‘Paging Dan Quayle’! Kamala Complains Her News Treatment Is the Worst of All Veeps

Josh Kraushaar National Journal Tweet “Paging Dan Quayle!”The latest article in the sad-sack series about Vice President Kamala Harris not being liked and feeling unappreciated. New York TimesWhite House correspondents Zolan Kanno-Youngs (Kati Rogers) and Zolan Kanno of Youngs (Zolan Kanno-Youngs) report Kamala thinks all white-guy vice presidents get better media coverage than her: 

Harris is She confided to her close friends that any one of her 48 predecessors would make a better news story about her. (Charles Curtis, who served as vice president under Hoover, spoke proudly of his Native American ancestry.) She also has confided in them about the difficulties she is facing with the intractable issues in her portfolio, such as voting rights and the root causes of migration.

Kamala was not able to believe that Dan Quayle had drawn a hostile crowd because it was an unpublished chat. Dick Cheney attracted a hostile media. Mike Pence drew a hostile press. There is no doubt that Pence received a hostile press. TimesIt’s like she is being complacent and letting her whine without responding. 

Journalists have the ability to find anti-woman bias feminists. Hillary Clinton is included in this story.

“There is a double standard; it’s sadly alive and well,” Mrs. Clinton said in an interview. “A lot of what is being used to judge her, just like it was to judge me, or the women who ran in 2020, or everybody else, is really colored by that.”

The minimum is the Times balanced out the sexist-bias hot takes with a fellow Democrat’s take on how she’s arrogant on the border issue: 

Representative Henry Cuellar, a moderate from Texas and one of the more prominent voices on border issues in the Democratic Party, said his experiences with Ms. Harris’s team had been disappointing. He called his staff to help Ms. Harris when he heard that she was going to the border this June. He didn’t get a phone call back.

“I say this very respectfully to her: I moved on,” Mr. Cuellar said. “She was tasked with that job, it doesn’t look like she’s very interested in this, so we are going to move on to other folks that work on this issue.”

In the future, Mr. Cuellar said he would go straight to the West Wing with his concerns on migration rather than the vice president’s office.

Of the White House, Mr. Cuellar said, “at least they talk to you.”

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