Kamala Harris is hitting the road, but the internet is already laughing.
The former vice president announced a 15-city tour to promote 107 Days, her memoir about the shortest presidential campaign in modern history. The book will be released on September 23, with the tour kicking off the next day in New York.
Online, critics immediately dubbed it a “nationwide comedy show,” mocking her attempt to turn political defeat into a speaking schedule. Harris says it’s about reflection, but the spotlight is already shaping the tour into something far more theatrical.
Her campaign lasted only 107 days after Joe Biden stepped aside, a sprint that ended in a loss to Donald Trump. Harris insists the memoir offers candid lessons and personal accounts, describing it as a journal turned book.
However, the rollout quickly spiraled into ridicule. Representative Virginia Foxx joked that the country should brace for comedy nights, while conservative commentators branded it the “Errors Tour.” Even White House deputy press secretary Abigail Jackson piled on, saying it felt like the worst 2028 campaign kickoff ever.
Still, Harris isn’t hiding. She will travel across big cities like New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles, but also stop in Trump country with dates in Texas, Alabama, and Tennessee.
The tour even stretches abroad, with appearances in London and Toronto. Supporters see it as Harris testing the waters before 2028, while detractors treat it as political self-parody. Every city on the schedule now doubles as both a stage for her story and a platform for critics’ punchlines.
Harris says she’s stepping back from politics “for now,” calling the system broken and transactional. Yet, the tour reads like the opposite: highly staged, ticketed, and ripe for commentary.
Whether it fuels her comeback or cements her loss as entertainment, one thing is clear—the “nationwide comedy show” will follow her every step of the way.