When Anna Wintour refused to replace the Vogue magazine cover portraying Vice President Joe Biden wearing Converse sneakers and a Donald Deal pantsuit, Kamala Harris reportedly felt insulted. Are they now feuding just because of this cover?

When Harris, 57, saw the "approachable but less than a grand image of the future vice president" that Vogue editor, 72, had chosen for her February 2021 print cover, she was evidently disappointed, as reported by Radar Online.

According to Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns' new book, "This Will Not Pass: Trump, Biden, and the Battle for America's Future," the Vice President allegedly sent advisers to address her concerns about the cover in the weeks leading up to Inauguration Day.

To placate Harris, the nation's first female, Black, and Asian vice president, Vogue released a limited-edition issue featuring a portrait of her wearing a powder-blue Michael Kors suit.

"Harris was wounded," Martin and Burns penned in one excerpt of the book. "She felt belittled by the magazine, asking aides: Would Vogue depict another world leader this way?"

According to reports, Wintour defended her decision, claiming that she had picked the photo because it made Harris "relatable" after being approached by Harris' new press secretary. Biden's senior aide allegedly told Harris' incoming chief of staff that these are "first-world issues."

Apart from this revelation, the book also discussed the reported divide between the camps of Biden and Harris, after Harris' deputy press secretary leaves her post for a new one with the Defense Department.

The book highlighted the fact that this is Harris' seventh worker in to quit since June of last year.

Ashley Etienne, the director of communications, and Symone Sanders, senior advisor and chief spokeswoman, all left their positions shortly before Singh did at the end of 2021.

According to Martin and Burns, Harris was concerned that Biden's aides looked down on her. However, her concerns and irritations were in effect, wearing down the West Wing.

"She fixated on real and perceived snubs in ways the West Wing found tedious," the book revealed.

Wintour acknowledged this particular controversy over the phot during an interview on "Sway," The New York Times' podcast.

She explained, "It was absolutely not our intention to, in any way, diminish the importance of the vice president-elect's incredible victory. We want nothing but to celebrate Vice President-elect Harris's amazing victory and the important moment this is in America's history, and particularly for women of color, all over the world.'"