It’s about time for another check-in on the Democrat 2028 presidential field.
Kamala Harris, the former vice president who made news by “changing the names of her KamalaHQ social media accounts to “headquarters,” using “headquarters_67” on X, where she already had 1.1 million followers, an apparent nod to the viral “6-7” slang term used by Gen Alpha and Gen Z.” No doubt, my single digit aged nephews will be very impressed. Unfortunately for Harris, they won’t be able to vote in 2028. As a female, half-African American, she is the only presidential candidate who has any sizable black support, which is important considering that community’s strength in the party. She is leading the field with almost 30 percent (RCP average) of the vote. And as the former vice president and U.S. senator from the largest state, she has great credentials. However, Harris in 2020 and 2024 also looked good at the start of her campaigns, but the more she campaigned, the worse she appeared. The only good news for her is that she has finally paid off all her debts from 2024, when she “spent a whopping $1.5 billion during her 107-day sprint to Election Day after President Biden suspended his re-election campaign July 21, 2024, only to lose all seven critical swing states to Trump.”
Cory Booker, U.S. Senator from New Jersey, has had no real impact in the U.S. Senate during his thirteen-year career there. So, of course, he wants to obscure that fact. His only positives are his being an African American and his large campaign kitty of almost $20 million, which he is very unlikely to spend on his Senate opponent. Also in recent news, the confirmed bachelor got married.
Gavin Newsom, a scheming, two-faced, slick, two-term governor of California, has seen his prospects rise, as he successfully “fought to stick it to Donald Trump, in re-redistricting,” but now they are beginning to settle behind his fellow Californian, Kamala Harris, at 23 percent. As I have predicted, and as I still predict, this white male heterosexual candidate, with a poor record as governor, who will soon lose that public office, has nowhere to go but down. And as everyone knows, I am always 100 percent correct with my predictions.
Pete Buttigieg, the former Secretary of Transportation who never served above the office of mayor, will be disappearing soon from the Democratic field. This is because his only news is that he received 0 percent of the black vote in a poll, which is unprecedented and unimpressive, and his record as secretary is “tainted” by failure. He should have run for Senate in Michigan.