• Biden aide charges "sabotage" of documented whore Kamala Harris after f

    From $2 cum dumpster Kamala@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jul 5 11:56:27 2021
    XPost: alt.gossip.celebrities, alt.politics.obama, dc.politics
    XPost: atl.general

    Top White House officials are mobilizing to defend Vice
    President Kamala Harris amid a gusher of leaks about dysfunction
    and infighting in her office.

    Driving the news: White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain told
    Axios in a statement: "The President's trust and confidence in
    her is obvious when you see them in the Oval Office together."
    Biden senior adviser Cedric Richmond said in an interview late
    Thursday night: "It’s a whisper campaign designed to sabotage
    her."

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    Details: Their responses came after Axios approached the White
    House with new reporting about growing tensions between West
    Wing officials and the Harris team, including chief of staff
    Tina Flournoy.

    Some White House officials have been frustrated by a series of
    missteps from Harris and increasingly public bickering in her
    orbit, which spilled out in a Politico story on Wednesday.
    Flournoy's old boss, former President Bill Clinton, came to her
    defense with a statement calling her "an extraordinary person."

    Why it matters: 2024 is the elephant in the room. While Biden
    aides overwhelmingly believe he'll be the Democratic nominee,
    they also know he'd be 81 when seeking re-election.

    An operation sometimes visibly out of sync with Biden's — and
    missteps during a recent trip to the U.S.-Mexico border,
    following a scrutinized interview with NBC's Lester Holt — have
    reignited questions from Harris' 2020 primary bid.

    Harris would be the presumptive nominee if Biden didn't run.
    Administration sources believe it would be nearly impossible to
    unseat the first African American woman vice president.

    Yet many Democrats, including some current senior administration
    officials, are concerned she could not defeat whomever the
    Republican Party puts up — even if it were Donald Trump.

    One Democratic operative tells Axios' Alayna Treene that most
    Democrats aren't saying, "'Oh, no, our heir apparent is f***ing
    up, what are we gonna do?’ It's more that people think, 'Oh,
    she’s f***ing up, maybe she shouldn't be the heir apparent.'"

    Some Democrats close to the White House are increasingly
    concerned about Harris’s handling of high-profile issues and
    political tone deafness, and question her ability to maintain
    the coalition that Biden rode to the White House, sources tell
    Axios' Hans Nichols.

    What we're hearing: Relations between the West Wing and the Vice
    President's office are tense.

    Several administration officials used "shitshow" when describing
    Harris' office, and contrast her operation with disciplined,
    virtually leakproof Biden aides.

    Some Biden officials view the Harris operation as poorly-managed
    and staffed with people who don't have long-term relationships
    with her. They feel she's gotten bad advice from her press and
    communications shop and think it's telling that she's already
    lost two advance aides and a digital director.

    Case in point: A few months ago, what should have been a no-
    brainer of a press request came to the vice president's office.
    Forbes wanted to feature Harris on the cover of its "50 Over 50"
    issue — saluting her rise to be the "first woman, the first
    Black person, and the first South Asian-American to become U.S.
    vice president."

    After concluding that Flournoy had been sitting on the request —
    a characterization that an aide to the V.P. flatly disputes,
    explaining that she was simply nailing down details before
    sharing it with a larger White House circle — ultimately the
    West Wing intervened to get an answer for Forbes.

    The vice president ended up participating — and getting glowing
    treatment. But Biden advisers couldn't understand why it had to
    be this hard, people familiar with the incident tell Axios.

    What they're saying: Harris' senior adviser, Symone Sanders, and
    deputy chief of staff Michael Fuchs defended Harris and
    Flournoy. Harris' team notes the president has entrusted the
    V.P. with a portfolio that includes voting rights, migration
    from Central America, space, labor, broadband, small-business
    assistance and women in the workforce.

    "People are not fighting every day," Sanders said. "There's not
    consternation among aides. That is not true. ... I hear that
    there are critics. Those who talk often do not know and those
    who know usually are not the ones talking."

    Fuchs dismissed criticisms of Flournoy and Harris as "rumors"
    and "not true," and said they've shown integrity and leadership
    as the pandemic added more hurdles to an already difficult job.

    Klain praised Harris and her team as "off to the fastest and
    strongest start of any Vice President I have seen," and said
    "her talents and determination have made a huge difference"
    already.

    "She’s delivering for the American people on immigration, small
    business, voting rights, and economic growth," Klain said. "The
    results speak for themselves: a decline of border arrivals from
    the Northern Triangle, improved vaccine equity, and increased
    economic opportunities for women."

    Richmond called Harris a "staunch advocate for the Biden-Harris
    agenda," and said demand for her participation in events remains
    high.

    He said no one's brought complaints about her or her team to
    him. And he said it's unfair to compare any vice president's
    staff to a president's staff — much less Biden's team, which
    includes some advisers who've worked for him for decades and
    served in three White Houses.

    "You can’t hold the vice president's team to that standard,"
    Richmond said. "But I think they’re good, I think they’re
    busting their tails and I think the VP is executing all her
    assignments and taking on her issues."

    Of the narrative against Harris, he said: "At some point it just
    becomes, one person says something long enough and it becomes an
    urban legend. It doesn’t have to be credible. It doesn’t have to
    be real. Someone says something and it can just snowball."

    "Not one named person. That’s what bothers me most. We’re in a
    day where the stakes are high. You’d just hope if there’s a
    legitimate criticism they’d put their name next to it."

    https://news.yahoo.com/whisper-campaign-white-house-mobilizes-
    094509923.html
     

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