In a sour commentary, NYT Deputy Opinion Editor Patrick Healy said he’d ‘cringed’ when former president Bill Clinton took the convention stage on Tuesday to claim that Harris would be ‘the president of joy’.
How’s that going to help the millions of Americans whose livelihoods are now at stake, Healey asked? And why has Harris failed to conduct a single interview or serious press conference since Biden stepped aside last month?
‘Ultimately, she needs more voters in the swing states to trust her to handle the economy better than her opponent… Harris can’t coast on “joy”,’ he concluded witheringly.
But worse was to come from the Times.
On Monday, the newspaper published a guest essay titled ‘Trump can win on character’, by conservative commentator Rich Lowry.
Pulling no punches, Lowry wrote that Harris is ‘weak and a phony and doesn’t truly care about the country or the middle class.’
Lowry attacked Harris’s record as Vice President, namely her failure to ‘secure the border or to address inflation’.
‘She doesn’t care if her tax policies will destroy jobs. She has been part of an administration that has seen real wages stagnate while minimizing the problem because the party line matters to her more than economic reality for working Americans,’ he added.
Of course, such critiques aren’t uncommon in conservative circles – but for such harsh words to appear in the NYT will no doubt be seen as a warning shot by Harris’s team.
Another Times guest essay, written by veteran financial journalist Roger Lowenstein and published on Tuesday, took further aim at Harris’s economic policy.
In the article – which, in fairness, also criticized Donald Trump’s position on import tariffs as ‘nonsensical’ – Lowenstein slammed Harris as ‘censorious and vague’ in her plan to unveil communist-style ‘price controls’ on supermarkets.
‘Forget that her proposal addresses a problem that no longer exists… More dismaying was her seeming ignorance that price controls, almost without exception, have led to shortages, supply chain disruptions and eventually higher prices,’ he wrote.
And it’s not just the Times.
Indeed, a sense of unease with Harris now appears to be creeping across the commentariat, with the authoritative Wall Street Journal and left-leaning The Hill adding to the disquiet.
‘Are You Willing to Pay $5 Trillion for Kamala Vibes?’ asked senior commentator James Freeman in the WSJ on Friday.
Freeman argued Harris has damaged the economy during her time as VP, not least by supporting Biden’s multi-billion-dollar hike in government spending during the COVID crisis.
‘She deserves more than her share of the blame for providing the crucial tie-breaking Senate votes for the spending schemes that fueled inflation,’ he wrote. ‘And now she’s promising to impose destructive new tax hikes on our slow-growth economy.’
Since Biden dropped out of the 2024 election race, liberal media have put in a hard shift trying to paper over Harris’s past record as the most unpopular Vice President in American history.
Donald Trump has long complained about US media bias, blaming it for the long ‘honeymoon’ enjoyed by Harris ever since Biden dramatically quit the presidential race.