Las Vegas Review-Journal

Harris’ history-making role includes an influentia­l voice and tiebreakin­g vote

- By Michael Crowley and Katie Glueck

WASHINGTON — Hours after she was sworn in as America’s 49th vice president, becoming the first woman and first woman of color in the job, Kamala Harris returned to the U.S. Capitol for her first official act: the swearing-in of three newly elected Democratic senators.

Harris acted in her constituti­onal role as president of the Senate when she gave the oath of office to two Democrats elected in a Georgia special election this month and to her own successor to the California seat she resigned Monday. But the ceremony also illustrate­d how important the Senate will be to the start of her tenure as vice president in the Biden administra­tion.

With the Senate divided 50-50 between Republican­s and Democrats, and newly inaugurate­d President Joe Biden hoping to pass ambitious legislatio­n on the coronaviru­s, the economy, climate change and other policy matters, Harris — who as vice president will break any tie votes in the Senate — may find herself returning often to the Capitol.

“There’s definitely going to be a demand, I think, in a 50-50 Senate, like I’ve never seen in the Senate before,” said Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J.

“For the Biden-harris agenda, she will be in Congress very, very often or reaching out to senators very often to try to push that agenda through,” Booker said.

An aide to Harris said that she had already begun reaching out to other senators about White House nomination­s, including that of retired Gen. Lloyd Austin

III to be secretary of defense.

But Harris, 56, is sure to be far more than a 51st Democratic senator to Biden. She will bring to her history-making role at the White House an array of skills that Biden will draw on, including the prosecutor­ial chops that she displayed in Senate Judiciary Committee hearings, her personal energy that balances Biden’s low-key approach and the voice she will offer to women and people of color.

“She’ll bring a justice lens, a racial justice lens, racial equity, to everything and

every policy and every decision that’s going to be made,” said Rep. Barbara Lee, D-calif., a longtime ally of Harris. “That’s so important, to have a Black woman, a South Asian woman’s perspectiv­e, on the big issues that this administra­tion has to tackle.”

Current and former aides to both Biden and Harris say that while dealing with the Senate will be important to her job, she has not been assigned a specific

issue portfolio, at least at the outset, and will instead serve as a governing partner to Biden on all of his top priorities. If fulfilled, that mandate could make her among the most influentia­l vice presidents in history.

In one sign of how much she may be involved in legislativ­e campaigns, Harris has been in touch with mayors around the country to preview Biden’s coronaviru­s relief package, the Biden aide said.

From the moment that Harris was chosen as Biden’s running mate, Republican­s sought to paint her as a radical who would co-opt the more centrist Biden agenda and push any administra­tion far to the left, often relying on sexist personal attacks in the process. Yet while Harris and Biden had sharp disagreeme­nts on a number of issues during the primary, as his running mate she made a point at every turn to demonstrat­e that she not only embraced his agenda but also had studied his proposals in detail and was fully on board as his partner.

She may face inherent challenges, however, including finding her place in a West Wing stocked with veterans of the Obama

White House who have known and worked with one another for years and advising a president with deeply fixed ideas of how Washington operates. And given speculatio­n that the 78-year-old Biden may not seek a second term in office, Harris, who mounted her own unsuccessf­ul 2020 White House bid, is sure to face scrutiny about her electoral future much earlier than did her predecesso­rs.

One factor that may work in Harris’ favor is Biden’s own experience as vice president, especially at the beginning, when he joined an Obama White House team that at times had a clubby quality. Harris’ allies hope and expect that Biden — and many of the aides who worked with him, like the incoming chief of staff, Ron Klain — will remember what it was like to be “on the other side” and ensure that Harris and her team are included and empowered.

“So many people in the Biden orbit are sympatheti­c to what it’s like to sit on the OVP side,” said Liz Allen, a former aide to the Biden-harris campaign, using the official abbreviati­on for the Office of the Vice President. “I think people are going to be jumping through hoops to make sure she can break through.”

Harris and Biden bring starkly different political profiles to the new administra­tion. When Biden walked into the White House on Wednesday, he returned to a building he knows intimately from eight years as vice president and countless visits during a 36-year Senate career. Harris, who was in the Senate for less than one term, has had far less exposure to the inner workings of a presidenti­al administra­tion.

Their difference­s in many ways flip the dynamic that existed between Biden and former President Barack Obama. Back then, Obama was a young, relative newcomer to the capital seeking experience and credibilit­y with working-class white America. Biden, a Beltway veteran, was his West Wing partner.

In this case, Harris will play the role of relative Washington newcomer and offer Biden, the consummate insider, a starkly different perspectiv­e on the world and a bridge to a diverse nation.

Sometimes she may also offer him a decisive vote. Although the Senate filibuster means that much legislatio­n requires 60 votes to pass, Biden and Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., who is now Senate majority leader, may turn to the parliament­ary tactic of budget reconcilia­tion, which prohibits the filibuster and allows for 51-vote approvals.

One early task for Harris will be ramping up her national security expertise. Aides say that she will support Biden’s broader agenda of reengaging with allies, dealing with the challenges China presents and combating climate change. But Harris is likely to pay particular interest to certain issues, including global health and democracy, and human rights. Harris also has a strong interest in cybersecur­ity, informed by her service on the Senate’s Intelligen­ce and Homeland Security Committees.

Biden has suggested that he sees himself as a “bridge” to the next generation of leaders — and many Democrats expect that Harris would be a part of that next generation. If Biden does not run again, Harris would almost certainly be considered the early Democratic front-runner for 2024.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK / AP ?? Kamala Harris is sworn in as vice president by Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. As vice president, Harris became the highest-ranking woman ever to serve in the U.S. government.
ANDREW HARNIK / AP Kamala Harris is sworn in as vice president by Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. As vice president, Harris became the highest-ranking woman ever to serve in the U.S. government.

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