Kamala Claims Fox Insider Leaked Election Night Data To Her Campaign

Kamala Harris, in one of her most revealing interviews since her failed 2024 presidential run, made a stunning claim.
She said she had a friend inside the Fox News “war room” feeding her campaign team critical data on election night, Mediaite reported. The admission came as Harris reflected on the painful hours that sealed her defeat against President Donald Trump.
Speaking on “The View,” Harris described a chaotic evening filled with whispers of bad news from Pennsylvania, emotional turmoil at home, and a husband praying in the shower that the outcome would not be catastrophic.
According to Harris, her campaign’s sense of optimism quickly collided with inside information.
“But on his way back from a rally where there was an incredible amount of enthusiasm, people on the ground were like, we got it, we got it, we’re going to do this,” Harris said.
“And then they talked with a mutual friend of ours who was over at Fox News in the war room, who had been hearing about data that suggested things were not looking great in Pennsylvania.”
In other words, Harris claimed her team was in direct communication with someone embedded at Fox News who was leaking real-time information as results came in.
She framed the story as a personal recollection, but the remark raises serious questions about media ethics, campaign coordination, and whether the flow of data out of Fox’s decision desk violated network standards.
Fox News has not commented on Harris’s claim.
“That night, I grieved in a way that I have not since my mother died,” she told the hosts.
Her remarks underlined how crushing the loss was for her family.
She recalled her husband, Doug Emhoff, shielding her from the bad news at first, retreating upstairs to pray that the projections from Pennsylvania were wrong.
It wasn’t just Harris who felt the blow.
She said supporters still approach her in tears, nearly a year later, unable to process how quickly the campaign’s momentum evaporated once the results rolled in.
Harris also revisited one of her lowest moments of the campaign, her October 2024 appearance on “The View.”
Asked what she would have done differently than President Biden, Harris replied, “There is not a thing that comes to mind.”
Critics seized on the line, saying it confirmed what many voters already suspected: that Harris was running as a continuation of Biden’s campaign rather than her own.
In this week’s interview, Harris downplayed the moment but admitted it was “symbolic of the issue.”
“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,” she said.
She rejected the suggestion that the viral answer tipped the election, arguing instead that rising prices and the economy were the deciding factors.
“The American people were sick of things being so expensive,” she said.
Harris repeatedly pointed to inflation and high costs as the issue that doomed her candidacy.
She said voters were exhausted by the economic strain and gave Trump another chance to make good on his promise to bring costs down.
Her argument reflected a recognition that her campaign never found a way to blunt Trump’s message on the economy.
“We just didn’t have enough time,” she said.
Harris admitted that her close alliance with Biden hurt her.
While reaffirming her personal loyalty, she acknowledged that voters wanted a clearer break from the past.
“I underestimated how visible those differences needed to be,” she said.
She also expressed frustration that even during her new interview, ABC cut away to cover Trump’s UN address.
It was a reminder, she said, that controlling the narrative was always a challenge.
If true, her claim would mean the Democratic nominee for president was benefiting from internal leaks inside the nation’s most-watched cable news network on election night.