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In other words, Harris admitted her team was in direct contact with someone on the inside at Fox News, getting early access to internal data that wasn’t public yet. That revelation is now sparking major questions about media ethics, political favoritism, and whether Fox News management knew this was happening.
So far, Fox News has remained silent on Harris’s claim.
WATCH:
“That night, I grieved in a way that I have not since my mother died,” Harris confessed. She revealed that her husband, Doug Emhoff, shielded her from the worst news at first, retreating upstairs to pray as the numbers from Pennsylvania crushed her campaign’s hopes.
According to Harris, even a year later, supporters still approach her in tears, struggling to understand how her campaign went from surging momentum to a stunning defeat in a single evening.
Harris also revisited the infamous October 2024 moment on The View when she was asked what she would have done differently than President Biden. Her answer — “There is not a thing that comes to mind” — became political kryptonite.
Critics seized on it as proof that Harris was running as Biden’s clone instead of offering voters a fresh vision. Harris admitted this week that the answer was “symbolic of the issue” and acknowledged, “I am a loyal person, and I didn’t fully appreciate how much people wanted to know there was a difference between me and President Biden.”
Despite the viral moment, Harris insists the economy was the real reason she lost. “The American people were sick of things being so expensive,” she said. Rising prices, she argued, gave Trump the upper hand, especially as voters demanded relief.
She also admitted her close ties to Biden hurt her campaign. “I underestimated how visible those differences needed to be,” she said, acknowledging voters wanted someone who would break sharply from Biden’s unpopular policies.
If Harris’s story is accurate, it raises a much bigger question: Did the Democratic nominee for president benefit from real-time leaks inside the nation’s most-watched news network on election night?
So far, no one at Fox has explained how or why this alleged information pipeline existed. But Harris’s casual admission has now blown the lid off a story that could spark calls for answers — and possibly an investigation.