Josh Shapiro lashes out at Kamala Harris and accuses her of telling "blatant lies"
After being considered by Kamala Harris to be her running mate, Josh Shapiro lashed out at her, calling her a
Joshua David Shapiro, governor of Pennsylvania, accused Kamala Harris, the nation's former vice president, of allegedly lying in her book about the 107 days of her campaign to become the first woman to govern the United States.
During an interview with The Atlantic magazine, the Democratic president, who was once considered as Harris's running mate, dismissed everything the Californian woman states in her book.
“That's complete nonsense. I can assure you that her stories are pure lies. “She’s trying to sell books and cover her tracks,” he said. Shapiro’s statement comes in the wake of the former vice president’s inexplicable defeat at the polls to Donald Trump after spending over $1 billion raised through donations on advertising campaigns and failed events—something she doesn’t mention in her book. In fact, Josh David Shapiro’s criticism extends to his own party for distancing itself from the needs of a citizenry hopeful that Republicans would get them out of trouble. “Democrats lost ground in some of these communities by not being present and not treating people with the respect they deserve.” Donald Trump has been a unique political figure in his generation who has managed to connect on a deeper cultural level,” he emphasized.
The 52-year-old governor's comments reveal the division that has emerged among Democrats in the wake of a frustrating campaign that led them to hand over total control of Washington to conservatives.
Knowing the implicit risk of being defeated again in the California gubernatorial election, Kamala Harris chose to pass up the opportunity to run and instead has dedicated herself to touring various cities across the country, denouncing the policies promoted by the conservative who defeated her on the ballot.
However,The fact that he now dares to criticize his former boss Joe Biden in his book has generated animosity among several Democrats, which could ultimately affect his strategy of again vying for the presidential nomination in 2028.

