Kamala Harris Is No Orator. She Needs to Become One to Win

When you're in the presence of a great orator, you just know. It's an unmistakable energy that sweeps across a room—a sense that the speaker not only controls the message but owns the moment.

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When you're in the presence of a great orator, you just know. It's an unmistakable energy that sweeps across a room—a sense that the speaker not only controls the message but owns the moment. From the calculated eloquence of Barack Obama to the folksy charm of Bill Clinton and the actorly cadence of Ronald Reagan, history shows it can win elections.

Charisma lowers the burden of proof and turbocharges the message. Carried aloft on wings of charm, he'd have built up a 10-percent lead by now. That's what Harris—despite the polls showing two-thirds think she 'won' the debate—failed to do.



And this is typical not just of the Democrats these days, but of the liberal side all over the world. Their candidates often have better policies, but they lack the charisma needed to seal the deal and emotionally dominate the conversation. We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly.

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