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On Monday, CNN’s Harry Enten examined Vice President Kamala Harris’s “very, very weak” performance among black men and women, cautioning that she is headed for a historic underperformance as a Democratic presidential nominee.

“This is the Democratic margin among black men under the age of 45 in presidential elections. You go back to November of 2012, what do you see? You see [Barack] Obama by 81, [Hillary] Clinton only won them by 63. Then we’re all the way down to [Joe] Biden last time around by 53 — A tremendous drop already,” began Enten.”And then you take a look at the average of the most recent polls, and Kamala Harris is up by only 41 points. That is about half the margin that Obama won them by back in November of 2012.”

“How about black men overall? It’s part of the same picture,” he went on. “Barack Obama won’em by 85. Then you see 71 with Clinton, 69 Biden, basically the same thing, holding steady. But here again, very, very weak, only a 54-point margin. Now, again, still winning them by a large margin, but considerably lower than what we’re used to.”

“Is she getting any relief with black women?” anchor John Berman asked.

“She’s doing better with black women than she is doing among black men. But here there isn’t a trendline almost until we get to Kamala Harris. So, again, this is a margin among black women. Look, Obama won them by 93, very large margin. Clinton won them by 93, a very large margin. Biden did a little bit worse at 85. But then you look here and you get a 71-point margin,” Enten responded.

“Now, again, these are large margins. But the bottom line is, when you’re talking about the base of the Democratic Party, you would think that Kamala Harris would do very well among black women based upon history. And of course, she would be the first black woman president. But she’s actually doing the worst for a Democratic candidate among black women since 1960, if this holds, John,” Berman continued.

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Meanwhile, there appears to be growing tensions and disagreements between the White House and Harris’ campaign, according to Axios.

“Many senior Biden aides remain wounded by the president being pushed out of his re-election bid and are still adjusting to being in a supportive role on the campaign trail,” according to national political correspondent Alex Thompson.

“They’re too much in their feelings,” one Harris ally reportedly told Axios about the White House.

Thompson wrote that the main problem with some Harris campaign staff is that White House staff “aren’t sufficiently coordinating Biden’s messaging and schedule to align with what’s best for the vice president’s campaign.”

Thompson brought up recent disagreements, such as how President Joe Biden held an unplanned press conference on Friday while Harris was in Michigan at an event.

In another interesting event, Biden praised Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for how he handled the recent storms, just a short time after Harris criticized DeSantis for not answering her calls. Thompson wrote that someone who knew about the situation said Biden didn’t know about Harris’s words before he praised DeSantis.

“The White House is lacking someone in the room thinking first and foremost about how things would affect the campaign,” a Harris aide told Thompson.

Despite “sore feelings” among some Biden aides, the report added that most of them are “actively rooting” for Harris to win.

However, there is ongoing conflict with some White House employees moving to the Harris campaign, particularly Biden staffers who believe “Biden’s team has labeled them as disloyal for leaving or even considering it.”

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