Kamala Harris Hints Her Political Career Is Not Finished Yet, Doesn’t Rule Out 2028 Presidential Run
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Kamala Harris Hints Her Political Career Is Not Finished Yet, Doesn’t Rule Out 2028 Presidential Run

It appears Kamala Harris has not realized the American people do not want her as president. After losing in a landslide in the 2024 election, Harris in her recent interview with CBS News has hinted her political career is not finished yet. When asked if she would consider another presidential run, the former vice president shared she is not done yet. CBS News reported more on Harris’ hints that her political career is not over yet: Kamala Harris mused about her political future and another presidential run, saying Saturday, “I am not done,” in a wide-ranging interview with CBS News’ partner, the BBC. Harris initially stayed out of the spotlight after losing the 2024 race to Donald Trump, but she has been back on the airwaves in the past month to promote her new book, “107 Days,” about her turbulent time as the Democratic nominee. Asked in her BBC interview whether former President Joe Biden’s last-minute withdrawal from the race stymied her chance to become president, Harris said it was a question to which she will never know the answer. She said warnings she made about President Trump on the campaign trail had been proved right, calling him a “tyrant.” She said she believed her predictions about Mr. Trump running an authoritarian government had been realized. Harris also called out businesses and universities for, in her view, toeing the line and bowing too easily to the president’s demands. The White House responded to Harris’ assertions in a statement to the BBC through spokeswoman Abigail Jackson. “When Kamala Harris lost the election in a landslide, she should’ve taken the hint – the American people don’t care about her absurd lies.” During the interview, Harris also focused on the future and touched on the possibility of a woman being in the White House one day. Harris told the BBC her grandnieces would, “in their lifetime, for sure,” see a female president. She then mused on her political future, saying she still sees herself having one. “I am not done,” Harris said. “I have lived my entire career as a life of service and it’s in my bones.” Watch Harris here: Kamala Harris says she’s not done yet. She’s going to run in 2028. More steaks from @BuckSexton coming for me! pic.twitter.com/vicrztrLTo — Clay Travis (@ClayTravis) October 25, 2025 At this point it would difficult for Harris to win a Democrat presidential primary after burning bridges with many Democrats in her new book 107 Days. Politico reported more on how Harris” new book has some Democrats upset: Kamala Harris’ media blitz is doing little to temper the frustration bubbling among Democrats over her retelling of the 2024 election. Over the last 24 hours, the former vice president insisted she isn’t burning bridges in her own party, rejected the idea that her infamous interview on “The View” tipped the 2024 election and didn’t rule out another run for political office. “In an era where Democrats need all hands on deck in the fight to protect the country and the constitution from the lawlessness of the Trump administration, she had a real opportunity to be a critical voice in the resistance,” said Michael Hardaway, a Democratic strategist who served as a senior adviser to House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries. “This book seems to be unhelpful and divisive in a way that makes it hard for her to be the face of the party as we look to the future.” More than six months after her losing election — and with Harris now back in the spotlight — her book, “107 Days,” has reopened wounds in a party still divided over who or what is primarily to blame for their sweeping losses and President Donald Trump’s return to the White House. Harris, for her part, argued on ABC’s “The View” on Tuesday that though “there were many factors,” ultimately, “we just didn’t have enough time.” It’s not the first time a political memoir has prompted eyerolls. Hillary Clinton’s book tour in 2017 triggered a collective groan among infuriated Democrats, including one top donor who told POLITICO at the time “she should just zip it.” Biden, struggling to sell his post-presidency legacy, is expected to release his own White House memoir. Democrats privately worry the parade of scab-picking, backward-looking books isn’t helping the party move on, especially as its brand sinks to new lows in public polling. “At a time when people are looking for a vision and leadership … and want to see leaders rise to the level of threat facing the country, it’s pretty crazy she chose to write a gossip book that prioritizes the pettiness of her politics,” said an adviser to a potential 2028 candidate granted anonymity to discuss the issue candidly. “It’s embarrassing for her, and for all Democrats, considering she was the leader of the party less than a year ago.” During her interviews this week, Harris clarified some of her more candid assessments from her book, including her decision that it would be too risky, as she wrote, to put former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigeig, a gay man and her preferred running mate, on a ticket headed by “a Black woman married to a Jewish man.”