Kamala Harris Speech Gets Brutal Onstage Review - From a Sleeping Saxophonist
During a speech at the Public Counsel’s William O. Douglas Award Dinner in Beverly Hills, Kamala Harris delivered remarks criticizing Republican voting policies while a saxophonist seated nearby appeared to fall asleep onstage. The moment was captured on video and shared by TMZ, which highlighted the image of the dozing musician as Harris spoke. The incident drew online commentary mocking Harris, with critics suggesting her speech was unengaging or tedious.
- ▪Kamala Harris spoke at the Public Counsel’s William O. Douglas Award Dinner in Beverly Hills, California, in April 2026.
- ▪A saxophonist appeared to fall asleep onstage during Harris's speech, a moment captured in video obtained by TMZ.
- ▪The video showed the musician with his head down and eyes closed for nearly a minute while Harris addressed election-related issues.
- ▪TMZ published the clip with a laughing emoji, drawing attention to the apparent lack of engagement from the saxophonist.
- ▪Harris criticized efforts to restrict voting and warned of attempts to cancel elections, themes that sparked both support and ridicule online.
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
Kamala Harris Speech Gets Brutal Onstage Review - From a Sleeping Saxophonist By Nick Arama | 10:40 AM on May 01, 2026 The opinions expressed by contributors are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of RedState.com. AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin We are all so lucky that Kamala Harris lost in 2024. When you think about all the things that have happened since then, if Harris were in the White House, we would have been in for some major trouble. Advertisement googletag.cmd.push(function () { googletag.display("div-gpt-300x250_2"); //googletag.pubads().refresh([gptAdSlot["div-gpt-300x250_2"]]) }); Beyond all the serious issues that would have gone wrong if she were the president, the utter emptiness of her continuous word salads would probably have had me tearing my hair out by…
Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at RedState.