Report Details How Group Continues To Pay Harris Debt
It’s hard to imagine a more perfectly disastrous metaphor than this: Kamala Harris as the neighbor who never mows her lawn, clutters up the street, and still finds time to gossip about everyone else’s business.
That’s where the Democratic Party finds itself today—stuck cleaning up after the Vice President’s $15 million mess, while the rest of the political world watches with equal parts disbelief and schadenfreude.
Let’s unpack the absurdity. Picture being a committed Democrat in early 2024. You buy the pitch: Biden’s running again, there’s a path to victory, you write a check. Then the “coup” happens—whether internal backroom politics or public polling panic, Biden is out, Kamala’s in.
But instead of a fresh, competent reboot, you get one of the most embarrassing campaign implosions in modern memory. Harris burns through a billion dollars. Yes, a billion—only to lose to Donald Trump by a margin that turns swing states into afterthoughts.
And now, you find out the DNC is still—still—paying for her failure. Axios reports that over $15 million in Harris campaign debt has been absorbed by the DNC in just the first six months of 2025.
And what do they have to show for it? A July cash-on-hand number that reads more like a mid-sized mayoral race than a national party: $13.9 million for the DNC, while the RNC sits on a towering $84.3 million war chest.
So what does the DNC do with its summer meeting? Begin with a land acknowledgment. Because naturally, when your party is hemorrhaging credibility, cash, and voters, what you really need is a ceremonial nod to 18th-century treaties. That’ll stop Trump.
Meanwhile, Amy Klobuchar doubles down on the worst of the party’s messaging failures by declaring, “Immigrants don’t diminish America. They are America!” While noble in sentiment, the line underscores exactly what voters rejected in 2024: a party so wrapped up in virtue-signaling that they can’t recognize when their own base is walking away.
Not from immigration reform—but from chaos at the border, fentanyl pouring in, and a political class more interested in open mic night rhetoric than national security.
