Kamala Harris defends her comments about not choosing Pete Buttigieg as her running mate during an interview with MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow, where she described the decision as a “risk” in the 2020 election.
The mask slipped again.
Failed presidential hopeful Kamala Harris confessed in her upcoming memoir, 107 Days, that Pete Buttigieg was her “first choice” for running mate during last year’s election, but she chickened out because he’s gay.
In excerpts published by the far-left rag The Atlantic, Harris whines about how Buttigieg “would have been an ideal partner—if I were a straight white man.”
“But we were already asking a lot of America: to accept a woman, a Black woman, a Black woman married to a Jewish man. Part of me wanted to say, ‘Screw it, let’s just do it.’ But knowing what was at stake, it was too big of a risk.”
So much for Democrats being the party of “inclusion.” Behind closed doors, Harris admits what conservatives have been saying for years: identity politics is nothing more than a tool to manipulate voters, and even Democrats don’t trust the country to accept their own rhetoric.
Responding to Harris’ remarks, Buttigieg told Politico on Sept. 18 that he was “surprised” by the passage and argued that Americans deserve “more credit” than assuming they would reject such a ticket.
“You just have to go to voters with what you think you can do for them,” he said. “Politics is about the results we can get for people and not about these other things.”
It can be recalled that Harris had not won a nationwide primary vote before becoming the nominee. Kamala Harris was chosen only when Joe Biden dropped out.
When pressed by MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow, Harris delivered her trademark word salad and denied discriminating against Buttigieg, while in the very same breath admitting his sexuality was a “real risk.”
Rachel Maddow:
I guess I’d ask you to just elaborate on that a little bit. It’s hard to hear—with you running as, you know, the first woman elected Vice President, a Black woman, and a South Asian woman elected to that high office, very nearly elected President—to say that he couldn’t be on the ticket effectively because he was gay. It’s hard to hear.
Kamala Harris:
No, that’s not what I said—that he couldn’t be on the ticket because he is gay. My point, as I write in the book, is that I was clear that in 107 days, in one of the most hotly contested elections for President of the United States against someone like Donald Trump, who… it was no floor… to be a Black woman running for President of the United States, and, as a vice-presidential running mate, a gay man—with the stakes being so high—it made me very sad, but I also realized it would be a real risk.
No matter how… I’ve been an advocate and an ally of the LGBT community my entire life. It wasn’t about any prejudice on my part. But we had such a short period of time, and the stakes were so high.
I think Pete is a phenomenal, phenomenal public servant. I think America is—and would be—ready for that. But when I had to make that decision, with two weeks to go, and maybe I was being too cautious, I’ll let our friends… we should all talk about that. Maybe I was. But that’s the decision I made. With everything else in the book, I’m being very candid about that—with a great deal of sadness about also the fact that it might have been a risk.
WATCH:
Kamala on not picking Pete Buttigieg as her VP: “To be a black woman running for the President of the United States and as a Vice Presidential running mate, a gay man, with the stakes being so high, I realized it would be a real risk.” pic.twitter.com/Wg0wuYqolo
— Greg Price (@greg_price11) September 23, 2025
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She’s Turning on Everyone: Cackling Kamala Harris to Publish Private Messages Showing Gavin Newsom Snubbed Her Endorsement
The post Kamala Harris Admits She Snubbed Pete Buttigieg as VP Pick Because He’s Gay – “Too Big of a Risk” appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.