The
blame game begins.
From the Daily mail
The people
surrounding Joe Biden blame Nancy Pelosi for Kamala Harris' election
loss as Democrats have begun to bicker over who caused the party's
disaster.
It came as the president, 82, reacted to Harris' concession speech
at Howard University Wednesday.
The blame game went into overdrive last night, as Biden
confidantes told senior White House reporters they hold the former
Speaker of the House responsible for him being pushed out of the
race.
'Bidenworld' sources claim that not only should the president have
stayed in the race but that he would have won the white
working-class voters who Harris largely ceded to Donald Trump.
The claim
that Pelosi got him out of the race is comparable to how Biden
blames Barack Obama for demanding he not run in 2016
against Hillary Clinton.
Other Democrat insiders have blamed Tim Walz for being too left
wing, too folksy, and too tainted by the Kenosha riots, while others
blamed every demographic possible.
Not enough
white women showed up, too many black men switched to Donald Trump
since 2020, and Hispanic voters abandoned the party.
Stephen A. Smith blames Michelle Obama and Oprah Winfrey for Harris
defeat to Trump
Former First Lady
Michelle Obama told an audience that
'a vote for
[Trump] is a vote against us.'
'How do you think
the men felt about that? So we have to do what you tell us to do;
otherwise, we're anti-you? You thought that worked? Do y'all know
anything about most men? You think that's going to work?'
As Smith sees it, the Harris campaign used 'guilty' to manipulate
'everyday people' 'into voting for Harris,' he said on his podcast.
To bolster his point, Smith played a clip of Winfrey hinting at an
anti-democratic takeover of the United States in the event of a Trump
victory.
'This is the kind of stuff that alienates an electorate, alienates
a voter,' Smith said. 'Because the freedom that you tell them you
have, you try to confiscate morally by letting them know, you ain't
worth a damn unless you vote the way we say you should vote.
'Who's going to go for that in a general election? With an economy
rife with inflation, with over 12 million people crossing the
border?'
The rhetoric also serves to underscore the growing divide between
elites and most Americans, Smith explained.