The Diary of a CEOKamala Harris: America Is At Breaking Point & I'm Deeply Concerned About The State Of The Country!
Steven Bartlett on kamala Harris Reveals Biden Rift, 2020 Regrets, And 2028 Dilemma.
In this episode of The Diary of a CEO, featuring Steven Bartlett and Narrator, Kamala Harris: America Is At Breaking Point & I'm Deeply Concerned About The State Of The Country! explores kamala Harris Reveals Biden Rift, 2020 Regrets, And 2028 Dilemma Kamala Harris uses this long-form conversation to candidly unpack her 107‑day 2024 presidential campaign, her complicated relationship with Joe Biden, and her enduring sense of responsibility for America’s political direction. She traces how her activist upbringing, legal career, and experience as Vice President shaped both her run for president and her reactions to losing to Donald Trump. Harris describes specific moments of anger and disappointment with Biden and his staff, her frustration at having her accomplishments suppressed, and the emotional toll of election night. At the same time, she outlines what Democrats must do differently—on communication, youth engagement, entrepreneurship, and media strategy—while leaving open, but unresolved, the question of whether she will run again in 2028.
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Kamala Harris Reveals Biden Rift, 2020 Regrets, And 2028 Dilemma
- Kamala Harris uses this long-form conversation to candidly unpack her 107‑day 2024 presidential campaign, her complicated relationship with Joe Biden, and her enduring sense of responsibility for America’s political direction. She traces how her activist upbringing, legal career, and experience as Vice President shaped both her run for president and her reactions to losing to Donald Trump. Harris describes specific moments of anger and disappointment with Biden and his staff, her frustration at having her accomplishments suppressed, and the emotional toll of election night. At the same time, she outlines what Democrats must do differently—on communication, youth engagement, entrepreneurship, and media strategy—while leaving open, but unresolved, the question of whether she will run again in 2028.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
7 ideasLeadership decisions must be anchored in service, not ego or entitlement.
Harris contrasts leaders driven by personal power with her own stated motivation of protecting people and expanding dignity. She argues that anyone seeking the presidency must do it for something bigger than themselves—otherwise they will not endure the emotional, reputational, and familial toll. Her criticism of Biden’s debate‑day call and of Trump’s self‑focus both reinforce her view that motivation shows up clearly in critical moments.
Your upbringing and early messages about duty shape lifelong purpose.
Harris credits her civil‑rights‑oriented parents and community for embedding service into her “DNA.” From being told at age two to protect her younger sister to watching her five‑foot‑tall immigrant mother fight for dignity, she internalized a responsibility to protect the vulnerable. This through‑line explains her work on child sexual assault cases, criminal justice reform, homeowner relief after 2008, and her comfort stepping into high‑stakes national roles.
Resilience in hostile or biased environments requires both inner tools and visible posture.
She describes repeatedly walking into rooms where people assumed she was not the decision‑maker. Her advice: enter “chin up, shoulders back,” remembering the many people not in the room who are proud of you and expect you to use your voice. She uses mental tools—recalling mentors like her first‑grade teacher and her mother—to reinforce her sense of worth, and warns against adopting others’ limited perceptions as your own ceiling.
Imposter feelings can coexist with competence; humility can be an asset.
Harris recounts feeling a form of imposter syndrome when she became district attorney, even after upsetting the odds. She reframes some of this as healthy humility—recognizing the seriousness of power entrusted by voters. Over time, repeated exposure to “untouchable” figures revealed that “everyone’s got a little dust on them,” which helped dissolve the illusion that higher‑status leaders are inherently more gifted.
Power structures often suppress potential rivals—even within the same team.
Harris details how parts of Biden’s staff “knocked [her] down,” failed to debunk unfair attacks, and withheld amplification of her accomplishments because they saw her as a threat. She views this as shortsighted, zero‑sum thinking that weakened the entire ticket. The lesson for any organization: when leaders’ teams treat capable deputies as competition instead of assets, the broader mission suffers.
Emotional storytelling and absurd ‘hooks’ routinely beat facts in modern politics.
She and Bartlett dissect Trump’s use of outrageous claims (like immigrants eating pets) and emotive anecdotes as strategic misdirection that hijacks attention and crowds out discussion of policy. Harris argues Democrats must relentlessly redirect focus to real economic and social impacts while also recognizing the media ecosystem’s bias toward emotional, fear‑based content and the role of corporate and social platforms in spreading disinformation.
Big losses trigger genuine grief, and processing them is essential for future decisions.
Harris describes election night as a state of shock comparable only to losing her mother, repeating “my God” as she grasped the harm she believes Trump would inflict. She and her husband avoided even talking about that night for months; writing her book forced them to revisit it. She frames post‑campaign depression as a mix of “phantom limb” syndrome after intense purpose, and grief that must be worked through before honestly considering another run.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesDon’t ever limit yourself based on other people’s limited ability to see who you are.
— Kamala Harris
On the day of the debate with Trump... it was so unnecessary. My takeaway is his motivation was all about himself.
— Kamala Harris (about Joe Biden’s call)
We may not have won the election, but our spirit can’t be defeated, ’cause then they really win.
— Kamala Harris
The failure of the Democratic Party will be to overlook the fact that it is bigger than this one guy.
— Kamala Harris
Sometimes the fight takes a while.
— Kamala Harris
QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE
5 questionsYou say Biden’s debate‑day call revealed his self‑focus; looking back, is there anything you could have done differently in that moment to protect your own mental readiness without further damaging the relationship?
Kamala Harris uses this long-form conversation to candidly unpack her 107‑day 2024 presidential campaign, her complicated relationship with Joe Biden, and her enduring sense of responsibility for America’s political direction. She traces how her activist upbringing, legal career, and experience as Vice President shaped both her run for president and her reactions to losing to Donald Trump. Harris describes specific moments of anger and disappointment with Biden and his staff, her frustration at having her accomplishments suppressed, and the emotional toll of election night. At the same time, she outlines what Democrats must do differently—on communication, youth engagement, entrepreneurship, and media strategy—while leaving open, but unresolved, the question of whether she will run again in 2028.
You’ve criticized Democrats for not leading with family‑centered economic policies and for sidelining innovators like Elon Musk; if you were the 2028 nominee, what exact first‑100‑days economic package would you put forward to signal a new relationship with entrepreneurs and working families?
You argue for lowering the voting age to 16 and empowering Gen Z—how would you address concerns that this is more about securing a partisan advantage than genuinely improving democratic representation?
Given what you experienced with Biden’s staff suppressing your accomplishments, how would you structure the West Wing personnel and incentives differently if you became president to avoid similar zero‑sum dynamics with your own vice president?
You’ve described your 2024 loss as a kind of grief comparable to losing your mother; what specific personal criteria—emotional, familial, and strategic—will you use to decide whether running again in 2028 is worth reopening that wound?
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
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