Younger people have told me that Kamala Harris’s defeat felt like 2016 squared. Her loss took me back to 1972,
Most failed presidential candidates never seek any office again — but when they do, they often give the presidency one more try.
Marking the end of her vice presidency, Harris assured her current and former ... Dwight Eisenhower, Richard Nixon and Harry Truman. According to the White House, the desk was used by all ...
Former Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband Doug Emhoff were spotted exiting a grocery store Thursday with plastic bags to carry their goods. Harris, 60 — who had talked about banning plastic straws during her 2019 presidential campaign — was seen smiling in the 99 Ranch Market Asian Grocery store in Westwood,
The U.S. has a long tradition of defeated presidential candidates sharing the inauguration stage with the people who defeated them, projecting to the world the orderly transfer of power. It’s a practice that Vice President Kamala Harris will resume on Jan. 20 after an eight-year hiatus.
In some ways, running for governor of her home state of California seems like an obvious next act for Vice President Kamala Harris ... (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) Richard Nixon, after all, came home ...
Twenty years earlier, after a much closer race, Republican Richard Nixon clasped John ... It’s a practice that Vice President Kamala Harris will resume on Jan. 20 after an eight-year hiatus.
(Getty Images via AFP) Twenty years earlier, after a much closer race, Republican Richard Nixon clasped ... It's a practice that Vice President Kamala Harris will resume on Jan. 20 after an ...
Former Vice President Kamala Harris departed Washington and the White House after observing a peaceful transfer of power that, in an alternative universe, could have been transferred to her. After declining to sit down with Vice President J.
Most failed presidential candidates never seek any office again — but when they do, they often give the presidency one more try.
President Joe Biden has pardoned Dr. Anthony Fauci, retired Gen. Mark Milley and members of the House committee that investigated the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.