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As America tuned in to the vice presidential debate Wednesday night, one thing was abundantly clear: Vice President Mike Pence has the temperament, leadership skills and gravitas to become president if called to serve our nation, while Sen. Kamala Harris does not.

And no, it has nothing to do with gender, as the left would like us to believe in its never-ending exploitation of identity politics. It's the invaluable experience Pence has acquired throughout his career from being governor of Indiana to his prominent role as second-in-command in the Trump administration these past nearly four years. He's assisted the president in running this country and mitigating one seismic crisis after another.

First, it was the #RussiaCollusionHoax, allegedly waged by Hillary Clinton, as we've learned from recently declassified notes by former CIA Director John Brennan.

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"Throughout the summer and fall of 2016, Hillary Clinton and the Democrats were accusing Donald Trump and his campaign of colluding with the Russians. We now know that that collusion hoax was false and that it was Hillary Clinton and the Democrats who were actually colluding with foreign intelligence officers," Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., told "Fox and Friends" Wednesday.

Next came multiple congressional investigations into the concocted collusion, followed by the 22-month special counsel investigation to derail the Trump administration and undo the results of the 2016 election.       

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Then came the impeachment fiasco that failed to remove our duly elected president. It was waged by Trump's nemesis Adam Schiff, D-Calif., a documented liar and propagandist, who was also at the forefront of the debunked Russia collusion plot alongside Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California and a cesspool of other "hate-Trump" Democrats and State Department hacks who arrogantly believed they should be in charge of our foreign policy, not the president.       

And then came the ongoing coronavirus pandemic — the worst global health crisis in a century — in which Pence has led the Coronavirus Task Force to glowing reviews.

In short, Pence is battle-tested. There's no challenge, domestic or foreign, he can't handle. He's someone the American people — and our military — can trust.       

The same, however, cannot be said of former Vice President Joe Biden's running mate, Kamala Harris, the junior senator from California rejected by her own party in the Democratic presidential primary.

Throughout the past 18 months, former prosecutor Harris has flip-flopped on banning fracking, "Medicare-for-all" and issues surrounding racism. For instance, she agreed to become Biden's running mate despite having lambasted him in the first Democratic primary debate for opposing busing and other implied "racist" behavior.       

Harris told Biden in a debate that it was "hurtful to hear you talk about the reputations of two United States senators who built their reputations and career on segregation of race in this country." She was referring to Biden's boastful working relationship with segregationist Democratic senators Herman Talmadge of Georgia and James Eastland of Mississippi while Biden was a senator representing Delaware.

"Eastland was a giant in the Senate and an avatar of the darkest racism of the Civil Rights-era South," wrote Tim Dickinson in Rolling Stone in June 2019. "He was a plantation owner who championed white supremacy in language that now shocks the conscience."       

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Harris has also flip-flopped on matters involving sexual harassment.       

During the Brett Kavanaugh 2018 Supreme Court confirmation hearings in the Senate, Harris viciously attacked Kavanaugh, insisting we believe his accusers' unsubstantiated sexual assault allegations. Yet, with her new boss, Joe Biden, similar allegations of inappropriate touching and assault from women have been met with a shrug.       

Does she have two sets of rules, one for Republicans and another for Democrats? Or do Harris' purported principles shift in the wind based on her own self-interest and/or political agenda du jour?       

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Given that Joe Biden is the oldest candidate to run for president, these are questions voters must ask come November.       

Bottom line: Kamala Harris isn't ready to be president. Her opponent, Mike Pence, is.       

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