A key House Republican is already looking ahead to 2028 and sees a silver lining in reports that failed Vice President Kamala Harris may attempt another presidential run - it could be exactly what the GOP needs to maintain power.
Rep. Mark Harris (R-NC) told Breitbart News Saturday that the prospect of Harris throwing her hat in the ring again would "certainly help" Republicans heading into the crucial 2026 midterms by reminding voters of the disasters they rejected when they overwhelmingly chose President Trump's return to the White House.
"The American people have already spoken loud and clear about Kamala Harris and her radical agenda," Harris said. "If she wants to remind voters why they rejected her policies of open borders, crushing inflation, and woke extremism, that's fine by us."
America Already Said 'No Thanks' to Kamala
Harris makes a compelling point. The 2024 election wasn't just a victory for Trump - it was a complete repudiation of everything Kamala Harris represented as Biden's second-in-command. From the border crisis she was supposed to solve but ignored, to the inflation that crushed working families, to the divisive identity politics that turned Americans against each other.
"Voters didn't forget how she failed as border czar, how she cackled while families struggled with grocery bills, or how she pushed men in women's sports," a GOP strategist told Next News Network.
The timing couldn't be more perfect for Republicans. Just as Trump's America First agenda is delivering results - securing the border, bringing back jobs, and restoring respect for American values - Democrats might hand the GOP the perfect foil in Harris.
The Gift That Keeps on Giving
Think about it, Patriots. What better way to energize the Republican base than reminding them of Kamala's greatest hits? Her word salads about "the significance of the passage of time"? Her complete failure to visit the border? Her tie-breaking votes that funded the Green New Deal waste?
Rep. Harris understands what many political observers are missing: sometimes the best campaign strategy is simply letting your opponents remind voters why they can't be trusted with power.
The question isn't whether Kamala will run again - it's whether Democrats are really desperate enough to resurrect the candidate who already proved she can't win when it matters most.
