A top Democratic lawyer just sounded the alarm: His party has NO plan to win elections or fix America’s problems. This warning came as former Vice President Kamala Harris spoke at a Washington D.C. summit targeting young voters. The event highlighted sharp divisions within the left.
Harris told the crowd that saving the planet and protecting individual rights are top priorities. She claimed current policies “reverse” these goals. But her message clashed with reality. Her own administration pushed extreme climate policies that hurt jobs and energy independence.
Meanwhile, critics like Democratic strategist Julian Epstein warned his party is stuck. “There is no plan,” Epstein admitted during a Fox News analysis. He blasted leaders for failing to address key issues like crime and inflation. This lack of direction has voters abandoning the Democrats.
The summit tried to rally activists with familiar liberal talking points. Harris praised protests and activist coalitions but ignored tough questions about solving problems. Her vague promises to “build a future” left serious policy gaps.
Fox News reporting revealed the event’s sponsors included far-left groups like Climate Power and New Virginia Majority. These organizations push radical agendas that alienate mainstream Americans. The summit’s focus on identity politics and climate change ignored issues like illegal immigration and rising costs.
Harris also took stabs at the midterms, urging activists to focus on elections in Virginia and New Jersey. But Epstein’s warning exposed a bigger problem: The Democrats are divided and out of touch. Their “all activism, no solutions” approach is turning off voters.
Conservatives say this chaos proves the left cannot govern effectively. Harris’s speech offered buzzwords instead of answers. Americans tired of empty promises demand leaders who protect their freedoms, secure borders, and grow the economy—not just lecture about “the future.”
The warning from Democratic insiders and Harris’s hollow rhetoric reveal a party in crisis. As elections approach, voters will decide if they trust candidates with real plans or stick with leaders who ignore the problems. The choice couldn’t be clearer.