Kamala Harris isn’t in the cellar of the Naval Observatory campaigning via Zoom calls à la Joe Biden in 2020.
No, she’s speaking to adoring crowds fired up by pop stars. She’s identifying herself with powerful (if somewhat esoteric) cultural trends. She’s clapping back against Donald Trump with panache.
Indeed, in one of the great political transformations of our time, she’s gone from a sub-par vice president to the second coming of Barack Obama in the space of about two weeks.
Except Obama was a genuine political talent who was glib enough to handle almost anything.
He wasn’t an intellectual but was a writer with intellectual interests — in another life, he could have been a staffer at the New Yorker instead of president of the United States (would that it had been so).
The people most aware that Kamala isn’t truly a new version of Obama are the people around her, who clearly fear putting her in any setting where she isn’t reading from a script.
Biden’s basement campaign in 2020 kept him from having to go out and build a crowd, but he did interviews.
Kamala’s teleprompter campaign in 2024 is meant to limit her exposure to keep her from inadvertently bursting the media bubble that’s been created around her.
In that, her campaign may resemble the pre-debate Biden approach this year more than his limited stumping in 2020.
Biden’s campaign this year obviously feared putting him out in any setting where he’d be challenged, and when his abysmal debate performance forced them to do so anyway (to prove he’d just had “a bad night”), the additional exposure resulted in predictable disaster.
Kamala’s problem isn’t messing up names or dates or losing her train of thought — hallmarks of aging. Rather, she often ends up repeating the same (usually banal) thought in slightly different words, so she expresses herself in an endless loop of vacuity.
In one of her few off-script comments since her ascension, she explained last Friday why President Biden should get credit for the prisoner swap:
“This is just extraordinary testament to the importance of having a president who understands the power of diplomacy and understands the strength that rests in understanding the significance of diplomacy and strengthening alliances.”
Because Kamala hasn’t been out there, we don’t know in her own words how she feels about the amazing turn of events over the last two weeks, how she plans to lead, or — and this is important — how she explains her multiple changes in position since she last ran for president.
If a presidential candidate flip-flops on one thing during a campaign, it’s usually a focus of discussion for weeks. She’s done so on about eight things with no explanation whatsoever and without generating any significant media static.
If you were them, wouldn’t you want to keep it that way?
The campaign will eventually need to do some interviews. Perhaps they will address the criticism that she’s being kept from the media with some appearances on MSNBC and with sympathetic influencers.
Then, they can address the further criticism that Kamala is only talking to partisan outlets with a sit-down with a relatively safe journalist who has credibility in the broader media, say, Lesley Stahl of “60 Minutes.”
Besides that, back to the teleprompter!
It’s extraordinary that the Democrats had one presidential candidate whom they didn’t trust with interviews and have replaced him with another, fresh and younger, candidate whom they also don’t trust with interviews.
For those keeping track, that’s three “understands,” two “diplomacys,” and two “strengths” in one sentence.
All that she said is that it’s important that Biden understands diplomacy, but she didn’t know how to land the plane after stating this simple idea in a brief sentence.
This is why Trump has to debate Harris: Given the way she has been hiding from the media, a debate (or debates) may have to be one of the main means of trying to expose her.
She’s out of the basement, but she’s never off script.
Twitter: @RichLowry