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Bill Maher Rips Kamala’s Memoir: A Grievance-Fueled Pity Party

Bill Maher didn’t mince words this week when he tore into Kamala Harris’s new memoir, 107 Days, calling it a textbook example of political victimhood and mocking its refusal to accept responsibility. Maher suggested a more honest subtitle — Everyone Sucks But Me — and accused Harris of spending the book pointing fingers instead of owning her failed campaign.

Maher’s critique landed where it hurts: the book reportedly blames everyone from Joe Biden to California’s Gavin Newsom for the collapse of her bid, even as Harris catalogues a campaign flush with cash and establishment backing. Maher highlighted the disconnect between the resources she had and the results she produced, arguing that leadership means accountability, not grievance tours.

Despite the blowback, 107 Days has been a commercial success, selling hundreds of thousands of copies in its opening weeks and positioning itself as one of 2025’s top political memoirs. But conservatives shouldn’t be surprised — controversy sells, and the left’s media machine is eager to monetize its own myths even as real voters suffer under failed policies.

The reaction from critics has been blunt: many see Harris’s memoir as a litany of excuses that reveals more about Democratic entitlement than about genuine self-reflection. Outlets across the spectrum have described the book as tone-deaf and self-aggrandizing, a symptom of a party that still mistakes celebrity and messaging for competence.

Even prominent figures who once cheered Harris have publicly questioned the strategy behind airing so many grievances, with commentators saying the book looks like political self-sabotage that could permanently burn bridges within her own party. That kind of inside-the-tent tantrum only confirms what conservative voters already know: the left prizes optics and blame-shifting over results and responsibility.

Americans who work hard for a living don’t respond to pity parties or memoir-driven excuse-making; they demand leaders who own mistakes and fight for solutions. If 107 Days is supposed to rehabilitate Harris’s standing, it’s doing the opposite — exposing a Democrat class that lacks the character conservatives champion: accountability, resilience, and respect for the voters who actually decide elections.

Written by Keith Jacobs

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