Kamala Harris’s presidential campaign is embracing the anti-Trump narrative of the ‘uniparty’ political class in a new television spot. It features comments made by former Vice President Mike Pence, former National Security Advisor John Bolton, and retired General Mark Milley. What voter demographic the message is meant to appeal to is unclear, as Pence, Bolton, Milley, and others cited in the one-minute-long ad spot are all deeply unpopular among average American voters.
The political class’s backing of Harris ahead of November’s election could become a political liability for the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee. With the likes of Iraq War architect and former Vice President Dick Cheney and his daughter, former Representative Liz Cheney (R-WY), endorsing Harris, the Democrats risk becoming the embodiment of an unpopular political and economic status quo.
I love that the theme of this past week has been “The Political Class For Kamala.”
Trump campaign should make a huge deal out of this. Cut ads with all her heinous endorsements from people that literally everyone hates.
I’ll elaborate in my evening email to members, tomorrow:… https://t.co/V9qRZY5O5o
— Raheem. (@RaheemKassam) September 7, 2024
Pence, an afterthought candidate during the 2020 presidential primary, denounced the populist political message that saw Republicans win the White House in 2016 late last year. Meanwhile, Bolton admitted in April this year that he wrote in Dick Cheney on his 2020 presidential ballot. The former Vice President to George W. Bush, Cheney was the champion of the disastrous U.S. invasion of Iraq that cost thousands of American lives and directly resulted in Iranian influence and terror proxies expanding throughout the Middle East.
As for Milley, the retired general has spent his time out of the military cashing in lucrative speaking fees and consulting contracts through his uniparty contacts. The National Pulse reported in March that global banking giant JPMorgan Chase has retained Milley as a senior adviser — most likely to advocate for the company’s interests on Pentagon-related matters.