The Daily Telegraph

Historic pick leaves Harris the favourite for president in 2024

- By Ben Riley-smith

Joe Biden’s vice-presidenti­al pick may have been about getting over the line on Nov 3 but his selection will shape the country and the Democratic Party for the next decade, whatever the outcome.

Yes, this was historic. Never before has a woman of colour been picked by a major party for the US presidenti­al ticket. The fact Kamala Harris was also deemed the safe choice says something, perhaps, about this moment in America.

But with his selection, Mr Biden has also effectivel­y made Ms Harris the front-runner to become president in the 2024 election and helped usher in the next generation of Democratic leadership.

Mr Biden will be 78 on day one if he wins the US presidency, older than anyone ever elected to the position. It means the chances of him running for a second term, for which he would be 82 on day one, are extremely slim.

If he wins but serves just one term, then as his vice president, Ms Harris will be front of the queue to get the Democratic nomination in the next election cycle, being the continuity candidate just as George HW Bush was to Ronald Reagan and Al Gore was to Bill Clinton.

If Mr Biden loses and Donald Trump gets a second term, then again Ms

His selection will shape the country and the Democratic Party for the next decade, whatever the outcome

Harris would probably run in 2024, only with the added lustre and heightened voter recognitio­n of having been a vice-presidenti­al nominee (though defeat would need to be carefully spun).

Such a jump in political recognitio­n was hard to imagine just before Christmas when, despite being widely tipped to win her party’s presidenti­al nomination, Ms Harris bowed out before even the first state voted, short on cash and languishin­g in the polls.

She also, to a degree, represents the new. Mr Biden is 77. Chuck Schumer, the top Democrat in the Senate, is 69. Nancy Pelosi, the party’s leader in the House of Representa­tives, is 80. The Democrats are led by people beyond traditiona­l retirement age.

At 55, Ms Harris is no spring chicken, but she represents the next wave of Democrats waiting to take on the mantle of party leadership after the Obama-biden years and face the challenges of the 2020s.

Whatever the result, with Mr Biden’s selection he has sped up the passing of the baton.

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