Kamala Harris reveals reservations about transgender athletes in women's sports in new book
OutKick host Riley Gaines unpacks an author’s admission that he was ‘cowed’ into supporting trans athletes in women’s sports on 'Hannity.'
Failed Democrat presidential candidate and former Vice President Kamala Harris admitted to having reservations over transgender athletes competing in women's sports in her new book.
In the book "107 Days," Harris wrote that she "agrees" with the concerns of parents and athletes who oppose letting males compete with females.
"I agree with the concerns expressed by parents and players that we have to take into account biological factors such as muscle mass and unfair student athletic advantage when we determine who plays on which teams, especially in contact sports," Harris wrote, per Politico. "With goodwill and common sense, I believe we can come up with ways to do this, without vilifying and demonizing children."
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Vice President Kamala Harris speaks to reporters in Houston, on Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
Harris never addressed the topic directly during her campaign, as the issue went on to be one of the more influential factors in the election.
Harris wrote she wouldn't turn against transgender people, and argued President Donald Trump "was painting a bull’s-eye on their backs and putting them in peril."
"This is a community with which I have a deep connection," she wrote. "There was no way I was going to go against my very nature and turn on transgender people."
Trump's campaign ad with the slogan "Kamala is for they/them, Donald Trump is for you," was hailed as the most effective message of the 2024 election. It highlighted the Democrats' position of enabling biological males in women's sports.
Harris admitted