Albuquerque Journal

The ’20 election is a choice between Trump - and Harris

- KATHLEEN PARKER Columnist

After months of carefully choreograp­hed suspense-building that produced more ennui than curiosity, Joe Biden finally made a decision: In November, voters will choose between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris.

Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee, all but handed the presidency to his significan­tly younger and battle-ready running mate, even saying the California senator is ready to lead the country.

Never mind that his own party found her insufficie­ntly nominate-able when she was running against Biden and a throng of other candidates during the Democratic primary. Biden is painfully familiar with her courage — or at least her audacity — having served as her target during a debate last year when she came close to accusing him of once being a racist. Like millions of Americans in the 1970s, Biden had opposed government-mandated busing as a young senator from Delaware.

Harris, one of those children who was bused to school, took a big chance in attacking Biden, who throughout his public-service career has worked alongside African Americans, as well as women, in securing equal rights. It was a low blow Biden has clearly forgiven. Or, perhaps, one he has embraced in a gesture of restitutio­n, if partly in the service of political advantage.

Or maybe it was just smart politics on both their parts. How, after all, can two old white guys, aka Republican­s, compete with a stentorian senator holding hands with a tough, smart, telegenic woman who represents a full-house of firsts? Not only is Harris the first woman of Indian and Jamaican descent to take her place at the top of the ballot, but she’s also the first Black woman to be tapped for vice president.

And, therefore, president, or at least a better-than-even shot at the big job. If he wins, Biden, at 78, would be older than Ronald Reagan was when he left the presidency. You can do the math. If 78 seems old for a grueling job known to turn younger men gray, imagine what it will feel like at the end of the first term, when he will be 82.

This is not a welcome exercise. Needless to say, no one wishes Biden ill. Nor is it satisfying to examine a candidate’s age when being sensitive to age seems kinder. Besides, Biden deserves respect for his long service, whatever his missteps along the way, including his abysmal handling of the Clarence Thomas Supreme Court confirmati­on hearings in 1991, when he was chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

But age matters a great deal when the presidency is at stake. Even if Biden serves his term, it’s unlikely he runs again, which means Harris will run in 2024 and, though impossible to know for sure, likely emerges as frontrunne­r for the Democrats.

That tees up an even more-interestin­g prospect: the first Black and Indian-American vice president would be running against another Indian-American woman, Nikki Haley. Two women running for president? Can’t you feel the excitement from the National Organizati­on for Women?

Although some have speculated Trump would ditch Mike Pence and grab Haley’s comet if things become desperate enough, the clock is winding down for that drama. Haley’s too smart to risk her own presidenti­al ambitions by involving herself any further with the Trump brand. Instead, she’ll continue making speeches — and money — and cast her own lot in 2024.

It’s almost worth electing Biden to ensure that we get the Kamala-Nikki showdown.

But not quite. Biden tapped Harris because she was the least risky choice. In doing so, he may have written the script for his party for the next decade, though nothing is assured. Polls indicating Trump trails Biden, er, Harris may not be telling us much. Fence-sitters who watched the primary debates and came away disliking Harris’ attack on Biden — and recalling her attacks on now-Justice Brett Kavanaugh during his confirmati­on hearing — may be more comfortabl­e with a known quantity than Harris, whose policies would offend anyone right of Bernie Sanders.

Biden, though he has made some adjustment­s to accommodat­e the more-progressiv­e wing of his party, isn’t a natural radical in the way Harris appears to be. If he wants to win with Harris by his side, he’ll need to bring her with him toward a lessradica­l, more-centrist position. And, if Harris wants to secure her presidenti­al future, she would do well to pick her battles. Like or dislike Mike Pence as vice president, he’s a decent man who won’t enjoy fighting a woman. And even these days, most Americans won’t like watching it.

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