Former vice president Kamala Harris, in his most acute comments about President Trump since he left office, criticized his policies as a dangerous run of the founding principles of the nations and warned on Wednesday an imminent constitutional crisis.
“Now I know that tonight’s event coincides with the 100 days after the inauguration,” he told about 500 people at a fundraising gala at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco. “And I will let others give a complete accounting of what has happened so far. But I will say this, instead of an administration that works to advance the highest ideals in the United States, we are witnessing the total abandonment of those ideals.”
The final result reduces the size of the government, the privatization of the services, which provides tax exemptions to the rich and cut Public Education-Education Trump and is the result of the efforts of decades to remodel the norms and the security network of the nation, SHEY said.
“It is an agenda. A narrow and self -service vision of America where they punish the truth about the counter -supporters, favor loyal ones, charge their power and leave everyone to use themselves,” said Harris. “Everything while abandoning the allies and retires from the world. And people, what we are experiencing at this time is exactly what they imagine for the United States. At this time, we are living in their vision for the United States. But this is not a vision that Americans.”
A Trump spokesman dismissed Harris’s comments.
“A failed loser cinge desperately relevantly while she leads the political abyss,” published White House spokesman Steven Cheung, published in X.
The speech of approximately 15 minutes of Harris in a collection of funds to emerge, which focuses on choosing female democrats, occurs amid the growing speculation about whether it will apply for the governor of California in 2026 to replace Governor Gavin Newsom. Harris has been criticized by the best Democrats who are already in the race for not announcing their intentions so far. Harris, 60, could look for that career and, on the other hand, decide to run for president for the third time in 2028.
Since he lost the presidential elections against Trump in November, Harris has appeared in public several times, but he greatly avoided getting into the political agitation that has consumed the nation since he left office in January.
After granting the defeat in the presidential race, Harris spoke with students in the Maryland body service program. Harris also commented on the letter after meeting with Firefighters and volunteers In Altadena, hours after attending the inauguration of Trump, taking a Broadway show, accepting a NAACP prize in February and making a surprise appearance at a national conference of black business and political leaders in Dana Point.
In those appearances, Harris spoke about the erosion of rights for minorities, women and the LGBTQ+ Trump community, not to mention it by name, and promised to stay active in politics.
But Harris’s comments on Wednesday were the most marked to date, which took place a day after Trump’s 100th post in office, in the city that launched his political career choosing his district prosecutor in 2003 and was the subsequent later Democrat in California after becoming becoming becoming becoming becoming becoming becoming becoming becoming. The speech was also the first time since he left the position he has publicly mentioned to Trump by name.
Harris argued that citizens’ dissent is the strongest and most effective way to stop Trump’s policies.
“We all know, President Trump and his administration and his allies have the notion that fear can be contagious. They have the notion that if they can make some people be afraid, it will have a chilling effect on others,” he said. “But what are overlooking, what they have overlooked is that fear is not the only thing that is contagious. The courage is contagious.”
He pointed out the protests of Americans on Trump’s policies that, according to her, have created “the greatest economic crisis made by man in modern presidential history.” These policies are increasing the cost of living and sinking the value of retirement savings, threatening social security and deportation of citizens and others without due process, he said.
“The courage of all these Americans inspires me,” said Harris.
Harris said he has legs asked about what he has in mind these days, and pointed out the viral video or the elephants in the Safari park of the San Diego Zoo forming a circle to protect his calves for a duration of an earthquake this month.
“As soon as they felt the earth trembling under their feet, they put themselves in a circle and stopped side by side to protect the most vulnerable,” he said. “Think about it, what a powerful metaphor.”
Harris said that while some use fear to divide and conquer, animals demonstrated the power to be together.
“Given the crisis, the lesson is not to disperse. The instinct must be to find and connect immediately with each other and know that the circle will be strong,” said Harris. “I am not here tonight to sacrifice all the answers, but I am here to say this: you are not alone, and we are all together in this. And they speak directly, think they are probable before they improve.