’s election.
    CreditDoug Mills/The New York Times

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
  1.  
  2. Why Abortion Rights Won Even as Kamala Harris Lost

    Voters in red and blue states supported abortion rights, but the movement’s winning streak came to an end.

    By Michael Barbaro, Kate Zernike, Asthaa Chaturvedi, Carlos Prieto, M.J. Davis Lin, Elisheba Ittoop, Pat McCusker, Dan Powell and Chris Wood

     
  3.  
  4. TimesVideo

    What Kamala Harris’s Loss Means To Black Women

    Vice President Kamala Harris ran a 107-day campaign under extraordinarily rare circumstances after President Biden dropped out of the race. But burdened by the legacy of her incumbency and the history of a nation that has been reluctant to elect a woman of color, Ms. Harris lost ground among most major groups of voters. Erica L. Green, a New York Times White House correspondent, explains what her emotional and defiant concession speech means to Black women in the country.

    By Erica L. Green, Claire Hogan, Christina Shaman, Nikolay Nikolov and James Surdam

     
  5.  
  6.  
  7.  
  8.  
  9. Who Is Kamala Anyway?

    Wesley Morris has a theory.

    By Wesley Morris, Elyssa Dudley, Wendy Dorr, Paula Szuchman and Rowan Niemisto

     
  10. Kamala Harris’s 2024 in Pictures

    As the year began, few expected Kamala Harris to make a historic march toward the presidency. After a head-spinning summer, her campaign’s remarkable story awaits its conclusion.

    By Nicholas Nehamas

     
Page 1 of 10

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT