Californians see Harris as ready to step into presidency
VP is ‘playing significant role’
WASHINGTON — Almost four months into the new administration, Vice President Kamala Harris has held onto a strong base of support in her home state, with voters by more than 2-to-1 saying she is “playing a significant role” in the administration and a majority seeing her as capable of stepping into the presidency if needed.
Maintaining an image as a significant figure in an administration without appearing to rival the president can pose problems for vice presidents. The task is even more complicated in Harris’ case as the first woman to hold the office, as well as the country’s first Black person and Asian American vice president.
So far, Harris appears to be finding the right balance in the eyes of homestate voters, based on the findings of the latest University of California, Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies poll, co-sponsored by the Los Angeles Times.
That’s crucial for Harris, who ran for the 2020 presidential nomination and remains interested in the top job.
As the nation’s largest Democratic stronghold, California would be key to any future run the vice president might make. And while the state’s heavy Democratic lean gives her a strong start, her popularity in California was dented by her unsuccessful primary bid — damage she appears to have fixed.
Both President Joe Biden and the vice president have strong job approval in a state they carried by a wide margin in the November election. The state’s voters approve of Biden’s job performance by 62% to 34%. Harris gets 53% to 33% approval. In Biden’s case, just 4% said they didn’t know enough to register an opinion, while 14% had no opinion on Harris.
In both cases, the state’s Republican minority makes up most of those who disapprove. Just 7% of registered Democrats disapprove of either Biden or Harris. Among the state’s large number of nonpartisan voters, about 3 in 10 disapprove. But among Republicans, 87% disapprove of Biden’s job performance, and 84% disapprove of Harris’.
As other polls have shown — and as Republican strategists have acknowledged — Biden does not generate fervent opposition. Just 8% of voters say they “strongly” disapprove of his work, while 39% strongly approve.
Biden’s job approval from the state’s voters overall is fairly similar to former President Barack Obama’s at this point in his presidency and far better than former President Donald Trump’s. At this point in his presidency, 39% of California voters approved of Trump’s work.
“Given the highly partisan state of politics and the Democrats’ nearly 2-to-1 advantage over Republicans in the California electorate, it is not surprising that Biden and Harris begin their terms in a very strong position here,” said Berkeley political scientist Eric Schickler, the codirector of the Institute for Governmental Studies.
Nationally, Biden’s job approval is not quite as high as in California — about 54% approve and 40% disapprove in the average of polls compiled by the 538 website.
A poll for The Associated Press by the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago, however, found 63% approval nationwide, with 71% approving of how Biden has dealt with the COVID-19 pandemic.
The AP-NORC poll, released Monday, found voters nationwide approving of Biden on the economy by 57% to 42%, but found weaker marks on immigration, with 54% disapproving and 43% approving.
The Berkeley IGS poll asked state voters a series of questions about personal attributes and asked whether they applied to Biden and Harris.