An article penned by CNN's Jasmine Wright, a black woman, was called "racist and misogynistic" because it offered a critique of Vice President Kamala Harris. The article reveals the that many on Harris' staff is "fume that she's not being adequately prepared or positioned, and instead is being sidelined" and digs into the relationship between President Biden and Harris.
The article cites White House insiders, saying: "Few of the insiders who spoke with CNN think she's being well-prepared for whichever role it will be. Harris is struggling with a rocky relationship with some parts of the White House, while long-time supporters feel abandoned and see no coherent public sense of what she's done or been trying to do as vice president. Being the first woman, and first woman of color, in national elected office is historic but has also come with outsized scrutiny and no forgiveness for even small errors, as she'll often point out."
In response, author Don Winslow claimed that the article was "racist and misogynistic" and that the article should not be allowed to "go unchecked."
"The vice president herself has told several confidants she feels constrained in what she's able to do politically. And those around her remain wary of even hinting at future political ambitions, with Biden's team highly attuned to signs of disloyalty, particularly from the vice president," Wright and Edward-Isaac Dovere write.
The written hit piece on @CNN today on @VP Kamala Harris - sent to millions - was racist and misogynistic and if you allow it to go unchecked you are failing her, President Biden and this country at a time when Trump and Republicans are trying to burn this country to the ground.
— Don Winslow (@donwinslow) November 15, 2021
Wright and Dovere note that racism and sexism are at play in Harris' treatment, saying "But many friends and supporters of Harris, as well as some on staff and in the kitchen cabinet of experienced Democratic advisers, feel like she's caught in a sort of political mess-up merry-go-round. They blame reporters they see as chasing incessantly negative stories and playing into undeniable structural issues of race and gender."
They also stated that “When Biden picked Harris as his running mate, he was essentially anointing her as the future of the Democratic Party. Now many of those close to her feel like he’s shirking his political duties to promote her, and essentially setting her up to fail. Her fans are panicked, watching her poll numbers sink even lower than Biden’s, worrying that even the base Democratic vote is starting to give up on her.”
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki rushed to the Vice President's defense, saying that Harris is "a vital partner" and "a bold leader."
For anyone who needs to hear it. @VP is not only a vital partner to @POTUS but a bold leader who has taken on key, important challenges facing the country—from voting rights to addressing root causes of migration to expanding broadband.
— Jen Psaki (@PressSec) November 15, 2021
To many on Twitter, this seemed an absurd and half-hearted defense.
Hahaha this is worse than saying nothing.
— Harmeet K. Dhillon (@pnjaban) November 15, 2021
Imagine the Game of Thrones machinations that took place for this to be the compromise tweet. https://t.co/s8PGyo1V8s
The article reports on what Jack Posobiec of Human Events Daily has been calling the "shade war" inside the White House.
CNN just confirmed 100% of my reporting on the White House Shade War
— Jacek Posobiec ???? (@JackPosobiec) November 14, 2021
About time they caught up!
CNN: Exasperation and dysfunction: Inside Kamala Harris' frustrating start as vice president https://t.co/PSJNQ4Y0be
It was in the spring that Harris' staff complained that she was being given tasks that were too hard, such as the border crisis. Writers like Ezra Klein jumped in to say that yes, Harris should be given easier Vice Presidential tasks so that she could have some chance of success.
Like Klein, Winslow opts for the soft racism of lowered expectations, believing that Harris is not be critiqued for her lack of experience and ability to do her job, but because the people who have noticed those failings are themselves racist and misogynist.
This tactic of framing Harris' critics as racist and misogynist becomes less and less plausible when levelled at black women who offer their analysis the woman who is only once removed from the presidency of the United States. Harris' race and gender have no bearing on her ability to do her job, or journalists' purview to weigh her efficacy in that position.
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