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According to ex-MSNBC political analyst Mark Halperin, Kamala Harris's campaign is currently worried it might lose six of seven battleground states.
Halperin also predicted Biden would drop out of the presidential race before he did.
He made his remarks on the independent streaming platform 2Way.
Halperin said, "We're talking about Harris a lot on this program for a couple reasons. We know what Trump is. We don't need to spend every episode talking about January 6. We'll talk about it if people want to bring it up."
"What's happening now with Kamala Harris is - this is an experiment," he continued. "Can you win a short campaign with an untested candidate? What I'm telling you is happening in private polling is she's got a problem now. It's not cheering for Trump."
He added, "It's not predicting Trump will win. She's got a problem. Please bring up The New York Times poll."
Analyzing the NYT poll - an outlet by no means friendly to Trump - Halperin said, "The New New York Times poll shows her up three nationally. We all know that three is like the bubble point. If she's up three, she's got a chance to win the electoral college, but they'd rather be at four and they don't want to be at two."
"So three is right at the bubble. I'm not saying this Times poll is right," he added. "It's in line with other national polls."
Halperin then cited a Wall Street Journal story that reported that Democrats had serious concerns about at least three Rust Belt states. He also said both Pennsylvania and Wisconsin were looking harder for Harris to win.
He explained, "Without Pennsylvania, there are paths, but there aren't many. There's no path without Wisconsin."
Halperin went into even more detail about why Harris should be worried about winning some key states, but also suggested that her "lack of decisiveness" was her "Achille's heel" and that is hurting her with voters.
It seems that after months of hiding from interviews, she finally decided to do a few in the last few weeks, and it became clear why her handlers were hiding her.
Voters don't like what they see. She doesn't come across as a leader.
It shouldn't have to be said, but that's a real problem for anyone who dares to become president.
Americans are now noticing in many states, swing and otherwise.
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