East Bay Times

Reports of Warren-Harris rift play into GOP hands

- By Robin Abcarian Robin Abcarian is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2023 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

There are so many ways to delegitimi­ze a woman in politics: Attack her for the sound of her laughter, for shedding a tear on the campaign trail, for her choice of clothing, for being cranky with her staff or eating her salad with a comb.

But no tactic is more tiresome than trying to exploit a rift between two major political figures who happen to be women.

In January, Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts was asked during a Boston Public Radio interview whether President Joe Biden should keep Vice President Kamala Harris as his running mate in 2024. Apparently not wanting to step on the president's toes, Warren politely dodged the question.

“I really want to defer to what makes Biden comfortabl­e on his team,” she said. “I've known Kamala for a long time. I like Kamala. I knew her back when she was an attorney general and I was still teaching and we worked on the housing crisis together, so we go way back. But they need — they have to be a team, and my sense is they are.”

Seems like a reasonable if somewhat bumbling response from one politician trying to avoid being put on the spot by predicting what another politician will do.

According to subsequent news reports, however, Warren's wishywashy words ticked off Harris, her aides and some top Democrats.

Putting Harris on the 2020 Democratic ticket was the fulfillmen­t of Biden's campaign promise that he would choose a woman as his running mate. That she was relatively youthful and a woman of color was a bonus.

Is there any reason to think that Biden, already in the ageist crosshairs, would dump Harris in 2024?

Of course not. He can't. He shouldn't. He won't.

Warren surely knew that.

Two days later, Warren clarified her remarks in a statement to the station: “I fully support the President's and Vice President's re-election together, and never intended to imply otherwise. They're a terrific team with a strong record of delivering for working families.”

Warren, reported CNN, tried to call Harris twice to apologize, but was rerouted to Harris' chief of staff, Lorraine Voles, who returned her call. Some conservati­ve news outlets — the New York Post, the Washington Times and Fox News — have portrayed this as a consequent­ial rift between former rivals.

Could Harris, who is the object of intense vilificati­on and whose approval ratings are wan, be a drag on the 2024 ticket?

It's hard to imagine a world where people would sit out an election or vote for a Ron DeSantis or a Donald Trump instead of a Joe Biden because they find Kamala Harris' laugh grating.

But political journalism abhors a vacuum, and speculatio­n about the fate of any vice president occurs around this time in every four-year cycle. So, naturally, there has been a spate of negative stories about Harris of late — saying that Democrats are disappoint­ed in her, that she has done nothing to distinguis­h herself as vice president, that she has not, as The New York Times put it last month, “risen to the challenge of proving herself as a future leader of the party, much less the country.”

To borrow a favorite Biden phrase, that's a bunch of malarkey.

By definition, vice presidents are not in a position to demonstrat­e their leadership skills, lest they be accused of underminin­g the boss.

Biden should announce that he's running for reelection, and that Harris will be his running mate. Then Democrats can get to work explaining why they deserve a second term instead of picking at Harris.

And to finish off a sexist story that deserved no oxygen in the first place, Harris should stop ignoring Warren and accept her apology. It's what a leader would do.

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