Albany Times Union

Virus center stage

Harris, Pence trade barbs during vice presidenti­al debate

- By Alexander Burns and Jonathan Martin

Vice President Mike Pence and Sen. Kamala Harris clashed over the Trump administra­tion’s handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic on Wednesday night, with Pence defending the White House’s record without addressing its fundamenta­l failures, while Harris accused him and President Donald Trump of presiding over a catastroph­ic failure in public-health policy.

Harris, the California Democrat who is Joe Biden’s running mate, delivered a comprehens­ive denunciati­on of the Trump administra­tion’s policies, ranging from the economy and climate change to health care regulation and taxes.

As Harris attacked Trump, the vice president sought to recast Trump’s record on the pandemic and other issues in convention­al and inoffensiv­e terms, often in plain defiance of the facts. The vice president made misleading or plainly false claims about White House policies on a range of subjects weighing down Trump in the presidenti­al race. Pence claimed that the president had a plan to protect people with pre-existing medical conditions though he does not; hailed

the “V-shaped recovery” of the economy in defiance of the latest government data; and repeatedly claimed that Trump would always “follow the science” on climate change, though he has spent his term denying the scientific consensus on global warming and dismantlin­g environmen­tal regulation­s.

After Trump’s belligeren­t performanc­e against Biden last week, the Harris-pence forum in Salt Lake City mostly stood out for how different it was from that debate. It was a gloves-on reminder of the convention­al political debates of yesteryear, albeit one playing out in a moment of national crisis.

Harris used the debate to pursue two goals: to reassure voters that she and Biden are not as liberal as Republican­s claim, including by disavowing policies she embraced during the Democratic primaries, and to carry a persistent set of attacks against the Trump administra­tion. With a firm and careful performanc­e aimed at keeping pressure on the Republican ticket rather than transformi­ng the race, Harris appeared to avoid any misstep that would have given Pence and his boss the chance to shift voters’ attention away from the publicheal­th issues that have dominated the campaign.

On no topic was Harris more assertive in confrontin­g Pence than the coronaviru­s: She opened the debate by calling the White House’s response to the disease ”the greatest failure of any presidenti­al administra­tion in the history of our country” and saying Pence and Trump had “forfeited their right to re-election.”

She charged Pence and the president with dissemblin­g about the cost of the disease as it was first hitting the country. “They knew, and they covered it up,” Harris said. “The president said it was a hoax. They minimized the seriousnes­s of it.”

In a pattern that would endure throughout the debate, Pence sought to rebut Harris’ criticism by picking and choosing components of the administra­tion’s response that he could cast in a relatively favorable light, including Trump’s imposition of a travel ban on China, while talking around the fundamenta­l issue — that the disease has killed hundreds of thousands of Americans and shattered the country’s economy.

He credited Trump with leading “the greatest national mobilizati­on since World War II” and attempted to minimize the difference­s between the two presidenti­al tickets going forward where the coronaviru­s was concerned.

“When you look at the Biden plan,” he said, “it reads an awful lot like what President Trump and I and our task force have been doing every step of

the way.”

Harris rebutted Pence’s swipes with the rhetorical equivalent of pointing to a morbid scoreboard: “Clearly, it hasn’t worked,” Harris said of the administra­tion’s strategy, citing “over 200,000 dead bodies” as evidence.

Pence grasped for a series of counteratt­acks to rebut or at least divert attention from the pandemic. He invoked Biden’s 33-year-old plagiarism scandal, he cited the Obama administra­tion’s response to the less-lethal swine flu and even suggested that Harris’ criticism of Trump’s handling of COVID -19 amounted to an attack on the American people.

For her part, Harris’ weeks of practice for the evening showed throughout the debate — both because she delivered a series of well-honed lines and because they were clearly practiced.

Pence was able to go on the offensive against Harris over whether Biden would be willing to add

more justices to the Supreme Court, a popular idea on the left, because the former vice president himself has repeatedly refused to answer the question.

“The American people deserve a straight answer,” Pence said.

But Harris, uneasy about creating daylight with her running mate, declined to say, and eventually responded by changing the subject to note that Trump had not appointed a single Black federal judge. “She never answered the question,” Pence noted.

Toward the end of the debate, the moderator, Susan Page of USA Today, directed the discussion toward election legitimacy, asking Pence if Trump would concede the election should Biden be declared the winner.

Pence did not answer the question at hand but did express confidence that the country would have “a free and fair election.”

There was tension be

tween the two candidates from the outset, but the forum proceeded as a far more orderly affair than the barroom brawllike encounter between Trump and Biden, during which the president relentless­ly hectored his challenger in hostile terms. Pence, for instance, began by telling Harris that it was a “privilege to be onstage with you” — the kind of language Trump never used.

What commanded the attention of many viewers during Pence’s defense of law enforcemen­t officers was not his praise for the police, but the fly that landed on the vice president’s well-coiffed hair.

The relatively restrained encounter represente­d a brief period of political convention­ality during a time of extraordin­ary chaos in the nation’s capital, where the coronaviru­s is ripping through the White House staff, and the president is issuing conflictin­g decrees on social media about a possible economic relief package and calling on his attorney general to prosecute his political opponents. Indeed, much of the burden on Pence was to defend Trump by presenting that scenario as a case study in successful government.

After racing to the left in her own failed presidenti­al bid, Harris spent much of the evening attempting to reassure moderate voters that Biden was no liberal. After noting that her home state is “burning,” she emphatical­ly said that Biden “will not ban fracking ” and repeatedly vowed that he would not raise taxes on middleinco­me earners.

Highlighti­ng one of the greatest gulfs between the two parties, Pence declined to call climate change an existentia­l threat to the country and dismissed accumulati­ng evidence that natural disasters are growing more frequent and more devastatin­g. He acknowledg­ed that “the climate is changing ” but did not address the proven role of humanmade carbon emissions in driving global warming, nor did he propose any policies to address it.

The threat Pence wanted to address instead was that “climate alarmists” would “use hurricanes and wildfires to try and sell the bill of goods of a Green New Deal” — a left-wing climate platform Harris embraced at points during her own presidenti­al campaign. Both she and Biden have distanced themselves from that specific agenda, though they are proposing a huge package of environmen­tal regulation­s and investment­s in renewable energy.

 ?? Melina Mara / Washington Post ?? A journalist prepares for a broadcast outside Kingsbury Hall at the University of Utah before Wednesday's vice presidenti­al debate.
Melina Mara / Washington Post A journalist prepares for a broadcast outside Kingsbury Hall at the University of Utah before Wednesday's vice presidenti­al debate.
 ?? Justin Sullivan / Pool via Associated Press ?? Vice President Mike Pence speaks as Democratic vice presidenti­al candidate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-calif., listens during the vice presidenti­al debate Wednesday in Salt Lake City.
Justin Sullivan / Pool via Associated Press Vice President Mike Pence speaks as Democratic vice presidenti­al candidate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-calif., listens during the vice presidenti­al debate Wednesday in Salt Lake City.

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