Top Harris campaign aides were swiftly criticized for their post-election interview with "Pod Save America," during which critics said they took no accountability.
Vice President Kamala Harris addressed her loss for the first time since her concession speech with a new video on X.
Members of the Harris campaign recently revealed that popular YouTube show "Hot Ones" rejected interviewing Vice President Kamala Harris ahead of Election Day.
Former Sen. Doug Jones (D-Ala.) and former Gov. Pat McCrory (R-N.C.) join Meet the Press NOW to analyze senior Harris campaign staffers' takeaways from their election loss. NBC News Correspondents Garrett Haake and Mike Memoli cover President-elect Trump's newest picks and what they reveal about his second-term agenda.
A top adviser to Kamala Harris said internal campaign polls never saw her beating Trump, despite her public polling posture.
Kamala Harris has reemerged following her election defeat to Donald Trump to deliver a message of hope to her supporters. Harris, who has been lying low since she lost the race for the White House earlier this month, shared a defiant address on Tuesday night where she told her supporters: “Don’t let anyone take your power.”
The president-elect carried 55 of the 67 counties. Most of the dozen counties where Vice President Kamala Harris beat Trump were sparsely populated counties in the Black Belt. Harris did win Jefferson County, the state’s largest, as well as Montgomery County.
Harris campaign senior adviser David Plouffe said that Vice President Kamala Harris' loss was due to a difficult political situation, especially in the battleground states.
Vice President Harris addressed her supporters directly last night as her campaign team spoke out about where they may have fallen short during the election. The 19th editor-at-large Errin Haines, chief strategist for the Bush-Cheney 2004 campaign Matthew Dowd and The Atlantic staff writer Mark Leibovich join Katy Tur to share their political analysis.
A recent assessment of the 2024 presidential contest suggested that Democrats needed to emulate right-wing outreach. But that’s different from turning out voters.
The running mates did not address the scrutiny surrounding their campaign finances but celebrated the historic sums of money they were able to raise during the cycle.