Kamala Harris’ return to her home in Los Angeles after being kicked out of the White House was not particularly friendly.
The former vice president returned to California on Tuesday to thank Los Angeles firefighters for their efforts during the recent wildfires and for his return home after spending the last four years in Washington.
However, his neighbors in the infamously wealthy enclave of Brentwood, once home to OJ Simpson, weren’t particularly thrilled to have their home.
“I’m ashamed that she lives here and I’m ashamed that she represented America,” Lewis, a real estate investor who lives near Harris, said Tuesday.
With rumors that Harris could run for governor in 2026, he expressed frustration with Democrats already in power.
‘Karen Bass, Gavin Newsom, you have destroyed my state. Kamala Harris will do exactly the same. “I would rather he found another state to destroy,” he said.
Another was furious at how the vice president, along with her husband Doug Emhoff, was making things difficult for those trying to enter and leave the area.
“I don’t care that he’s back, except that they block the road every time he comes to town,” said another resident.
Kamala Harris’ return to her home in Los Angeles after being kicked out of the White House was not particularly friendly

The former vice president returned to California on Tuesday to meet, greet and thank Los Angeles firefighters for their efforts during the recent wildfires and for a return home after spending the last four years in Washington.
Harris maintains Secret Service protection for the next six months and four black sports cars were guarding his home Tuesday.
She returned to California on a plane flown exclusively by women to Los Angeles International Airport.
Harris, who vowed Friday that he won’t “sit quietly into the night,” and Emhoff later served meals to firefighters at a World Central Kitchen stop in Altadena, where much of the damage has occurred.
“We wanted to go out… and just let people know that we see them and we care about them,” he said, according to the New York Post.
Morlene Keller, an interior designer and Harris’ neighbor, was much happier to see her, but hoped she wouldn’t do it for political reasons.
“I wish she were back in Washington, but I’m happy to have her back,” he said.
Peggy Garrity, a retired attorney, shared those sentiments, although she admitted that Brentwood is a very mixed neighborhood of liberals and conservatives.
“It’s tragic that she’s not in the White House, but it’s a pleasure to have her as a neighbor,” Garrity said.

However, his neighbors in the infamously wealthy enclave of Brentwood, once home to OJ Simpson, weren’t particularly thrilled to have their home.

Harris, who vowed Friday that he will not “go quietly into the night,” and Emhoff later served meals to firefighters at a World Central Kitchen stop in Altadena, where much of the damage has already been done.
He added that regardless of politics: “Most people find it annoying when Sunset Boulevard is blocked.”
“She’s a good neighbor, but maybe she should go back to her private life,” said another anonymous resident.
In recent days, Harris has reportedly complained to close allies that she is disappointed that Biden has claimed in interviews that he could have won the 2024 election if he had not dropped out of the race.
Harris is said to have expressed “deep sadness” at her loss and those close to her believe Biden’s dubious claim that she would have won shows the “one-sided loyalty” of their relationship.
All of this paints a very bleak picture for the outgoing vice president, but she has apparently been followed by a dark cloud throughout her entire political career.
Back in the 2010s, when Harris was serving as California Attorney General, she was allegedly known for running a “toxic” workplace.
After being elected in 2017 to represent California in the US Senate, working conditions reportedly did not improve.
The analysis showed that his office had the ninth-highest turnover rate of the 114 senators who served between 2017 and 2020.

Vice President Kamala Harris visited Altadena, California, to assess the aftermath of the Los Angeles fires

Harris visits firefighters at a Los Angeles County fire station
Others who worked for Harris before she was vice president told the Washington Post in December 2021 that he often presents “soul-destroying criticism” and behaves like a “bully.”
According to insiders, Harris is not done with politics and well-connected strategists in DC expect her to emerge as a presidential candidate in 2028 or run for governor of California in 2026.
Besides, NBC News reported Monday that Harris might do what many former politicians do and publish a book about her time in Washington.
But if Harris returns to the political race, she may very well run into the same obstacle that thwarted her presidential ambitions this time around.