Kamala Harris appears on The Diary of a CEO podcast, where she urged lowering the U.S. voting age to 16 — citing “climate anxiety” among Gen Z teens who she claims “fear they’ll be wiped out” by extreme weather.
[snip]
The vice president has no constitutional authority to negotiate or sign treaties on behalf of the United States.
That power belongs solely to the president, with the advice and consent of the Senate.
Harris’s remark wasn’t a slip of the tongue; it was a complete fabrication meant to inflate her nonexistent foreign policy record.
[snip]
The vice president plays no formal role in the treaty process—not in negotiation, not in signing, and not in ratification.
Harris’s job description involves presiding over the Senate and supporting the president’s agenda, not acting as the chief architect of international diplomacy.
Her claim that she personally signed treaties with “hundreds” of leaders would mean she either fundamentally misunderstands her position or is deliberately misleading the public.
[snip]
She attended summits, posed for photos, and delivered statements crafted by the White House.
Nowhere in any official record or news archive is there evidence of her signing treaties.
In reality, the administration’s major international agreements—such as the U.S.-Mexico migration talks and Pacific security arrangements—were led by former President Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken, not the vice president.
[snip]
As attorney general, she pledged criminal justice reform but oversaw policies that worsened crime.
As vice president, she promised to address the border crisis yet avoided visiting it for months.
Her most recent falsehood fits a long pattern: say something grand, hope no one checks, and count on a sympathetic media to clean up afterward.
By contrast, President Trump’s record on foreign policy, even during his first term, is defined by results, not empty claims.
* Original Article:
Kamala Harris Says She Signed ‘Hundreds of Treaties’ — Records Show None Exist