Kamala Harris INCOMPETENCE Exposed With 7 Blunders!

Pollster Frank Luntz outlined what he considered to be Vice President Kamala Harris’s seven errors and missed opportunities during her Thursday CNN interview.

Harris participated in her first sit-down interview with CNN’s Dana Bash since officially starting her 2024 presidential campaign on July 21. Speaking on “Squawk Box,” Luntz expressed his disappointment with Harris’s performance, especially considering the ample time she had to prepare for the interview.

“I was not impressed as an observer and someone who’s expecting more from her with this much time to get prepared,” Luntz said. “First, and I call it DOD, which is Day One Detail. She gave child tax credits, a housing credit. She should have had something for day one, for the first hour, the first day, the first week, the first month and the first year. It’s the most important thing voters are looking for to see whether you’re serious. She really didn’t itemize much more than her talking points.”

Bash began the interview by asking Harris what she would aim to achieve on her first day in office if she won the presidential election. The vice president responded that she would focus on “strengthening the middle class,” but did not provide further details.

“Second, it’s not inflation. It’s affordability. And the fact is, food, fuel, housing and health care has become so much more expensive. She said she understood it, but she didn’t give ideas to address it and to solve it,” Luntz continued. “Third, she emphasized repeatedly, ‘My values haven’t changed.’ Because she’s been accused of being a flip-flopper. It’s not values, that’s about her. It’s priorities, because that’s about all of us.”

During her 2020 presidential campaign, Harris advocated for a ban on fracking. However, after announcing her 2024 presidential run, she quickly reversed her position. When Bash questioned her about this shift during the Thursday interview, Harris did not offer an explanation for the change in her stance.

“Number four, ‘You deserve.’ She talked once again as though it was still a convention speech. She did not itemize exactly what the people of the United States deserve in terms of their president, in terms of, in her case, her policies,” he added. “Number five, the C word. She talked about consensus and a little bit about common ground. It’s really common sense, because voters are not looking for an ideological president. They’re looking for someone who can get things done — a real record of results. Sixth, in her attack of Trump, she should have said, ‘He promised, he failed, it’s time to give someone a chance to do a better job.’ Compared Trump’s record rather than just shots at him. And number seven,’ how would you feel if your kids spoke to you the way Donald Trump speaks to America?’ It’s a simple rhetorical question. It’s her strongest criticism of Trump, I didn’t hear that last night.”