Kamala Harris’s Cringeworthy Reboot

Posted on Tuesday, February 10, 2026
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by Sarah Katherine Sisk
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Former Vice President Kamala Harris has returned to the political scene with a bold new innovation: a website and social media account that does… what the internet already does.

Last week, Harris relaunched her long-dormant campaign account, Kamala HQ, under the new name “Headquarters,” a self-described “Gen Z–led progressive content hub” where users can go online to “get basically the latest of what’s going on.”

In other words, it’s a news feed just like the million other news feeds that already exist — but with memes, outdated references, and peak cringey Kamala energy. Critics on the left and right have slammed it as an awkward attempt to stay relevant and a soft launch for a political comeback that seems just as doomed as her last presidential bid.

Democrat Advisor Kaivan Shroff blasted Headquarters as “another splashy consultant-serving, donor-driven project that sidesteps the real work the left needs to do to win back younger voters.” Even CNN called it “cringe.”

That’s a rather cold reception from the left for Harris’s most visible return to public life since her defeat in the 2024 presidential election. In that contest, Harris notably lost significant ground with younger voters, a sharp departure from the norm for Democrats.

Headquarters will operate in partnership with the progressive advocacy group People for the American Way and position itself as a permanent digital hub rather than a campaign vehicle. Harris will serve as chair emerita, a largely symbolic role that allows her to maintain a presence without declaring any future plans.

Still, the timing and messaging invite speculation about Harris’s political intentions. In a Harvard-Harris poll out earlier this month, the former vice president held a healthy lead in a hypothetical 2028 Democrat primary matchup at 39 percent support. California Governor Gavin Newsom came in second at 30 percent, with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in third at 12 percent.

But if the bungled rollout of Headquarters is any indication, a potential Harris 2028 campaign would likely be just as disastrous as her 2024 campaign.

For instance, though Harris’s team billed Headquarters as an effort to build something lasting — a permanent digital hub meant to cultivate a new generation of liberal supporters – the rollout hinged on the username “@Headquarters_67,” a reference to a short-lived Gen Alpha meme that flickered across the internet in 2025 before mostly disappearing.

The handle became an instant punchline, prompting enough ridicule that the account quietly changed to “@Headquarters68_,” only to abandon the entire gimmick soon after. It now operates under the far more generic name “@HQNewsNow,” a tacit admission that the original attempt at being clever was a flop. The fact that the individuals running the account are so sensitive to even moderate online criticism does not bode well for Harris’s political operation.

Headquarters reads like a response to political exile. The rebrand suggests a belief that the problem was not credibility or performance, but presentation — that the right meme, the right handle, or the right aesthetic might succeed after a failed national campaign.

Young voters, however, are not confused about how the internet works. They know when they are being pandered to. Headquarters treats Gen Z as a branding problem to solve rather than a relationship to build, an approach that comes off less as outreach and more as an insult to people’s intelligence. It assumes that younger voters disengaged in 2024 because Democrats failed to speak in the right internet dialect.

In reality, young voters fled the Democrat Party because they recognized that its ideas had failed and its promises had come up empty. They also saw how hopelessly corrupt the party had become by lying and covering for a president in a serious state of cognitive decline while installing Harris as its nominee in shockingly un-democratic fashion. Clever memes can’t remedy that lingering image problem.

That misread helps explain why the rollout unraveled so quickly. Young voters do not need Kamala Harris to curate the internet for them. They need reasons to trust leaders who ask for their votes.

Projects like this make more sense once you look at who they’re really for. They’re not built to persuade skeptical voters, but to signal momentum to donors, consultants, and operatives who mistake activity for progress. A rebrand produces impressions, headlines, and fundraising — all without forcing Democrats to reckon with why young voters walked away in the first place.

That’s what makes the talk of “permanent infrastructure” so hollow. A project meant to last shouldn’t burn through three usernames in a matter of days. If Democrats can’t decide who they are or how they want to present themselves, it’s difficult to believe they understand the voters they’re trying to reach.

What Kamala Harris and her team still seem unable to grasp is that you cannot manufacture a political movement on command. The right did not stumble into Gen Z by accident. It spent years showing up on campuses, hosting events, arguing ideas, and giving young people something real to belong to. The online presence followed the work — not the other way around.

Charlie Kirk succeeded because he took young people seriously and met them where they were, day after day, for years, building a durable youth coalition through the unglamorous work Democrats keep trying to skip. There are very few figures in American politics, on either side, who have built that kind of organic connection.

More than one year later, Kamala Harris still hasn’t learned the lessons of 2024. And as the old saying goes, those who don’t learn from history are doomed to repeat it.

Sarah Katherine Sisk is a proud Hillsdale College alumna and a master’s student in economics at George Mason University. You can follow her on X @SKSisk76.

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