El Dorado News-Times

A good end to identity politics

- Froma Harrop Columnist Follow Froma Harrop on Twitter @ FromaHarro­p. She can be reached at fharrop@gmail.com.

With Americans pained by both civic violence and cases of police brutality, the times call for leaders who support law and order and justice. Joe Biden has found such a person in choosing Kamala Harris as his running mate.

But getting there was not half the fun. It was not fun at all. As often happens in Democratic campaignin­g, the process deteriorat­ed into a self-harming orgy of identity politics.

For starters, Biden should not have vowed early on to pick a woman. Then activists demanded that the woman be “of color.”

The reward is getting rid of President Donald Trump. And a look at voting patterns suggests that most African American voters understand something the activists don’t.

Those participat­ing in the Democratic primaries had black candidates to choose from, but they preferred Biden by a very large margin. Why? Because the color of the nominee was not their paramount considerat­ion. Replacing Trump was.

And they knew what they were doing. So did President Barack Obama when he made Biden, a regular white guy from Scranton, his partner. Obama knew how to win.

Much of Harris’ appeal — both as San Francisco district attorney and California attorney general — was being a tough prosecutor. She went after the violent criminals who, it should be noted, preyed mostly on minority communitie­s. There won’t be any “defund the police” rhetoric coming from her.

Some on the left dislike her for this, but it’s a strong selling point in the general election. A DA can oppose mass incarcerat­ion of low-level drug offenders and at the same time seek higher conviction rates for serious crimes. There’s no contradict­ion there.

A sharp mind combined with experience in some of America’s biggest law enforcemen­t jobs makes Harris someone who could conceivabl­y step in as president. The Harris debate we can look forward to is the one with Vice President Mike Pence.

Biden’s insistence that his running mate be a woman oddly trivialize­d many of the candidates on his list. Several of the top names were exceptiona­lly qualified apart from their gender, apart from their race. Lumping them together in a DNA-segregated playpen seemed somehow demeaning.

Daughter of a Jamaican father and Indian mother, Harris is herself driven “crazy” at being reduced to a “demographi­c archetype,” according to a longtime aide. Diehards who loudly insist that if Biden hadn’t picked a “woman of color,” black female voters might stay home insult both the voters and the candidates.

Biden’s choice of Harris is, in the end, a good one, not because of her color but because of her talents, experience and understand­ing of the moment we live in. But it should have been OK for him to choose a white man with the same strengths. Or a black man or a male Asian American.

There was nothing wrong with Cory Booker or Andrew Yang. They should have been on the vice presidenti­al list, as well as Pete Buttigieg.

Well, the process was unnecessar­ily painful, but Democrats now have a strong ticket. Time to forward march to Nov. 3.

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