During his "My Take," Tuesday, "Varney & Co." host Stuart Varney argued Kamala Harris was "chosen" as the Democrat nominee to replace President Biden by party leaders who didn't want a divisive competition between rival candidates.
STUART VARNEY: So, Kamala Harris is the anointed one.
Chosen in backrooms because party leaders didn't want a divisive competition between rival candidates.
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It's a coronation, and the Democrats are rallying around her to give a sense of euphoric unity. Not everyone is happy.
Viewers of this program have often heard me sing the praises of Bret Stephens, a New York Times editorial writer.
His latest column is titled "Democrats Deserved a Contest, Not a Coronation."
In his opinion, the backroom choice allows party leaders to ignore the obvious weaknesses of Harris' candidacy.
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For example, she's unpopular. As of Monday, this week, 51% of voters do not approve of her. She hasn't had a positive approval poll rating in 3 years.
She does not have a good campaign record.
She won only one competitive race, and that was for California attorney general, and she won by less than one point.
She's a bad manager. There's a constant churn among her staff.
Stephens says she has a penchant for excruciating banality. Not necessarily a good quality for a politician.
One example, "It is time for us to do what we have been doing, and that time is every day." That's banal all right.
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Trump will exploit this kind of thing, and it will convince many voters that Harris is a lightweight.
She's a San Francisco liberal, out of line with most Americans.
All those weaknesses could have been exposed if there had been a contest among candidates, but party leaders went for a coronation instead.
Stephens believes it will end in failure. "Decide in haste, repent at leisure" he says, and I think he's right.