KAMALA HARRIS’S BOLD BBC HINT — “Possibly” the First Female President? Democrats Fracture, Conservatives Mock as 2028 Speculation Ignites Firestorm
By Elena Vasquez, Political Correspondent Washington, D.C., October 27, 2025 — In a moment that’s sent shockwaves from Capitol Hill to cable news studios, former Vice President Kamala Harris dropped her most tantalizing hint yet at a White House comeback, telling BBC interviewer Laura Kuenssberg she could “possibly” become the first female commander-in-chief. The remark, aired Sunday in a preview clip from her first major UK sit-down, has unleashed a torrent of backlash: Democrats are splintering over her viability, conservatives are branding it “delusional ambition,” and betting odds — which place her behind even Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson — underscore the long-shot gamble. As Harris promotes her memoir 107 Days, the quip has reignited 2028 fever, forcing the party to confront its post-Trump wilderness.
The interview, filmed amid Harris’s European book tour and set for full broadcast at 9 a.m. GMT, arrived like a grenade lobbed into a powder keg. Fresh off her landslide 2024 defeat to President Donald Trump — where she lost every swing state and the popular vote by 5 points — Harris has been coy about her future. But when Kuenssberg pressed her on whether her grandnieces would witness a woman in the Oval Office “in their lifetime,” Harris replied with unwavering optimism: “For sure.” Asked point-blank if that trailblazer could be her, the 60-year-old Californian paused, then delivered: “Possibly.” She doubled down moments later: “I am not done. I have lived my entire career as a life of service, and it’s in my bones.”
The exchange, clipped and shared across platforms, exploded online. #Kamala2028 trended globally within hours, blending fervent support from progressive faithful with savage memes from the right. On X, one viral post quipped, “Kamala’s ‘possibly’ running again? That’s like saying the Titanic might make it to New York — with the same captain.” Another, from a Trump ally, snarled: “Delusional ambition at its finest. America rejected her twice; now she wants a third strike?” The White House piled on swiftly, with spokeswoman Abigail Jackson retorting: “When Kamala Harris lost in a landslide, she should’ve taken the hint — the American people don’t care about her absurd lies.” Conservatives, reveling in the schadenfreude, flooded airwaves; Fox News host Sean Hannity dubbed it “the comeback no one asked for,” while RedState’s analysis warned it could “hand Republicans the election on a silver platter.”
Within Democratic ranks, the reaction is a house divided — a microcosm of the party’s soul-searching after Biden’s late exit and Harris’s flameout. Loyalists like Rep. Maxine Waters hailed it as “vintage Kamala: resilient and unapologetic,” arguing her prosecutorial chops and barrier-breaking resume position her perfectly against Trump’s “authoritarian drift.” In the BBC chat, Harris didn’t mince words on her successor, labeling Trump a “tyrant” whose allies are “bending the knee” for favors like merger approvals or dodged probes — a nod to recent headlines on DOJ weaponization and media suspensions, like Jimmy Kimmel’s brief ABC benching over Charlie Kirk jabs. “She warned us,” one X user posted alongside a campaign clip, garnering 50,000 likes.

Yet skeptics abound, even among allies. Centrist strategists whisper that Harris’s 2024 stumbles — gaffes, border optics, and a perceived lack of vision — make her toxic cargo. “Possibly? More like preposterously,” vented anonymous DNC sources to Politico, citing internal polls showing her trailing governors Gavin Newsom and Gretchen Whitmer by double digits in early primary matchups. Progressive firebrands like AOC have stayed mum, but off-record gripes focus on her Silicon Valley ties and tepid Gaza stance. One Hill Democrat told The Hill: “We’re bleeding enthusiasm among young voters; Kamala’s the last face they want to see again.” The divide deepened when Kuenssberg confronted her with betting odds from William Hill, pegging Harris’s 2028 odds at 20-1 — worse than The Rock’s 16-1. Unfazed, Harris shot back: “If I listened to polls, I wouldn’t have run for my first office… or my second. And I certainly wouldn’t be sitting here.”
Harris’s memoir, released last month and already a New York Times bestseller, provides the backdrop — and ammunition. 107 Days is a no-holds-barred autopsy of her abbreviated 2024 bid, from Biden’s “reckless” debate debacle to aides who “undermined” her ascent. She recounts urging Biden to step aside sooner, only to be stonewalled, and blasts party elders for treating her as a placeholder. “It was chaos,” she writes of the convention scramble, admitting the rushed platform left her “fighting with one hand tied.” Critics panned it as score-settling; fans see vindication. Sales have surged 30% post-interview, per Nielsen, as it climbs audio charts thanks to Harris’s narration.
The timing couldn’t be more fraught. With Trump back in the White House, Democrats are in rebuild mode: Midterms loom in 2026, and the 2028 primary scrum is underway. Newsom’s crisscrossing Iowa; Whitmer’s touting Michigan’s abortion win; Pete Buttigieg’s podcasting policy deep-dives. Harris, sidelined but unbowed, positions her tease as a feminist clarion call. “My grandnieces deserve to see a woman lead — breaking glass ceilings, not just staring at them,” she told Kuenssberg, evoking her trailblazing 2021 inauguration. Allies like Stacey Abrams frame it as empowerment: “Kamala’s ‘possibly’ is every woman’s ‘yes’ to the impossible.”

But the backlash underscores deeper perils. Online, misogynoir-tinged trolls amplify her 2024 losses, with one X thread racking up 100,000 views: “From border czar to Oval Office dreamer — the delusion is real.” Fundraising dips for allied PACs signal donor jitters; a Guardian poll shows 58% of Dems prefer a fresh face. Even international observers, like Kuenssberg, injected skepticism: “The bookies have you behind The Rock,” she noted dryly, prompting Harris’s poll-defying retort.
As the dust settles, Harris’s hint isn’t just personal ambition — it’s a gauntlet to a fractured party. Will it rally the base or repel moderates? In a CNN analysis, veteran operative James Carville warned: “She’s got name ID and cash, but zero momentum. This could be her last dance — or a suicide pact.” For now, the firestorm rages, with Trump Truth Social-ing mockery: “Kamala’s ‘not done’? Good — more laughs for 2028!” In the echo chamber of American politics, one word — “possibly” — has cracked open the vault of what-ifs. Whether it leads to resurrection or ridicule, Harris has ensured she’s the conversation.