The Harris campaign appears to be offering maximum inclusivity by allowing new candidates to select an unlimited number of preferred pronouns when filling out their application.
As soon as they submit their name and resume, Harris presidential job applicants can choose from a menu of “pronouns,” which include identifiers like “Fae/faer,” “Hu/hu,” “Ey/em” and “Xe/xem.” If, for some reason, none of the nine pronouns recommended by the Harris campaign suit an applicant, they can check a box that says “custom” and enter their preferred pronouns.
Image from Harris’ presidential candidate application, which includes a list of nine pronoun identifiers and the option to create “custom” pronouns if the included pronouns don’t fit the applicant’s preferences.
In addition to offering unlimited pronoun options, the Harris campaign’s job application asks candidates to explain how they would “contribute to building a diverse culture” if hired. Meanwhile, the application also includes a so-called “optional” diversity survey that the campaign says will help “assess our diversity and inclusion efforts.” The survey again asks applicants to identify their preferred pronouns, gender identity, and whether they identify as gay or straight.
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The Harris campaign’s so-called “optional” diversity survey asks potential new hires to share their gender identity and sexual orientation.
Fox News Digital reached out to Harris’ campaign for comment but did not receive a response.
Earlier this month, footage resurfaced of Vice President Kamala Harris from 2017, showing the 2024 Democratic presidential candidate calling on “everyone” to “wake up.”
“We have to stay awake, like everybody has to stay awake,” Harris, then a senator, said at the conference in 2017. “And you can talk about whether you’re the most awake or the most awake, but you have to stay more awake than less awake.” Harris reiterated her comments the next day in a post on X (formerly Twitter), saying, “We have to stay active. We have to stay awake.”
“Everybody needs to wake up,” Harris says in unearthed video spreading like wildfire on social media

Vice President Kamala Harris has not taken any formal questions from reporters since being dispatched to claim “it was a terrible night” regarding President Biden’s disastrous performance in the debate. (Alison Joyce/AFP via Getty Images)
A few days before this video surfaced, another video of Senator Harris introducing herself to a group of blind people, including explaining her name, pronouns and outfit, resurfaced, sparking ridicule online. “Hello, and welcome to these leaders who are here to have this very important discussion about some of the most pressing issues of our time,” a masked Senator Harris said during a roundtable discussion discussing the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision and its impact on people with disabilities. “I’m Kamala Harris, my pronouns are she and her. I’m the woman sitting at the table in the blue suit.” Other guests at the table introduced themselves in a similar way.
Harris was officially nominated as the Democratic presidential candidate on August 5 after President Joe Biden announced he would not seek reelection, bowing to pressure from within his party over his declining cognitive function. Praised She has been criticized in the media for her identity politics, including as the “daughter of immigrants,” “the first female Vice President in U.S. history,” and “the first woman of color to lead a major party candidate.”
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Pronouns mixed with neo-pronouns. ((Screenshot/Gutfeld!))
When Harris first ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2020, she deliberately Emphasis on feminine pronouns “I think it’s a very personal thing,” she said when talking about the presidency, explaining why in a 2019 BuzzFeed News article.
“I say that more explicitly now than I used to, but I’m always very conscious that in this kind of work, I’m asking people to see things they’ve never seen before.” Harris told BuzzFeed. In response to a question about her choice of words, Harris said, “It’s necessary, especially given this whole discussion about ‘electability,’ and it’s driving me nuts. It’s important to understand that we really need to check in on how people think about these things. But we have to help them along the way. Part of that is about the use of language.”





